- Source: Prenzlau
Prenzlau (German: [ˈpʁɛnt͡slaʊ] , formerly also Prenzlow) is a town in Brandenburg, Germany, the administrative seat of Uckermark District. It is also the centre of the historic Uckermark region.
Geography
The town is located on the Ucker river, about 100 km (62 mi) north of Berlin. Prenzlau station—which opened in 1863—is a stop on the Angermünde–Stralsund railway line.
History
Settled since Neolithic times, the Prenzlau area from the 7th century AD was the site of several gords erected by the Polabian Slavs called Ukrani. In the late 12th century, the Dukes of Pomerania had the region colonized by Low German settlers.
Prenzlau itself, named after Slavic Premyslaw, was first mentioned in 1187. It received town privileges by Duke Barnim I of Pomerania in 1234. When Duke Barnim signed the Treaty of Landin with the Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg in 1250, Prenzlau was already a fortified town with walls and moats, four parish churches and a monastery. Together with Berlin-Cölln, Frankfurt and Stendal, it ranked among the largest towns in the margraviate.
The Prenzlau and the Uckermark region were devastated during the Thirty Years' War. From the late 17th century onwards French Huguenot refugees settled here and an economic recovery started. Also a garrison town, Prenzlau was again ravaged by passing troops during the Seven Years' War and the Napoleonic Wars. In the mid 19th century, several citizens emigrated to Australia, where they founded the town of Prenzlau, Queensland west of Brisbane.
In World War II the Oflag II-A prisoner-of-war camp was located just south of Prenzlau on the main road to Berlin. The town centre was largely destroyed. The East German authorities had it rebuilt with large panel Plattenbau buildings.
Demography
Climate
Politics
Seats in the town's assembly (Stadtverordnetenversammlung) as of 2014 local elections:
Christian Democratic Union (CDU): 7
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD): 7
The Left: 6
Bürgerfraktion (Independent): 4
Wir Prenzlauer (Independent): 2
Free Democratic Party (FDP): 1
National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD): 1
Twin towns – sister cities
Prenzlau is twinned with:
Barlinek, Poland
Pokhvistnevo, Russia
Uster, Switzerland
Varėna, Lithuania
Notable people
René Bielke (born 1962), ice hockey player
Oscar Florianus Bluemner (1867–1938), American painter
Wilhelm Grabow (1802–1874), civil servant, judge, and politician
Jacob Philipp Hackert (1737–1807), landscape painter
Frederika Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt (1751–1805), queen consort of Prussia
Louis I, Grand Duke of Hesse (1753–1830)
Princess Amalie of Hesse-Darmstadt (1754–1832)
Princess Wilhelmina Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt (1755–1776)
Paul Hirsch (1868–1940), politician
Hans Felix Husadel (1897–1964), composer and conductor
Otto Kaiser (1924 - 2017), scholar
Brigitte Rohde (born 1954), sprinter
Max von Schenckendorff (1875-1943), general in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany
Ernst Christian Friedrich Schering (1824–1889), apothecary and industrialist
Johannes Schmidt (1843–1901), linguist
Christian Friedrich Schwan (1733–1815), publisher and bookseller
Adolf Wilhelm Theodor Stahr (1805–1876), writer and literary historian
Christiane Wartenberg (born 1956), athlete
Carola Zirzow (born 1954), sprint canoer
Gallery
References
External links
Municipal website (in German)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Johannes Schmidt (ahli bahasa)
- Paul Hirsch
- Emden
- Daftar kota di Jerman
- Barlinek
- Jacob Philipp Hackert
- Barnim I dari Pomerania
- Korvet kelas Parchim
- KRI Kapitan Patimura (371)
- Uckermark
- Prenzlau
- Treaty of Prenzlau
- Ellingen (Prenzlau)
- Prenzlau station
- Battle of Prenzlau
- Prenzlau State School
- Marienkirche, Prenzlau
- Napoleon
- Prenzlau, Queensland
- Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg