Castle ruins in Kleinmachnow, with surviving foundations of medieval Burg Machnow.
Alte Hakeburg is a castle site in Kleinmachnow, Brandenburg, Germany. A castle stood here by the early 14th century, and the estate later passed to the von Hake family in the early 15th century. Only foundation remains survive today. Nearby, a manor house built in 1803 was destroyed in 1943.
Alte Hakeburg is a castle site in Kleinmachnow, in the Berlin-Brandenburg area of Germany. According to the provided information, a castle already existed there at the beginning of the 14th century. At that time, the small village was owned first by the von Löwenberg family and the mint master Thile Brügge, and later by the von Quast family. In the early 15th century, the feudal possessions of Kleinmachnow and Stahnsdorf passed to the von Hake family, who soon took up residence on the knight’s estate. The estate covered around four hectares and lay behind a watermill identified by an inscription as built in 1695 by Ernst Ludwig von Hake and renewed in 1856 by the brothers von Hake. The old castle stood to the right of the entrance from the village street. Only remains of its foundation walls survive. Next to Burg Machnow, also called Alte Hakeburg, the Hake family had a new manor house built in 1803 by David Gilly in a classicist Baroque style. The supplied text states that both the manor house and the Alte Hakeburg burned out in 1943; the manor house was demolished in 1950. Today, the site is chiefly represented by the surviving foundation remains.