Flintbek Explained

Image Coa:DEU Flintbek COA.svg
Coordinates:54.25°N 14°W
Image Plan:Flintbek in RD.png
State:Schleswig-Holstein
District:Rendsburg-Eckernförde
Amt:Eidertal
Elevation:50
Area:17.57
Postal Code:24220
Area Code:04347
Licence:RD
Gemeindeschlüssel:01 0 58 053
Website:www.flintbek.de
Mayor:Horst-Dieter Lorenzen

Flintbek is a municipality in the district of Rendsburg-Eckernförde, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is on the River Eider, c. 10 km southwest of Kiel. The meaning of the name is controversial but one possibility is the combination of flint(stone) with the word bek (beck, brook).

Flintbek is the seat of the Amt ("collective municipality") Eidertal, and of the former Amt Flintbek.

Archeological excavations at Flintbek discovered cart tracks dating from c. 3400 BC underneath a megalithic long barrow, belonging to the Funnelbeaker culture. This is the earliest known direct evidence for wheeled vehicles in the world (i.e. not models or images).[1] [2] [3] [4]

Places of interest

The Lutheran Church dates back to at least 1223, when Earl Albrecht of Orlamünde, Governor of the Danish King, authorised the Monastery of St Augustine to build a church in Flintbek.[5] The present building is late gothic and has an impressive wooden tower and steeple. The interior has a carved wooden altar (Schnitzaltar).

In the church cemetery is a 1952 sculpture by Friedrich Wilhelm Klose, Mutter des Ostens (Mother of the East). She represents the suffering and misfortunes of those driven from their homes because of war. The inscription reads:

„Ich will euch trösten, wie einen seine Mutter tröstet. Jes. 66,13. Wir gedenken unserer teuren Toten in der ostdeutschen Heimat.“

"I will comfort you as one whom his mother comforts.Isa. 66.13. We pray for our beloved dead in the East German homeland."[6] Also in the cemetery is a memorial to the dead of both World Wars.

There are pleasant walks along the river Eider. The oldest iron bridge in Germany (1865) is in the Eider Valley, in the adjacent community of Techelsdorf.[7]

References

  1. Web site: 3400 BC: The oldest evidence for the use of the wheel and wagon originates from Northern Germany. Kiel University. 2022.
  2. The Neolithic burial sequence at Flintbek LA 3, north Germany, and its cart tracks: a precise chronology. Antiquity. 85. 329. 2011. Mischka. Doris. 10.1017/S0003598X00068289. 742–758. 140571057 .
  3. Web site: The earliest evidence of wheels and wagons in Neolithic Central Europe and the Early Bronze Age of the northern Pontic areas (3500–2200 BC). 2016. Bockmeyer. Sarah.
  4. Book: Anthony, David A. . . Princeton University Press . Princeton, N.J . 2007 . 66 . 978-0-691-05887-0 .
  5. Web site: Kirchengemeinde Flinkbek. Unsere Kirche - Geschichte und Gegenwart. 2015-11-22.
  6. Web site: Gemeinde Flintbek: Leben und Wohnen - Gästeinformation - Mutter Osten. www.flintbek.de. 2015-11-22.
  7. Web site: Techelsdorf. memim.com. 2015-11-22.

External links