Lensahn is a municipality in the district of Ostholstein, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is situated approximately 9 km south of Oldenburg in Holstein, and 40 km northeast of Lübeck.
Lensahn is the seat of the Amt ("collective municipality") Lensahn.
The oldest deed proving Lensahn’s existence dates from 1222. A purchase agreement mentioned the name Linsane and Rotbertus de Linsane as witness. The name of the place is of Slavic origin and means „Resident of the untilled new land“. Attempts to derive the name from the Lower Saxon language could not establish. Thus the older name Linsane should denote a linseed field. In 1245 the Counts of Schauenburg and Holstein started building the brick gothic village church. In 1440 Eggert von Heesten became the first documented owner of Lensahn. Ten years later in 1450 Hartwig von Buchwald purchased the manor Lensahn, followed by Mathias von Ratlau in 1460.
The church chronicles mention plague epidemics. They also confirm the steering towards the Lutheranism since 1542: the Protestant Reformation in the Lensahn duchies counted 36 yards, including Wendisch-Lensahn and Beschendorf.
Lensahn is an Amt ("collective municipality") in the district of Ostholstein, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. The seat of the Amt is in Lensahn.
The Amt Lensahn consists of the following municipalities:
Coordinates: 54°13′59″N 10°52′59″E / 54.233°N 10.883°E / 54.233; 10.883