Badersen

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Badersen
City of Nossen
Coordinates: 51 ° 8 '55 "  N , 13 ° 15' 58"  E
Height : 197 m above sea level NN
Area : 1.49 km²
Residents : 33  (May 9, 2011)
Population density : 22 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : November 1, 1935
Incorporated into: Proda
Postal code : 01683
Area code : 035241
Badersen (Saxony)
Badersen

Location of Badersen in Saxony

Badersen is a district of the Saxon city ​​of Nossen in the district of Meißen . First mentioned in 1319, it belonged to Leuben-Schleinitz from 1993 to 2014 , but was incorporated into Pröda as early as 1935. It has belonged to the city of Nossen since 2014.

geography

View from the east of Badersen

Badersen is located about twelve kilometers west of the district town of Meißen and six kilometers southwest of Lommatzsch on the western edge of the district. The place is about 200  m above sea level. NN in Lommatzscher Pflege , surrounded by arable land on the western slope of a small valley. To the south and west of Badersen runs the Markritzer Bach , which rises between Markritz and Lüttewitz and flows into the Thirties Water at Lossen . North of Perba , this stream flows into the Ketzerbach , which drains into the Elbe near Zehren (municipality of Diera-Zehren ) .

Badersen is connected to the district road 8078 from Markritz to Perba , which passes east of the town . Connections via paved roads also exist from the town center to the neighboring towns of Gödelitz and Lossen. There are several farms in the village , including three-sided and four-sided farms . Badersen forms a district that borders Lossen in the north. Schleinitz is neighboring in the northeast, and the Pröda / Schl district is to the east of Badersen . In the southeast Praterschütz is neighboring, in the west the district borders Gödelitz. With the exception of Gödelitz, which belongs to the town of Döbeln in the district of central Saxony , all surrounding towns such as Badersen are part of the town of Nossen.

history

Population
development
year Residents
1834 084
1871 098
1890 106
1910 097
1925 094
Pröda
Badersen and the surrounding area in the Oberreit'schen Atlas, before 1843

Badersen is first mentioned in 1319 as a poseblood . The place name comes from Old Sorbian and means "place on the birch grove" or "place on the shore". Podebross is mentioned in 1454 , Padersenn was handed down in 1552 . Another name variant dates from 1671, when Badershain is mentioned. Badersen and Baderschen are recorded in 1814.

In the early modern period , Badersen was administered from Meißen. At the end of the 17th century, the place belonged to the Meißen hereditary office , then to the Meißen office in the middle of the 19th century and, from 1856, to the Lommatzsch court office. From 1875 the administration was then incumbent on the Meißen district administration . Before Badersen was given independence as a rural community by the Saxon rural community order in 1838, the place was characterized by the feudal system . In 1552 the manor Hof exercised the manorial rule over 6 possessed men and 20 residents . At the end of the 17th century, the lords of Graupzig were the landlords. After the end of the Seven Years' War (1756–1763) the manor Gödelitz held the manorial rule over 5 possessed men and 7 cottagers who cultivated 12 Hufen land.

In 1900 extended to the farmers hamlet Badersen a 149 hectare large block and strip-floor , which was used almost exclusively agricultural, as the residents of the village were mostly farmers. In 1834, 84 people lived in Badersen, compared to 106 in 1890. Subsequently, the population decreased slightly. In 1925, 94 people lived in Badersen, all of whom belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran parish in Leuben. Already in the 16th century the place was parish in the local church. Today Badersen and the surrounding villages belong to the parish of Leuben-Ziegenhain-Planitz.

On November 1, 1935, Badersen's communal independence, which had been achieved in 1838, ended again, the place was incorporated into the neighboring town of Pröda, which was actually smaller than Badersen. On the same date Dobschütz and Praterschütz also became part of Prödas. Together, these places came after the Second World War in the Soviet zone of occupation and later the GDR . On July 1, 1950, the municipality of Pröda and its districts were incorporated into Schleinitz . The historically grown affiliation to Meißen was retained even after the territorial reform in 1952 , which Schleinitz and its districts assigned to the Meißen district in the Dresden district. Rural life in Badersen was now based on agriculture in the GDR .

After German reunification , Badersen came to the re-established Free State of Saxony. Since the municipality Schleinitz with its slightly more than 700 inhabitants was too small to remain independent, it merged with Leuben and its districts to Leuben-Schleinitz with effect from January 1, 1993. The following regional reforms located in Saxony leuben-schleinitz 1996 the district Meissen-Radebeul and 2008 the district Meissen to. With the incorporation of Leuben-Schleinitz into the city of Nossen on January 1, 2014, Badersen became a district of this city.

Web links

Commons : Badersen  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Badersen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony

Individual evidence

  1. Small-scale municipality sheet for Nossen, city. (PDF; 1.3 MB) State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony , September 2014, accessed on May 22, 2015 .
  2. a b Badersen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  3. With the incorporation of Badersen into Pröda in 1935, only population figures were collected for the entire community.
  4. Ernst Eichler , Hans Walther (ed.): Historisches Ortnamesbuch von Sachsen , Berlin 2001, Volume I, p. 33f, ISBN 3-05-003728-8
  5. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. City and district of Meißen. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  6. Federal Statistical Office (Ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 .
  7. ^ Schleinitz in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony