Fewjena
Fewjena
City of Jena
Coordinates: 50 ° 55 ′ 57 ″ N , 11 ° 36 ′ 1 ″ E
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Height : | 140–170 m above sea level NN | |
Area : | 5.02 km² | |
Residents : | 11,463 (Dec. 31, 2017) | |
Population density : | 2.283 inhabitants / km² | |
Incorporation : | October 1, 1909 | |
Postal code : | 07749 | |
Area code : | 03641 | |
Location of Wenigenjena in Thuringia |
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Karl-Liebknecht-Straße in Wenigenjena (towards the city center)
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Wenigenjena is a district of the university town of Jena in Thuringia .
location
Wenigenjena is east of Jena city center and east of the Saale . The district can be reached via the Camsdorfer Brücke , the Griesbrücke and the Wiesenbrücke . The new route of federal highway 7 limits the district to the north. This is where the borders with Kunitz / Laasan meet , Jenaprießnitz / Wogau continue to the east , then the Kernberg area and Ziegenhain , Stadtmitte and Jena Nord to the south .
11,356 inhabitants live in an area of 5.02 km² (as of December 31, 2015). The federal road 7 once ran over the Camsdorfer Bridge through the middle of the district. Relief was found with the Wiesenstrasse bridge.
history
Wenigenjena ("Klein-Jena" or "Wendisch-Jena") was created at the ford of an old east-west trade route that crosses the Saale. Yugoslavian settlement pits are proven here. The oldest cemetery in Jena, which dates back to the 9th century, was discovered in the area of the Church of Our Lady in Wenigenjena. The city archaeologist Matthias Rupp therefore assumes that Wenigenjena was the origin and the first settlement area of Jena. To the right of the Saale is the Jenzig with its steep and rocky flanks. Finds from the Bronze and Iron Ages were made in its earth . He once carried a fortified hilltop settlement with cultic significance.
Wenigenjena was first mentioned in a document in 1257, the neighboring town of Camsdorf on April 25, 1369. On April 22, 1890 the district committee decided unanimously to merge the two suburbs of Jena. The State Ministry of Saxony-Weimar decided to do so on July 9, 1891. In 1909, Wenigenjena was incorporated into Jena.
Attractions
The Schillerkirche "Our Lady", a hall church from the 14th / 15th. Century, the original church building is in Wenigenjena. Wenigenjena is connected to the city center of Jena by the Camsdorfer Bridge , which crosses the Saale . The historic green fir inn is located on this bridge . Since 1960 there has also been the Albert Schweitzer community center in Wenigenjena , which is connected to the Schillerkirche via the Jena - Thalbürgel church cycle path .
traffic
Wenigenjena is connected to the Jena local transport network from around 4 a.m. to midnight every day. Two lines operate on the tram route opened in 1914, as well as one bus line. The diameter lines 2 and 14 connect Wenigenjena to the city center and lead to change trains in other parts of the city to the west and south of Jena. In the evenings (on weekends also in the morning), tram line 33 replaces line 2. The regional bus lines 410 and 411 connect Jena with Eisenberg and in Wenigenjena connect the Fuchslöcher residential area to the local transport network. The train stations Jena Paradies and Jena West can also be easily reached from Wenigenjena.
Wenigenjena is connected to the federal trunk road network with the B 7 .
Personalities
- Karl Eduard Putsche (1805–1882), philologist
See also
literature
- Karlheinz Hengst / Peter Wiesinger: The Jena names in Thuringia from a linguistic, dialectological and historical perspective. In: Contributions to Name Research, Vol. 51, H. 1, 2016, pp. 3–38.
Web links
- The church district of Wenigenjena
- Norbert Nail: Philological gleanings on the place name Jena. (PDF; 313 kB), https://norbert-nail.de/jena-norbert-nail.pdf , June 2017, p. 8: “In summary, it can now be stated […] that the riddle about the ON [place name ] Jena is far from resolved [...]. "
Individual evidence
- ↑ Wenigenjena on jena.de
- ↑ Norbert Nail and Joachim Göschel (eds.): About Jena - The riddle of a place name . Journal for Dialectology and Linguistics - ZDL Beihefte; Issue 104, Franz Steiner Verlag Stuttgart, 1999, ISBN 3-515-07504-6 , p. 18
- ^ Matthias Rupp: The four medieval fortifications on the Hausberg near Jena . Municipal museums Jena, 1995, ISBN 3-930128-22-5 , p. 17
- ↑ Michael Köhler: Pagan sanctuaries - pre-Christian places of worship and suspected cult sites in Thuringia. Jenzig-Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-910141-85-8 , p. 187
- ↑ Kurt Zahn: On the history of Wenigenjena and Camsdorf from its first mention in 1257 to its incorporation into the city of Jena in 1909: family register and house book. Working Group for Central German Family Research
- ^ Wolfgang Kahl : First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual . Verlag Rockstuhl, Bad Langensalza 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , pp. 310 and 48