Boderitz (Bannewitz)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boderitz
Municipality Bannewitz
Coordinates: 51 ° 0 ′ 4 "  N , 13 ° 42 ′ 48"  E
Residents : 167  (December 31, 2012)
Incorporation : 1922
Postal code : 01728
Area code : 0351
map
Location of Boderitz in Bannewitz

Boderitz is a district of the Saxon municipality of Bannewitz in the district of Saxon Switzerland-Eastern Ore Mountains .

Entrance to Boderitz

history

Boderitz was first mentioned in 1350 as Podebrese (place at the birch grove). The settlement could already have taken place before the year 1000 by Elbe Slavic tribes and later by German settlers. This can be assumed from the round or horseshoe-shaped arrangement of the farmsteads. The Rundling was a typical form of settlement for the Slavs in this area.

Other earlier names were Podebrese 1350, Bodebriß 1400, Podenbrose 1431, Podenwese 1445, Podieritz 1451, Poderwitz 1551, Paderitz 1561.

In 1408, the Dresden patrician Vincenz Busmann and his brothers were enfeoffed with Boderitz by Margraves Wilhelm II , Friedrich I and Friedrich the Friedfertigen along with 14 other villages near Dresden, but pledged it as early as 1414 and had to pay off debts in 1431 the margravial court Jew Jordan, who sold it to the Dresden citizens Nicolaus Tirmann and Peter Zcuzcke.

Boderitz was parish in Dresden until 1902, and since then in Bannewitz.

In 1922 Boderitz was incorporated into Bannewitz, and since 2000 Boderitz has had the status of a district of Bannewitz.

Cultural history

The Marienschacht - a hard coal mine sunk in 1886, in which the bismuth later extracted uranium-containing rock - is located on Boderitzer Flur. His Malakow shaft tower is part of the coat of arms of the municipality of Bannewitz.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Municipal administration Bannewitz: Presentation of the districts of Bannewitz
  2. ^ Boderitz in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  3. ^ Document book of the cities of Dresden and Pirna (CDS II 5) . Leipzig 1875, No. 129, p. 117 f.
  4. ^ Document book of the cities of Dresden and Pirna (CDS II 5) . Leipzig 1875, No. 152, p. 133 f.
  5. ^ Johann Christian Hasche: Diplomatic history of Dresden from its creation to our days . Dresden 1817, Part 3, No. 135, p. (234).