Klein Gaglov or Gogolovk ( German: Klein Gaglow ; n.-puddle. Gogolowk [2] ) is a village in Lower Lugice , Germany . It is part of the Kolkwitz municipality in the Spree-Naise district in Brandenburg .
| Village | |
| Kline Gaglov Gogolovka | |
|---|---|
| Klein gaglow Gogolowk | |
| A country | |
| Earth | Brandenburg |
| Area | Spree-Nyce (district) |
| Community | Kolkwitz |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | 1389 |
| Center height | 85 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 1 , in summer UTC + 2 |
| Population | |
| Population | 430 [1] people ( 2006 ) |
| Nationalities | Luzhichans , Germans |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +49 355 |
| Postcode | 03099 |
Content
- 1 Geography
- 2 History
- 3 population
- 4 notes
Geography
Located at the southwestern administrative border of Cottbus, not far from the Federal Highway 15. It borders on the urban areas of Sachsendorf in the north and Gros-Gaglow in the east.
Neighboring settlements: in the south-west - the village of Lütol of the Drebkau commune, in the south - the village of Annachof (currently part of the city borders of Drebkau), in the west - the village of Geink and in the north-west - the administrative center of Kolkwitz [3] .
History
First mentioned in 1389 under the name Gogolow minor [4] .
Currently, the village is part of the cultural and territorial autonomy of the “ Luzhitsky Settlement Region ”, on the territory of which there are legislative acts of the lands of Saxony and Brandenburg, contributing to the preservation of the Luzhitsky languages and the culture of Luzhic [5] [6] .
Population
The official language in the village, in addition to German , is also the Lower Sorbian language .
According to the statistical work “Dodawki k statisticy a etnografiji łužickich Serbow” Arnost Muki in 1884 lived 243 people (233 of them Serbluzhichan (96%)) [7] .
The Luzhitsky demographer Arnosht Chernik in his essay Die Entwicklung der sorbischen Bevölkerung indicates that in 1956, with a total population of 732 people, the Serbluzhitsky population of the village was 1.2% (of which 6 people actively spoke the Lower Luzhitsky language and 3 were passive) [8 ] .
| 1875 | 1890 | 1910 | 1925 | 1946 | 1964 | 1971 | 1981 | 1992 | 2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 247 | 243 | 387 | 386 | 750 | 663 | 621 | 355 | 319 | 430 |
Notes
- ↑ Beitrag zur Statistik Landesbetrieb für Datenverarbeitung und Statistik Historisches Gemeindeverzeichnis des Landes Brandenburg 1875 bis 2005 19.13 Landkreis Spree-Neiße
- ↑ Ortsnamen Niederlausitz / Wejsne mjenja Dolna Łužyca , Wörterbuch
- ↑ Jenička serbska karta w syći
- ↑ Reinhard E. Fischer: Die Ortsnamen der Länder Brandenburg und Berlin: Alter - Herkunft - Bedeutung. be.bra Wissenschaft, 2005, S. 97.
- ↑ Gesetz zur Ausgestaltung der Rechte der Sorben (Wenden) im Land Brandenburg (Sorben (Wenden) -Gesetz - SWG) dated July 7, 1994
- ↑ Gesetz über die Rechte der Sorben im Freistaat Sachsen (Sächsisches Sorbengesetz - SächsSorbG) dated March 31, 1999
- ↑ Ernst Tschernik: Die Entwicklung der sorbischen Bevölkerung. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1954, str. 52
- ↑ Ludwig Elle: Sprachenpolitik in der Lausitz. Ludowe nakładnistwo Domowina, Budyšin 1995