Wandsbek was once part of the
county Stormarn. Its villages were first mentioned in the middle of the 13th century. The name
Wandsbek,
Wandsbeck or (older)
Wantesbeke derives from old Low Saxon ("
Low German") for "border river" and the river Wandse was a natural territorial border. An old
Danish phrase for stating that something is a fraud / unreliable is to claim that
"det gælder ad Wandsbek[/Vandsbæk] til" (i.e.
"this is valid in Wandsbeck."). Wandsbek was one of the three locations in the Danish monarchy where the first lottery drew its numbers, and this expression dates from the early years of this lottery's life where a number of people tried to claim prizes in Copenhagen with tickets from Wandsbeck. Since each of the three towns drew its own set of numbers, a ticket from one town was worthless in the two others. Until 1864 Wandsbek was a part of the
Duchy of Holstein and under the rule of the
King of Denmark. Afterwards, it became part of the Prussian province
Schleswig-Holstein. In 1937 the still Prussian city of Wandsbek joined the city of Hamburg through the
Greater Hamburg Act. ==Geography==