List of streets and squares in Kaditz
The list of streets and squares in Kaditz describes the street system in the Dresden district of Kaditz with the corresponding historical references. Streets and squares in the Kaditz district are listed. The extent of the statistical district 23 (Kaditz) is only slightly smaller and includes all streets of the Kaditzer Flur with the exception of Scharfenberger Strasse, which is entirely part of the statistical district 22 (Mickten) .
General
The most important street in the Kaditzer Flur is the federal motorway 4 , which has the Dresden-Neustadt motorway junction, named after the Neustadt side of the Elbe, in the district. It is connected to Elbepark Dresden as well as Washingtonstrasse and Kötzschenbroder Strasse via a complex system of ramps and crossings . There are no federal roads in Kaditz, but there are two Saxon state roads : the S 73 ( Washingtonstraße ) and the S 82 ( Leipziger Straße ). Before the incorporation of Kaditz into Dresden in 1903, streets were mostly named after neighboring towns to which they led or people with a local connection. Exactly one year after the incorporation, on January 1, 1904, Dresden's Lord Mayor Otto Beutler had around 20 Kaditz streets and squares renamed. The Wilhelminian-style settlement of Neukaditz, which was built around 1900, was particularly affected. In his announcement of November 11, 1903, Beutler stated that the reason for the renaming was that the street names concerned coincided in the newly incorporated towns, were already present in older parts of Dresden or were confusingly similar. The brisk settlement activity of the 1930s brought a third wave of new street names. All current street names were in effect before the Second World War. One (Bobestrasse) of the three (Strachwitzstrasse, Dungerstrasse and Riegelplatz) that were renamed during the National Socialist era to remove the names of unpopular people (Bobe, Radestock, Simson) has been reversed.
The naming of the 45 named Kaditz streets and one named square in the district (Riegelplatz) was partly systematic. Nine streets have names of neighboring or nearby places (plus Leipzig for the trunk road, and Gleina as a desert). Eight more relate to local field names (e.g. Kaditzer Tännicht, Seewiesen , Gucksberg), six have another local reference (small settlers, outskirts, sandy soil). Four streets bear the names of locally significant personalities (Adolf, Emilie, Waldemar, Kolbe), three of which are given names. Five bear the names of poets (Andersen, Geibel, Grimm, Schenkendorf, Schwab), three of which gave the fairytale poets' quarter its name. Two namesake were German language purists (Riegel, Dunger), in the time of the GDR one (Bobe) of the originally two streets (also Radestock), named after the consumer cooperatives, got its old name back. Six streets were named after Leipzig or Berlin university teachers, two (Quandt and Baudissin) after personalities who had rendered services to the arts in Dresden. The other three official street names are the center of Altkaditz , Lommatzscher Strasse, which follows the Pieschen naming system, and Washingtonstrasse, the name of which is the only Kaditz main thoroughfare created in the Weimar Republic that does not follow any system.
There are also unofficial names, including Borngasse or Wassergasse as a connecting route from Altkaditz to the Elbe. In Elbepark Dresden , which is completely on the Kaditzer Flur, there are also several unnamed streets, the adjacent buildings of which are part of Peschelstraße by post .
The cultural monuments that are located on the Kaditz streets and squares are listed in the list of cultural monuments in Kaditz .
Legend
The following table gives an overview of the streets and squares in the district as well as some related information. In detail these are:
- Name / Location: Current designation of the street or the place as well as under 'Location' a coordinate link via which the street or the place can be displayed on various map services. The geoposition indicates approximately the middle of the street.
- Length / dimensions in meters: The length information contained in the overview are overview values rounded up or down according to mathematical rules , which were determined in Google Earth with the local scale. They are more for comparison purposes and, if official values are known, are exchanged and marked separately. For squares, the dimensions are shown in the form a × b. The addition “in the district” or “in the district” indicates how long the street is within the city / district, provided it runs through several city / districts.
- Name origin: origin or reference of the name.
- Year of naming: Time at which the street was given its current name (if known).
- Notes: Further information on nearby institutions, the history of the street, historical names, monuments, etc.
- Image: Photo of the street.
Street directory
Name / location |
Length / dimensions |
Origin of name |
Year of designation |
Remarks | image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adolfstrasse location |
180 m | Adolf Franze, Kaditz landowner and councilor | 1900 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was called Straße VII as a plan street . | |
Altkaditz location |
340 m | Historic center of the street nanger village Kaditz | 1904 | Initially, Altkaditz was called Dorfplatz , then from 1899 after Martin Luther Lutherplatz . Since 1904 the section between Emmauskirche and Serkowitzer Straße, originally called Kirchstraße, has also been called Altkaditz . | |
At the Kaditzer Tännicht location |
210 m | Location on the Kaditzer Tännicht, a foothills of the Junge Heide that were gradually cleared and built on from 1890 to 1927 | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and was called Straße 76 as a plan street . | |
Location on the Kesselgrund |
400 m | Location on Kesselgründchen, a parcel of land | 1939 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects the Spitzhausstrasse and Gleinaer Strasse. | |
At the Seegraben location |
500 m | Location on Seegraben, a small moat in the middle of the old Elbarm Seewiesen , cf. Seewiesenweg | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects the Gucksbergweg and the Serkowitzer Straße. | |
On the outskirts location |
290 m | Location on the outskirts, near the city limits from Dresden to Radebeul , currently the oldest section of the Dresden city limits | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects Kötzschenbroder and Gleinaer Straße. | |
At the Vorwerkfeld location |
430 m | Location on the Vorwerkfeld, a parcel that belonged to the Vorwerk Poppewitz until the 15th century | 1939 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects Kötzschenbroder and Serkowitzer Straße. | |
Position on the hooves |
190 m | Location on parcel Die Hufen | 1911 | The street is located in the small Märchendichterviertel and connects Andersen- and Kötzschenbroder Straße. | |
Andersenstrasse location |
200 m | Hans Christian Andersen , Danish poet and writer | 1927 | The street is located in the small Märchendichterviertel and connects Gustav-Schwabstrasse and Grimmstrasse. | |
Baudissinstrasse location |
250 m | Wolf Heinrich Graf von Baudissin , writer, translator and diplomat | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was initially called Forststraße from 1896 , cf. At the Kaditzer Tännicht. | |
Bobestrasse location |
150 m | Hermann Bobe, co-founder and chairman of the first Saxon consumer association in Pieschen | 1926 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was called Strachwitzstraße between 1937 and 1956 after Moritz Graf von Strachwitz . | |
Dungerstrasse location |
160 m | Hermann Dunger , German language purist and teacher, co-founder of the General German Language Association (ADSV) , cf. Riegelplatz | 1935 | The street is in Neukaditz and before 1935 was called Radestockstraße after Max Radestock . | |
Emilienstraße location |
350 m | Emilie, wife of Carl Kolbe and daughter-in-law of Hermann Kolbe , cf. Kolbestrasse | 1899 | The northern part of the street forms the city limits to Radebeul . | |
Fechnerstrasse location |
490 m | Gustav Theodor Fechner , physicist and philosopher | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and from 1895 was initially called Albertstraße after King Albert . Originally it was part of the old connection route between Kaditz and Trachau (see Grimmstraße) and ended at Riegelplatz. Due to the construction of the motorway, the westernmost part was separated off in the 1930s and added to Grimmstrasse (this affected the house at Grimmstrasse 35 ). In the 1990s, large parts of the Elbepark were built over. A remnant of the connecting route to the west of Wächterstrasse is still there and is popularly called Alte Fechnerstrasse . The Rudi theater is on the street (No. 2a). | |
Fürstenhainer Strasse location |
950 m | Fürstenhain , then part of Kötzschenbroda | 1904 | The road consists of two parts, which are connected by a dirt road. The eastern one is part of a planned small settlement and has existed since 1937, the older western one was called Bernhardstrasse from 1899 after the then Kaditz pastor Bernhard Henrici. | |
Geibelstrasse location |
160 m | Emanuel Geibel , poet | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was called Straße E as a plan street . | |
Gleinaer Strasse location |
1,540 m | Gleina , desert around the location of the Dresden-Neustadt junction with the federal motorway 4 | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and consists of two unconnected parts. The eastern one is between Fürstenhainer Strasse and Am Stadtrand, the western one between Spitzhausstrasse and Kötzschenbroder Strasse. | |
Grimmstrasse location |
1,300 m | Brothers Grimm , linguists and fairy tale collectors, founders of German philology and German studies | 1904 | The street consists of three parts, which initially had different names. The smallest and oldest part is between Altkaditz and Serkowitzer Straße and was called Schmiedestraße until the 1920s after the Kaditzer village smithy located there. The largest section, located between Serkowitzer Straße and Riegelplatz, was part of the old connecting route between Kaditz and Trachau (see Fechnerstraße) and the most important traffic route to Altkaditz and was therefore initially called Hauptstraße from 1896 . To the east of Riegelplatz was the Wilhelmstrasse, also named in 1896 (namesake unknown), which reached to Rankestrasse. In 1996, when the motorway was expanded, the outermost eastern part was separated and connected to Peschelstrasse. | |
Gucksbergweg location |
240 m | Location on Gucksberg, a flat elevation that was used for viticulture, cf. Weingartenweg | 1939 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects Weingartenweg and Kötzschenbroder Straße. | |
Gustav-Schwab-Straße location |
180 m | Gustav Schwab , poet and pastor | 1927 | The street is located in the small Märchendichterviertel and connects Andersen- and Kötzschenbroder Straße. | |
Kathenweg location |
100 m | Former location of several cathens , simple cottages for farm workers | 1939 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects the Weingartenweg and Am Seegraben. | |
Kleinsiedlerweg location |
220 m | Inhabitants of the local planned small settlement | 1939 | The street connects Zitzschewiger and Gleinaer Straße. | |
Kolbestrasse location |
100 m | Hermann Kolbe , chemist, father-in-law of Emilie Kolbe, cf. Emilienstraße | 1904 | This cul-de-sac is located in Neukaditz and was initially called Georgstraße from 1892 after the then Crown Prince Georg . | |
Kötitzer Strasse location |
200 m | Kötitz , district of Coswig | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects Fürstenhainer Straße and Am Kaditzer Tännicht. | |
Kötzschenbroder Straße location |
(in the district) |
2,400 m Kötzschenbroda , then an independent municipality, since then part of Radebeul | 1904 | The street had been part of the right Elbe connection between Dresden and Meißen since the Middle Ages and was called Meißnische Straße . As a result of the devastating Elbe flood in 1784 , the traffic train was relocated further north in 1787, cf. Leipziger Street. From then on the now bypassed section was called Alte Meißner Straße , from 1899 Dresdner Straße . Their sequels are also called Kötzschenbroder Straße in Mickten and Kötzschenbrodaer Straße in Radebeul. Since the 1930s, the space for a four-lane expansion with a median was kept free in the Kaditz section of the building, which until now has only been implemented between Washingtonstrasse and Riegelplatz. It forms a street with Lommatzscher Strasse. | |
Long fields location |
220 m | Location on Langefeldchen, a parcel of land | 1937 | The street is located in a planned small settlement and connects the Zitzschewiger and Gleinaer Straße. | |
Leipziger Strasse location |
(in the district) |
600 m Leipzig , Saxon city | around 1840 | The road runs along the land border between the districts of Kaditz and Trachau or the border between the statistical districts of Kaditz and Mickten . The street had been part of the right Elbe connection between Dresden and Meißen since 1787 and took over the name Meißnische Straße from today's Kötzschenbroder Straße. Her continuations are also called Leipziger Strasse in Trachau, Mickten, Pieschen and the Leipziger Vorstadt or Meißner Strasse in Radebeul. | |
Leuckartstrasse location |
150 m | Rudolf Leuckart , zoologist, founder of parasitology | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and from 1900 was initially called Theresienstraße after Theresie, the wife of the last Kaditz community leader Friedrich Findeisen. | |
Lommatzscher Strasse location |
(in the district) |
400 m Lommatzsch , town near Meißen, northwest of Dresden | 1938 | The street runs along the land border between the districts of Kaditz and Mickten or the border between the statistical districts of the same name. The road beginning at Dreyzigerplatz in Mickten was created in connection with the construction of the motorway and initially served as a pure motorway feeder . Since the 1930s, the entire length of the building has been kept free for a four-lane expansion with a median, which so far has only been implemented between Washington and Pieschener Strasse. It forms a street with Kötzschenbroder Straße. | |
Peschelstrasse location |
1,000 m | Oscar Ferdinand Peschel , geographer, writer and editor | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was initially called Carlstraße from 1896 after the Kaditz farmer Carl Kuhn. In connection with the construction of the Elbepark and the expansion of the motorway, the extreme eastern part of Grimmstrasse was cut off in 1996, specifically connected to Peschelstrasse and extended south to Washingtonstrasse. | |
Quandtstrasse location |
180 m | Johann Gottlob von Quandt , art historian and patron | 1904 | The cul-de-sac marks the corridor boundary between Kaditz and Trachau and the boundary between the two statistical districts of the same name from the outer city limits to Leipziger Straße . It is located in Neukaditz along the Leipzig – Dresden railway line and was therefore initially called Bahnstraße from 1897 onwards . | |
Rankestrasse location |
1,200 m | Leopold von Ranke , historian | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz in the east of the Kaditzer Flur and was therefore initially called Oststraße from 1895 . Originally it was part of the old connection route between Trachau and Alt-Radebeul . | |
Riegelplatz location |
150 × 120 m | Herman Riegel , German language purist and art historian, co-founder of the General German Language Association (ADSV) , cf. Dungerstrasse | 1935 | This (with the exception of the center of Altkaditz) the only Kaditzer Platz is located at the intersection of Grimmstrasse and Kötzschenbroder Strasse. As the location of a Bismarck oak, it was called Bismarckplatz after Otto von Bismarck from 1899 , and then Simsonplatz after Eduard von Simson from 1904 . | |
Roscherstrasse location |
180 m | Wilhelm Roscher , historian and economist | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was initially called Luisastraße from 1892 after the then Princess Luise . | |
Sandbodenweg location |
230 m | Located in an area with sandy soil | 1937 | The street is located in a planned small settlement and connects the Zitzschewiger and Gleinaer Straße. | |
Scharfenberger Strasse location |
(in the district) |
280 m Scharfenberg , village of Klipphausen | 1904 | This dead end is the feeder to the Dresden-Kaditz sewage treatment plant and part of the historical Bischofsweg and ends at the level of the former Elbe ford on the Elbe meadows . To the east she sits down on the Übigaus and Micktens corridors . In large parts of the street forms the border between the two districts. | |
Schenkendorfstrasse location |
250 m | Max von Schenkendorf , writer and poet | 1904 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was initially called Marienstraße from 1899 after the wife of the Kaditzer Heinrich Findeisen, who had the street laid out on his building land, cf. Guardian Street. The lowest house numbers assigned are 23 and 24, as the original plan was to extend the street to the south to at least the corridor boundary to Mickten. | |
Seewiesenweg location |
310 m | Location on the old Elbarm Seewiesen , which bears this name due to the nature of its soil (damp lowland with swampy hollows), cf. At the Seegraben | 1937 | The street is located in a planned small settlement and connects Kötzschenbroder and Gleinaer Straße. | |
Serkowitzer Strasse location |
1,680 m | Serkowitz , directly neighboring district of Radebeul | 1900 | The road consists of two parts. The Gartenstrasse , which was named in 1899 and formerly Dorffrieden , was not included in the actual Serkowitzer Strasse until 1904 and runs on the garden side of the northern Altkaditz houses. The larger section west of Spitzhausstraße was originally part of the old connection route between Kaditz and Serkowitz. At the city limits to Radebeul, the street turns into Altserkowitz . | |
Spitzhausstrasse location |
1,220 m | Spitzhaus on the Radebeuler Lößnitzhöhen, in whose rough direction the road runs | 1904 | From 1896 the street was initially called Radebeuler Straße, as it connected the centers of Altkaditz and Alt-Radebeul . Its extension in Radebeul is Kaditzer Strasse . | |
Übigauer Strasse location |
1,010 m | Übigau , directly neighboring district of Dresden, at that time a neighboring community | 1896 | The name of the street crossing the Kaditz flood channel was written Uebigauer Straße until around 1905. Originally it was part of the old connecting route between Kaditz and Übigau or Mickten, its course from that time is only preserved on the short section from Altkaditz to the flood channel. In the southeast of the Kaditzer Flur and most of the Micktner Flur, the old Übigauer Straße was built over, with the exception of the section between the intersection of Washington- / Overbeckstraße and Scharfenberger Straße in Mickten, where it almost meets its Übigauer counterpart, Kaditzer Straße . | |
Wächterstrasse location |
(in the district) |
510 m Karl Georg von Wächter , lawyer, university professor and politician | 1904 | The street is in Neukaditz, its southern end (approx. 100 meters) belongs to Mickten. From 1899 it was called Heinrichstraße after the Kaditzer Heinrich Findeisen, who had the street laid out on his building land, cf. Schenkendorfstrasse. | |
Waldemarstrasse location |
250 m | Waldemar Höpfner, owner of a nearby asphalt, roofing felt and wood cement factory and member of the Kaditz municipal council | 1900 | The street is located in Neukaditz and was called Street A as a plan street . Original plans to extend the road to the north beyond Kolbestrasse were not carried out. During the GDR era, the corresponding corridor in the section between Peschel and Roscherstrasse was partly built over. | |
Washingtonstrasse location |
(in the district) |
300 m George Washington , first US President | 1932 | The road connects the Dresden-Neustadt motorway junction with the Flügelwegbrücke ( Kaditzer Bridge from 1930 to 1984 ) and was called Am Flugplatz from around 1920 after the first Dresden airfield in Kaditz . In connection with the bridge construction, it was extended in 1930 from Übigau via Mickten to Kaditz. In connection with the expansion of the motorway and the construction of the new Elbepark in 1996, its Kaditzer section was relocated to the east from Kaditzer to Micktner Flur and again extended in a northerly direction to Peschelstrasse. | |
Weingartenweg location |
360 m | Location near the former Episcopal-Meissnian vineyards ( Bischofsgarten ), cf. Gucksbergweg | 1939 | The street is part of a planned small settlement , connects Serkowitzer Straße and Am Vorwerkfeld and goes beyond it as a short dead end . | |
Zitzschewiger Strasse location |
720 m | Zitzschewig , district of Radebeul | 1937 | The street is part of a planned small settlement and connects Fürstenhainer Straße and Am Stadtrand. |
literature
- Adolf Hantzsch : Name book of the streets and places of Dresden (= messages of the association for the history of Dresden ). Wilhelm Baensch, Dresden 1905 ( Online [PDF; 37.1 MB ; accessed on May 24, 2019] 17th and 18th issue).
- New Neighborhood Kaditz e. V. (Ed.): Typically Kaditz. History and stories . Dresden 2002.
Web links
- Lars Herrmann: Streets and squares in Kaditz. Retrieved March 16, 2010 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ New Neighborhood Kaditz e. V. (Ed.): Dresden-Kaditz. History - stories - memories. Dresden 2005.