Ammelgoßwitz

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Ammelgoßwitz
Coordinates: 51 ° 28 ′ 43 ″  N , 13 ° 9 ′ 12 ″  E
Residents : 69  (May 9, 2011)
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Incorporated into: Liebersee
Postal code : 04874
Area code : 034224
Ammelgoßwitz
Ammelgoßwitz

Ammelgoßwitz is part of the municipality of Belgern-Schildau in the district of Northern Saxony in Saxony .

location

The district of Ammelgoßwitz is located east of Belgern and can be reached via a cul-de-sac from federal highway 182 . The district of the village lies west of the large Elbe arch on the western edge of the diked Elbe meadows south of Belgern.

history

In 1235, Margrave Heinrich von Meißen gave the Buch monastery the prædium in fundo nostræ proprietatis situm Amilgozwiz , partly for the money, the Mgf. Dietrich the oppressed (his father) had received from the monastery. In 1267 an agreement was reached between the Bishop of Meißen and the abbot of Buch monastery about the affiliation of the familia of the grangia Amilgozewicz to the parish in Belgern: the abbot had given the pastor of Belgern 14 bushels of wheat and the church of St. Bartholomäi to Belgern for pastoral care Pound of wax. In 1268 this agreement was specified and confirmed: legacies should belong to the church to Belgians, other donations should go to the magister curiae , confession and communion at Easter should be held by the monks sent by the abbot.

In 1280, when Ulrich von Pack transferred an island to the monastery, the allodium Amilgozwiz of the von Buch brothers was named. Mgf sold in 1286. Heinrich gave the monastery the upper and lower court in Amelgozewitz . In 1326 Gutzelo von Triestewitz had to return his fiefdom in Belgern to the Abbot of Buch because of damage to the Amelgostewitz farm . In 1337 Mgf. Friedrich II. (The serious one) u. a. the allodium Ammelgostewicz under his protection.

In 1353 the abbot of Bosau questioned the witnesses of two attacks on Ammelgoßwitz. First 19 horses, and then 24 horses and 6 wagons of oats were stolen from the grangie. The survey was based on seven articles, unfortunately only the answers were recorded, the articles themselves are not named. In 1362 Titzko von Eichen filed an objection in the Ammelgoßwitz dispute, apparently he had earned income from Belgians that Boto von Torgau had previously owned and which were probably not taken into account when the city was transferred to the monastery. So he had resorted to self-help. Finally, the perpetrators of the Ammelgoßwitz court are banished.

In 1372 the abbot of Buch bought the margrave u. a. the Bede in Ammelgoßwitz. In 1378 Ammelgostewicz, curia monachorum in Buch , had to deliver 1 ton of fish, 1 gray cloth, 1 calf, 1 sheep and 2 shoulders to the castrum Torgau every year and to serve in the army. In 1485 it belonged to the Ernestine part of Saxony, although it was in the territory of the Albertine part. At the end of the 15th century the grangie was dissolved and the land was given to farmers for interest.

The place was always parish after Belgians.

In 1791 the place was called Ammelgoßwitz , as it is today. In 1818 91 and in 1946 213 people lived in the village. The regional authority was in Wurzen in 1551 , then in Belgern and from 1816 until today in Torgau. The village was incorporated into Liebersee on July 1, 1950 and reclassified to Belgern in 1994. It has belonged to Belgern-Schildau since January 1, 2013.

Mansion

The manor located in the village was owned by the Wittenberg professor Carl Ferdinand Schmid since 1796 . The mansion is still awaiting renovation.

Development of the population

year Residents
1551 06 possessed men , 35 residents , 18 hooves
1764 08 fireplaces, 18 hooves
1819 91
year Residents
1880 88
1895 74
1910 89
year Residents
1925 108
1939 097
1946 213

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Small-scale municipality sheet for Belgern-Schildau, city. (PDF; 795 kB) State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony , September 2014, accessed on May 29, 2015 .
  2. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 329. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 30.
  3. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 698. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 55.
  4. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 716. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 56.
  5. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 975. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 69.
  6. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 1121. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 75.
  7. original document SHStA Dresden: 10001, Mature certificates, No. 2377. pressure at. Schottgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book than # 146..
  8. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 2765. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 161.
  9. ^ Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii Buch, as no. 173.
  10. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 3676. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 184.
  11. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 3692. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 185.
  12. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 4025. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 192.
  13. Predecessor of the Torgau Office, see Hans Beschorner (Ed.): Registrum dominorum marchionum Missnensem (1378) . Entry LXIIa / 31. Leipzig / Berlin 1933, p. 242 .
  14. a b Ammelgoßwitz in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony