Altenhof (Leisnig)

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Altenhof
community Leisnig
Coordinates: 51 ° 10 ′ 0 ″  N , 12 ° 58 ′ 58 ″  E
Residents : 362  (1950)
Incorporation : July 1, 1963
Incorporated into: Naunhof
Postal code : 04703
Area code : 034321
map
Location of Altenhof in the area of ​​the city of Leisnig
Altenhof, church from the southeast
Altenhof, church around 1840 (Saxony's church gallery)

Altenhof is a district of the city of Leisnig in the district of central Saxony . 1950 the place had 362 inhabitants. In 1963 he was incorporated into Naunhof , in 1992 to Bockelwitz , and in 2012 to Leisnig.

history

Altenhof village church

Altenhof was built before 1190 as part of the state expansion. Before 1190, the church dedicated to St. Aegidius , a patron who enjoyed great popularity among the lords of the Pleißenland , was certainly founded . In 1192 Altenhof and its church were part of the basic equipment of the Cistercian monastery in Buch . Research assumes that it was called Buch at that time , because it was the seat of the Lords of Buch, ministers of the Burgraves of Leisnig, who at that time probably had to move to the new courtyard (the neighboring Naunhof). In 1231, the Bishop of Meißen had to settle a dispute between the Lords of Buch and the monastery, who reclaimed the fields at the antiqua curia (Altenhof), but the abbot was able to prove that the fields had been in the monastery for over 30 years.

Until the secularization after the Reformation , Altenhof remained in the possession of the monastery, the church was also taken care of by the monks of the monastery until then . The church in Altenhof also included Naunhof, Naundorf (near Leisnig) and Beiersdorf.

The remaining goods of the monastery were summarized in the office monastery book. According to his office inheritance book of 1548 ten possessed men belonged to Altenhof , including seven hookers, who are all loanable and interestable to the monastery book with 15.75 hooves. The higher court belonged to the Leisnig office, the inheritance court to the Klosterbuch office. They serve the office with four foot servants and put their share according to the number of their hooves on the three military vehicles that are in office. The monastery office now also had to maintain the church in Altenhof. The pastors and schoolmasters of Altenhof from the Reformation to 1750 can be found in the Leisnig Chronicle. This source is also used by the Saxon Church Gallery, which lists other events and anecdotes about the story.

Information on the more recent history of the village can be found in the New Mildensteiner Storyteller, the newsletter of the Leisniger history and homeland association.

literature

  • Cornelius Gurlitt : Altenhof. In:  Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the Kingdom of Saxony. 25th booklet: Office governance Döbeln . CC Meinhold, Dresden 1903, p. 1.
  • Jens Kunze: The Leisnig Office in the 15th Century , p. 344, Leipzig, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86583-027-2
  • Georg Dehio : Handbook of German Art Monuments, Saxony II, p. 78, Munich 1998, ISBN 3-422-03048-4

Web links

Commons : Altenhof  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. see under Web Links: Digital Historical Directory of Places
  2. Jump up Gerhard Graf: The Aegidius Patronage and the Pleißenland Imperial Territory . In regional history as a challenge and program, commemorative publication for Karlheinz Blaschke. Stuttgart 1997, ISBN 3-515-07212-8
  3. summarized by Thomas Ludwig: Property history of the Cistercian monastery in Buch bei Leisnig , master's thesis, Leipzig 1996
  4. ^ Repertory Saxonicum of the ISGV , Amtserbbuch Kloster Buch / Altenhof
  5. Johann Kamprad: Leisnigker chronicles from 1753, copy on behalf of Leisniger history and heritage association (2013), pp 333-337, ISBN 978-3-00-043035-0 .
  6. Sachsens Kirchengalerie, Fifth Volume, Sixth Section, The Inspections Nossen, Leisnig, Döbeln and Wurzen, Altenhof pp. 50–54, additions p. 118, p. 140, Dresden, around 1840.
  7. No. 1/2012, Leisnig's new districts - Altenhof by Renate Simon, p. 2.