Dietzhausen
Dietzhausen
City of Suhl
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Coordinates: 50 ° 36 ′ 5 ″ N , 10 ° 35 ′ 32 ″ E | |
Height : | 362 (360-380) m |
Residents : | 1118 (Jan 31, 2015) |
Incorporation : | April 1, 1994 |
Postal code : | 98529 |
Area code : | 036846 |
Location of Dietzhausen in Suhl
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Former school
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Dietzhausen has been part of the independent city of Suhl in the Free State of Thuringia since 1994 .
Geographical location
Dietzhausen is located in the southern Thuringian Forest west of Suhl, on the road to Meiningen in the valley of the Hasel. In the west the place borders on the village Wichtshausen , in the east on the villages Albrechts and Mäbendorf .
history
The place was first mentioned in a document in 810. Dietzhausen belonged to the county of Henneberg and was in the Saxon office of Kühndorf until 1815 . The place was parish after Albrechts . The first church was destroyed in 1634, the current church of St. Jonannes was built in 1681/82.
From 1816 to 1944 Dietzhausen was part of the Erfurt administrative district of the Prussian province of Saxony . On April 1, 1994 it was incorporated into Suhl.
An exhibition taught about the history of Dietzhausen during the Weimar Republic and after 1933, which was on view from August 30 to September 3, 2019 in the village church. The local historian and local historian Rudolf Denner compiled them. He dedicated it to the 45 dead and 17 missing from the Second World War who came from the village, as well as the 14 residents who stood in the resistance against National Socialism, and all those who perished in the Dietzhausen forced labor camp.
Personalities
Born in Dietzhausen:
- Eberhard von Breitenbuch (1910–1980), resistance fighter against Adolf Hitler
- Horst Brandt (trade unionist) (* 1928), trade unionist
Living in Dietzhausen:
- Landolf Scherzer (* 1941 in Dresden), writer and publicist
- Lars Nonn (* 1971 in Suhl), enduro athlete
Individual evidence
- ↑ René Heilig: Dietzhausen and the bird shit. The Second World War links a Thuringian village with the world. In: Neues Deutschland from August 31/1. September 2019, pp. 12–13 (with many illustrations)