At Jacobstein

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Am Jacobstein is an approximately 600 meter long inner-city street in the Saxon city of Radebeul , located in the districts of Niederlößnitz and Naundorf .

View from Jacobstein: Wackerbarth Castle is to the right of Wackerbarthstrasse. Am Jacobstein runs at the foot of the mountain slope .

Development

View of Kötzschenbroda. 1867. Contemporary lithograph. House Liborius and the Lower Berghaus are halfway up, about a third from the right. Before that, Am Jacobstein runs right towards the castle. The avenue to the bottom left is Ludwig-Richter-Allee
Am Jacobstein, from the eastern farm building of Schloss Wackerbarth to the east (1906)

The numbering of the house addresses starts at the end of Winzerstraße or from Am Bornberge with No. 4 on the south side on the left, the even numbers start in the north right after the junction from Neufriedstein with No. 2 and go straight to No. 42 in front of the castle grounds. The odd numbers go up to number 21, in front of the castle on the south side there is still free grassland that belongs to the former Niederlößnitz waterworks and where water is still drawn today.

Some cultural monuments lie along the road and are therefore listed in the list of cultural monuments in Radebeul-Niederlößnitz (A – L) and the list of cultural monuments in Radebeul-Naundorf , some also with addresses of cross streets:

In addition to the house flywheel (building owner award 1998 in the renovation category), the building owner of the house Am Jacobstein 14 received recognition at the Radebeul building owner award (category new building) in 2005 .

At the western end, Am Jacobstein leads directly to the property of Schloss Wackerbarth , which can now be found at Wackerbarthstraße 1, after the cross street to Meißner Straße , which was not accessible to the public for a long time, is again on public property ; In GDR times, the address was Am Jacobstein 44. The location that can be reached directly from Am Jacobstein also includes the new production building for the Saxon State Winery, Schloss Wackerbarth , which is located next to the listed Baroque garden .

The land and vineyards on the north side opposite No. 9 belong to the historical vineyard landscape of Radebeul and above the buildings in the Lößnitz landscape protection area . The vineyards belong to the major Saxon wine location Lößnitz within the single location Radebeuler Steinrücke .

Wackerbarths Ruhe was listed as an art monument in Dehio's rapid inventory in 1905 , and in the more extensive inventory of monuments by Gurlitt in 1904 , the Jacobstein was also listed as Jacobsthurm with the same address as Wackerbarth (Friedrichstrasse 28), but also the house flywedel as a vineyard house (Friedrichstrasse 24). As early as 1912, the Niederlößnitz community issued a local decree to protect the property in order to protect it against parceling efforts ( urban sprawl ). The basis was the Saxon law against disfigurement of town and country from 1909.

Naming

The historic Berggasse was already mentioned as part of the Salzstrasse in the Kötzschenbrodaer Dorfrügen ( Thanneberger Rügen from 1497), also by Matthias Oeder (around 1600) in the maps of his first Electoral Saxony state survey . Hans August Nienborg mapped the route in 1714 as Berggasse .

Then followed before 1897 Grenzstraße and in 1897 the dedication as Friedrichstraße .

In 1935 the street was named Am Jacobstein after the eponymous landmark on the slope edge, the Jacobstein .

local residents

The Dresden councilor Johann Georg Ehrlich was one of the owners of the vineyards above the road.

The pedagogue Johann Peter Hundiker lived in the Lower Berghaus (No. 2).

The court chamber councilor Christian Friedrich von Gregory not only owned the “ Sorgenfrei” house in Oberlößnitz, but at times also owned the vineyards above Am Jacobstein including Wackerbarths Ruh ' .

literature

Web links

Commons : Am Jacobstein  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. Georg Dehio ; Barbara Bechter (arr.); Wiebke Fastenrath (arr.); u. a .: Saxony I; Dresden administrative district . In: Handbook of German Art Monuments . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1996, p. 730–739 (building mentioned as an example).
  2. Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 1998. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on January 31, 2015 .
  3. Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 2005. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on February 1, 2015 .
  4. Manfred Richter: Am Jacobstein. In: Niederlößnitz from yesteryear. Retrieved January 24, 2015 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 50 ″  N , 13 ° 37 ′ 25 ″  E