Steinbach (Bad Lausick)
Steinbach
City of Bad Lausick
Coordinates: 51 ° 8 ′ 41 ″ N , 12 ° 38 ′ 43 ″ E
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Height : | 164 m | |
Incorporation : | January 1, 1999 | |
Postal code : | 04651 | |
Area code : | 034345 | |
Location of Steinbach in Saxony |
Steinbach is a district of Bad Lausick in the Leipzig district in the Free State of Saxony . Steinbach, Beucha, Kleinbeucha and Stockheim belong to the village of Steinbach.
geography
Steinbach is located northwest of Bad Lausick am Jordanbach. Beucha on the Eula is located southwest of Steinbach . Stockheim is north of Steinbach.
history
Steinbach
Steinbach was first mentioned in 1168 in connection with a moated castle and the manor based on it . The Jordanbach decisively shaped the settlement complex. The manor, the church and the village developed as a village of streets and rows of streets. In Catholic times Steinbach belonged to the diocese of Merseburg . In 1445 there was a knight's seat with two outbuildings and in 1540 Hans von Holleuffer is named as the owner. The von Weißbach, von dem Winckel and, in 1608, Hans Georg von Zehmen families follow . He married Anna Margarethe von Kitzscher in 1614. The Thirty Years War brought many tribulations and looting to Hans Georg vZ. He had to flee from possessions and goods over twenty times. He had 17 children. The last two Zehmic owners of the Steinbach manor were Sigismund vZ in 1668 and his daughter Magdalene vZ in 1690. Kötteritz, b. v. Take. Her husband was the canon of Merseburg or Kurf. Secret Council and Vice Chancellor Wolff Siegfried von Kötteritz. He had the castle built around 1715 and the new church was built in 1717 on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the Reformation. Under his patronage, he had the church built in its current baroque form at his own expense. Other owners of the manor were Christoph Friedrich von Pflugk in 1719 (as the patron saint of the church, he arranged for the finely designed stucco ceiling to be installed in the church), the Baumann family in 1754 and, from 1891 until the expropriation in 1945, Alexander Pagenstecher († 1928) and his heirs. After 1945 the castle served as a school and later also as a municipal office.
Steinbach and the Vorwerk Lindhardt were in the Electoral Saxon and Royal Saxon Office Borna until 1856 . From 1856 the place belonged to the Lausick court office and from 1875 to the Borna district administration . Today's village was created to a not insignificant extent in the course of settlement policy in the area of the Espenhain opencast mine .
Beucha with small beucha
The village of Beucha was first mentioned in 1180 as "Bichow". It developed as a square village with a church and mill on the Eula. There was a manor in the village. The settlement of Kleinbeucha between Beucha in the south and Steinbach in the north did not develop until the 18th century with sheep farming and fish farming. Beucha formed with Flößberg and a share of Trebishain an exclave between the offices of Borna and Colditz , which until 1816 belonged to the Electoral Saxon or royal Saxon inheritance of Grimma and was then affiliated to the Borna office. From 1856 the place belonged to the Borna court office and from 1875 to the Borna district administration.
Stockheim
Stockheim was first mentioned in 1204. The Reihendorf am Göselbach was the most south-westerly place in the main part of the Electoral Saxon or Royal Saxon inheritance of Grimma. In 1856 the place came to the Lausick court office and in 1875 to the Borna district administration.
Common history of the districts of Steinbach
Steinbach, Beucha and Stockheim belonged to the Borna district in the Leipzig district since 1952 . On January 1, 1967, Steinbach and Beucha merged to form Steinbach-Beucha. This in turn merged with Stockheim on October 1, 1972 to form a community called "Steinbach". During the district reform in the Free State of Saxony, Steinbach came to the Muldental District in 1994 . On January 1, 1999, it was incorporated into Bad Lausick. After 1990, agriculture and forestry have remained formative for the place compared to other branches of the economy. The village of Steinbach has a local council.
literature
- Stefan Hänsel: Local family book Steinbach near Bad Lausick 1577–1799. Berlin: epubli 2014, ISBN 978-3-8442-9996-0 , 503 families
- Doris Rahn, Petra Friedrich, Andreas Süß, Falk Golde, Frank Müller, Jens Raake, Reinhard Tost: Seven Towers - One Thought, Churches and Parishes in Leipzig's Neunseenland. Ev.-Luth. Church communities Steinbach and Kitzscher, 2007, created as part of a project by the Heimatverein des Bornaer Landes e. V., including a beautiful and interesting description of the Steinbach church.
- Matthias Donath : Palaces in Leipzig and the surrounding area . edition Sächsische Zeitung Redaktions- und Verlagsgesellschaft Elbland mbH, Meißen 2013, p. 10, Steinbach p. 126 and 128.
Web links
- http://www.bad-lausick.de/de/stadt-region/index.php?id=15 , portrait of the district of Steinbach on the Bad Lausick homepage
- http: //www.sachsens-schlösser.de/index.php/12-b/417-bad-lausick-schloss-steinbach , Steinbach Castle
- http://www.freizeit-objekte.de/objk_auf.php?ID=04-651-55 , Steinbach mansion
- To the district of Beucha
Individual evidence
- ^ Hanns-Moritz von Zehmen: Genealogical news about the Meißnian nobility of Zehmen, 1206 to 1906. Wilhelm Baensch, Dresden 1906, p. 38, cf. P. 56 and 57.
- ↑ Seven towers - one thought, churches and parishes in Leipzig's Neunseenland. Ev.-Luth. Kirchengemeinden Steinbach and Kitzscher, 2007 p. 56, cf. Pp. 58 and 59.
- ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 62 f.
- ^ The Borna District Administration in the municipal directory 1900
- ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 60 f.
- ^ The Borna District Administration in the municipal directory 1900
- ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 60 f.
- ^ The local council of Steinach on the website of the Free State of Saxony