Rotmersleben ( it. Rottmersleben ) - a village in Germany , in Saxony-Anhalt , is in the region of Börde in the municipality of Hohe-Börde . The population is 769 people (as of December 31, 2011). It covers an area of 11.32 km².
| Village | |||
| Rotmersleben | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rottmersleben | |||
| |||
| A country | |||
| Land | Saxony-Anhalt | ||
| Area | Byrd | ||
| Commune | Hoe berde | ||
| History and geography | |||
| Square | 11.32 km² | ||
| Center height | 92 m | ||
| Timezone | UTC + 1 , in the summer UTC + 2 | ||
| Population | |||
| Population | 769 people ( 2011 ) | ||
| Digital identifiers | |||
| Telephone code | +49 39206 | ||
| Postcode | 39343 | ||
| Car code | BK | ||
| Official code | 15 0 83 445 | ||
Content
History
Until August 31, 2010, Rotmersleben was an independent commune, and it had two settlements: the Great and the Small Rotmersleben.
September 1, 2010, after the reforms, Rotmersleben became part of the new commune Hohe-Börde [1] .
Greater Rotmersleben
The first mention, about then still Retmersleve ( German Retmersleve ), refers to 964 in the gift margrave of Hero , where he bequeathed 20 gufs of land to the monastery of Gernrode [2] .
In the polyptic of Verdun Abbey in the X - XI centuries, the settlement is referred to as Radmareslu ( German Radmaresluuu ). In the future, the name has undergone a change: Radmar on Rottmer , and the ending is smoothed down to -leben - heritage [3] .
For a long time, the noble family of von Berwinkel lived in Rotmersleben. In 1292 they traded with the monastery of Ilsenburg, and in 1302 they entered the Halberstadt principality, and in 1311 the settlement was given to Berwinkle as a feud , as well as the settlement of Bebertal .
In 1625 and 1636 a plague raged in the settlement.
In 1818, there were 66 houses, 436 inhabitants, a Lutheran church with a school, two taverns and a mill in the settlement.
Small Rotmersleben
In the X century, the settlement belonged to the county Valbek . In 991, it was inherited by Titmar of Merseburg , and after his death was transferred to the bishopric of Merseburg .
In 1446, the settlement was transferred to Berwinkles, and in 1492 was completely empty.
In the 17th century, the von Alvensleben family became a landowner [4] .
In 1818, the settlement was a farm with 2 houses and 24 inhabitants [5] .
Notes
- ↑ StBA: Changes in German Communities, see 2010
- ↑ de: Codex diplomaticus Anhaltinus Nr. 38
- ↑ Vgl. Gunhild Winkler: Die Ortsnamen auf - leben - Versuch einer Typologie und Analyze. In: Namenkundliche Informationen Nr. 95/96, 2009, p. 209–232 ( PDF; 1.22 MB Archival copy of June 12, 2015 on Wayback Machine ), ISSN 0943-0849
- ↑ JAF Hermes (Hrsg.): Historical-geographical-statistical-topographical guide for the region Magdeburg Volume 1, 1843
- ↑ Karl von Seydlitz: Region of Magdeburg: Geographical Statistics and Topography , 1820