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Rügen (German pronunciation: [ˈʁyːɡn̩] ⓘ; Rani: Rȯjana, Rāna; [2] Latin: Rugia, Ruegen) is Germany's largest island. [3] It is located off the Pomeranian coast in the Baltic Sea and belongs to the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .
Mönchgut (Monk's Estates in German) is a peninsula of 20.66 square kilometers with 1,374 inhabitants in the southeast of Rügen island in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany. [3] It lies just between the Greifswalder Bodden and the rest of the Baltic Sea .
Binz lies on the eastern coast of the island of Rügen between the bay of Prorer Wiek and the lake of Schmachter See.North of Binz is the Schmale Heide, a neck of land that links the Muttland – Rügen's central region – with the peninsula of Jasmund.
Glowe in 2011 Glowe aerial view. Glowe lies about 18 kilometres north of Bergen auf Rügen and is located at the western end of the boundary between the Jasmund peninsula and the narrow land bridge of Schaabe between the Baltic Sea (the bay of Tromper Wiek) and the lagoon of Großer Jasmunder Bodden.
Buskam: the largest glacial erratic in Germany is located ca. 300 metres offshore, east of Göhren. Memorial for the victims of Action Rose in 1953 on the Baltic Sea (Hotel Seestern, Poststraße 10) Göhren Village Church dates to the 20th century (1929/30). The area monument, the Hessenlager, on the road to Lobbe is an 1812 military camp.
Bergen auf Rügen is the capital of the former district of Rügen in the middle of the island of Rügen in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany.Since 1 January 2005, Bergen has moreover been the administrative seat of the Amt of Bergen auf Rügen, which with a population of over 23,000 is Mecklenburg-Vorpommern's most populous Amt.
The Slavic burgwall, whose three temples were destroyed in 1168, is one of the best preserved in Germany. The older town houses, mainly sideways on to the road, date exclusively to the period after the great town fire of 1765: Lindenstraße 1-2 and 4 , vicarage, Wenden Str. 17, Langestr. 13
Neuenkirchen is first mentioned in 1318 as Nygenkerke.. Until 1326, the village was part of the Principality of Rügen and, thereafter, the Duchy of Pomerania.Under the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, Rügen, and thus the region of Neuenkirchen, became part of Swedish Pomerania.