Großsolt

Großsolt (Danish: Store Solt) is a municipality in the district of Schleswig-Flensburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.

Großsolt
Store Solt
Großsolt Church
Großsolt Church
Coat of arms of Großsolt Store Solt
Location of Großsolt
Store Solt within Schleswig-Flensburg district
Großsolt Store Solt is located in Germany
Großsolt Store Solt
Großsolt
Store Solt
Großsolt Store Solt is located in Schleswig-Holstein
Großsolt Store Solt
Großsolt
Store Solt
Coordinates: 54°42′N 9°31′E / 54.700°N 9.517°E / 54.700; 9.517
CountryGermany
StateSchleswig-Holstein
DistrictSchleswig-Flensburg
Municipal assoc.Hürup
Government
 • MayorPeter Richelsen
Area
 • Total25.07 km2 (9.68 sq mi)
Elevation
29 m (95 ft)
Population
 (2022-12-31)[1]
 • Total1,802
 • Density72/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
24991
Dialling codes04602, 04633
Vehicle registrationSL
Websitewww.amthuerup.de

Geography

The municipality of Großsolt is located about ten kilometers south of Flensburg and consists of the villages Großsoltholz ( Store Soltskov ), Großsoltwesterholz, Großsoltbrück ( Store Soltbro ), Bistoft, Estrup, Kollerup, Mühlenbrück ( Møllebro ) and Großsolt itself.

The Bondenau and the Kielstau, from which further west the Treene emerges, flow through the municipality from east to west and end in the Treßsee .

The landscape is hilly and consists mainly of Weichselian ground moraines and inland sand . Großsolt is one of the landscape fishing .

History

Großsolt was first mentioned in 1352. The name originated from the original name of today's eastern Treßseeniederung (Treene river lowlands). The shore of the lake was located near the village until the early modern period.[2] The ending "-solt" comes from "sulz" for marsh, marshy terrain. A derivation from the word of "salt", as it occurs in some Schleswigian names has been conjectured to point to an earlier name of the Bondenau river,[3] but other sources deem it improbable.[4]

Until the 20th century, people were fishing in Großsolt. The Treßsee, which was probably more than one hundred hectares in size, silted up due to river regulation on the Kielstau and the Bondenau rivers in 1925 and further land consolidation in the 1960s and 1970s. As salmon populations died off, the fishing rights that had once guaranteed local prosperity became meaningless.

At the end of the Second World War, in May 1945, Heinrich Himmler temporarily stayed with his entourage in Kollerup ( ♁ Lage ). Himmler had come to the Flensburg area via the so-called Rattenlinie Nord to take part in the last Reich government in Flensburg-Mürwik . After being denied a place in the new government, he fled further south to Bremervörde, where he was captured by British soldiers and shortly afterwards died by suicide on May 23, 1945 in Lüneburg. [5] [6]

References


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