Manor House Wodarg
Between the stream called Grosser Landgraben to the east and the Tollense River to the west lies Wodarg. On a bend of the Tollense stand the remains of a medieval castle, Burg Conerow, which is mentioned in a document of 1248 and was probably a property of the von Walsleben family.
The von Walsleben knights owned extensive fiefs in the area. Sigmund von Walsleben had the manor house built in 1733; over the centuries it was rebuilt and improved several times, and at the beginning of the twentieth century the pavilion-like annex was constructed. Philipp von Walsleben sold Wodarg to Peter Ernst Meyenn in 1762. In 1877 Baron Helmuth von Maltzahn-Gültz acquired the estate. It remained in the possession of the von Maltzahn family until 1945; the last owner was Gerhard Freiherr (Baron) von Maltzahn.
After the end of the Second World War the manor served as accommodation for refugees, and a shop and restaurant were later established. However, it has now stood empty for several years.
Of the estate buildings there remained a stable and a large barn.
In the nineteenth century an English landscape garden was laid out around the house and still exists today, although untended.