Ehrenberg (Kriebstein)

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Ehrenberg
Kriebstein municipality
Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 35 ″  N , 13 ° 2 ′ 1 ″  E
Residents : 400
Incorporation : January 1, 1994
Postal code : 09648
Area code : 034327
Ehrenberg (Saxony)
Ehrenberg

Location of Ehrenberg in Saxony

Ehrenberg is a district of the municipality of Kriebstein in the district of central Saxony (Free State of Saxony ). The place was merged on January 1, 1994 with the previous communities Höfchen and Kriebethal to form the community of Kriebstein.

geography

Ehrenberg lies to the east of the Zschopau , which is dammed to the south-west of the town to form the Kriebstein dam.

Neighboring places

Kriebethal Schoenberg Massanei
Kriebstein Neighboring communities Grünlichtenberg
Erlebach Höckendorf

history

Ehrenberg Castle around 1850
Ehrenberg Manor (2019)

The Waldhufendorf Ehrenberg was first mentioned in 1349 as "Errinberg". Before 1560, the manorial estates of Ehrenberg belonged to the territory of the Lords of Kriebstein . After the ducal councilor Georg von Carlowitz auf Kriebstein died on May 2, 1550 and his eldest son Christoph had managed the father's legacy until the fraternal division in 1560, Ehrenberg fell to him among four brothers. The foundation stone for Ehrenberg Castle was laid on April 23, 1563 . Its possessions came to Wilhelm von Schönberg in 1583 . He ceded the property in 1607 to his son-in-law Georg Kölbel von Geysing by exchange, who sold it again in 1611 to his brother-in-law Wolff Rudolph von Ende . The Ehrenberg manor was first mentioned under the von Ende family in 1696, and the town of Ehrenberg also belonged to the manor. Between 1697 and the 19th century, Ehrenberg Castle was owned by the von Einsiedel family .

In 1588 the possessions of the former Kriebstein dominion, to which Ehrenberg also belonged, were integrated into the Rochlitz office . Thus, Ehrenberg belonged to the Electoral Saxon or Royal Saxon Office of Rochlitz until 1856 . The offices were dissolved during the administrative reforms carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony in the 19th century . As a result, in 1856 Ehrenberg came under the administration of the Waldheim court office and in 1875 to the newly founded Amtshauptmannschaft Döbeln . Ecclesiastically, the place is parish to Waldheim . After the death of Count Detlev von Einsiedel, who died in Dresden on March 20, 1861 , the property fell to his daughter, Mrs. Johanna Auguste Sahrer von Sahr , who passed away in Dresden on January 6, 1871, and Ehrenberg, like her other goods , to her husband Carl Heinrich Sahrer von Sahr left behind. He died in 1874 and bequeathed it to his nephew, Alfred Georg Sahrer von Sahr , as the marriage remained childless . He had three children with his wife, Helene Sahrer von Sahr, born in Einsiedel. Johanna Auguste, Nikolaus and Elisabeth Sahrer von Sahr. Alfred Georg Sahrer von Sahr died in 1921, his wife Helene in 1928, and Ehrenberg came to Nikolaus Sahrer von Sahr .

After the Second World War , the Sahrer von Sahr family was expropriated on September 2, 1945 as part of the land reform . After the land reform, new farmers moved into Ehrenberg Castle . In 1948 the building was demolished except for the so-called chapel wing. This section was still inhabited until around 1988 and then fell into complete disrepair.

As a result of the second district reform in the GDR , the municipality of Ehrenberg became part of the Hainichen district in the Chemnitz district (renamed the Karl-Marx-Stadt district in 1953 ), which was continued as the Saxon district of Hainichen from 1990 and in 1994 in the Mittweida district and in 2008 in Central Saxony district rose. On January 1, 1994, the Ehrenberg community was merged with the previous communities of Höfchen and Kriebethal to form the Kriebstein community. The Ehrenberg manor was acquired in 2000 by the artist and architect Pier Giorgio Furlan, who began renovating the farm buildings. In the former Ehrenberg manor, the support group “Centro Arte Monte Onore eV”, founded in 2000, has its seat, which realizes cultural projects and events with many volunteers and contributors.

Web links

Commons : Ehrenberg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Kriebstein Castle at www.sachsens-schlösser.de
  2. Ehrenberg Castle at www.sachsens-schlösser.de
  3. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 58 f.
  4. The Döbeln administrative authority in the municipal register 1900
  5. ^ Ehrenberg on gov.genealogy.net
  6. ^ Website of the support group "Centro Arte Monte Onore eV"