Manor house in Lietzen commandery complex, dating from 1229/1240.
Manor house in Berlin, Germany, forming part of the Lietzen commandery complex dated to 1229/1240. The wider ensemble includes a commandery church, park, enclosing wall, mill buildings, and a granary, and is associated in the source with the religious orders of the Templars and Hospitallers.
Herrenhaus is part of the Gesamtanlage der Komturei Lietzen in Brandenburg, Germany. The provided information identifies it within a larger complex that includes the commandery church, a park, an enclosing wall, mill buildings, and a storage building. The site is dated to 1229/1240. The listed builders are the Templars and Hospitallers, identified as a religious order. Based on the source text, Herrenhaus belongs to this historic commandery ensemble rather than standing alone. Its significance in the provided material lies in its inclusion within a broader preserved complex associated with medieval religious orders. The ensemble is described as comprising several architectural and landscape elements, linking the Herrenhaus with ecclesiastical, residential, defensive, and agricultural structures. No further details about the building’s architecture, later history, present use, or specific features are provided in the input. Therefore, the confirmed summary is limited to its role as one component of the Komturei Lietzen complex in Brandenburg, dated to 1229/1240 and associated in the source with the Templars and Hospitallers.