Clennen

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Clennen
City of Leisnig
Coordinates: 51 ° 11 ′ 59 "  N , 12 ° 55 ′ 26"  E
Postal code : 04703
Area code : 034321
map
Location of Clennen in the area of ​​the city of Leisnig

Clennen is a district of the city of Leisnig in the district of central Saxony . In 1925 the place had 105 inhabitants. In 1937 he was incorporated into Sion , 1973 with this to Bockelwitz , 2012 with this to Leisnig. Today around 50 people live in Clennen.

history

The village of Clennen is of Sorbian origin, recognizable by the fact that it still had to deliver wax grain to the Tragnitz Vorwerk in 1403, a levy that all villages that arose before the formation of the Burgwards Leisnig had to pay.

The name Clenne means "settlement near the maple trees" and is of Sorbian origin.

The first written mention Clennen 1214 in a document of the Bishop of Meissen for Klosterbuch in which he the transfer of the parish ( parochia ) Leisnig confirmed among its equipment tithe and conduct in Clennen. This escort makes it probable that apart from the road over the bridge in Fischendorf there was another old road that Leisnig bypassed.

The place was first parish after the Matthäi-Kirche Leisnig. In 1286 he was sent to the Altleisnig church , and to Sitten since the Reformation.

In 1378 Clennen had 43 bushels of grain and the same in oats a year, plus a kitchen beef, to deliver to the castrum Leisnig.

The Buch monastery inheritance book names 7 possessed men in Clennen, including 6 Pferdner, of which 2 can be borrowed and paid for to the Buch monastery, the other 5 reject and interest the Kötteritzsch zu Sitten, the council of Leisnig and the monastery Sornzig with a total of 23.5 Hooves. The courts belonged to the respective gentlemen or the Leisnig office.

literature

Web links

Commons : Clennen  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Clennen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  • Repertorium Saxonicum of the ISGV , Amtserbbuch Kloster Buch Clennen

Individual evidence

  1. see under Web Links: Digital Historical Directory of Places
  2. Manfred Kobuch: Leisnig in the table goods directory of the Roman King, NASG 64/1993, pp. 29–52.
  3. Organic farmer, Skat and 100 sheep: guests in Clennen and Doberquiz. Retrieved on July 18, 2018 (German).
  4. Original document: SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 193. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 4
  5. Old Salt Road according to Jens Kunze: Leisnig Office
  6. Predecessor of the Leisnig office, see Hans Beschorner (ed.): Registrum dominorum marchionum Missnensem (1378). Leipzig-Berlin (1933).
  7. see under web links: Repertorium Saxonicum of the ISGV