Fishing village

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Fishing village
City of Leisnig
Coordinates: 51 ° 10 ′ 0 ″  N , 12 ° 55 ′ 35 ″  E
Incorporation : October 10, 1965
Postal code : 04703
Area code : 034321
map
Location of Fischendorf in the area of ​​the city of Leisnig

Fischendorf is a district of the city of Leisnig in the district of central Saxony . In 1964 the place had 849 inhabitants. In 1965 he was incorporated into Leisnig.

history

Fischendorf was created in the 12th century as part of the state expansion in the Pleißenland . It was subordinate to the Burgraves of Leisnig . According to the Leisnig official inheritance book, Wachkorn had to pay, a levy that still points to the time of Burgwards Leisnig. Fischendorf has no division of the hooves, so it was not a farming village. It was first mentioned in 1273 when taxes were transferred from Vischerstorf to the Sornzig monastery.

According to the Registrum Dominorum of 1378, "Vischerdorf et Droynicz" had to deliver a kitchen cattle together, a tax that probably dates from the time of the servitien of the Leisnig table good .

In 1496, farmers from Fischendorf were named whose donations were to go to the newly built Compassionis Mariae altar in the Matthäi Church in Leisnig, namely "Merten Clarman, Caspar Clarman, Valten Furkall, Jorge Langpein". Remains of these charges are still found in Amtserbbuch Leisnig as "six pence in the common chest", there were according to caste the revenues of the Church of St. Matthew, including the one side altars summarized. Furthermore, the official inheritance book in Fischendorf names "13 possessed men, including 1 hooker, all of whom can be lent to the Leisnig office and are subject to interest". For this purpose, the inn had to provide a whole army wagon (an armored wagon with 4 horses) together with the Clennen inn . This indicates income in connection with the right of escort in both places, which can be proven as early as 1214. The other residents of Fischendorf, however, were exempt from military service. The regional court was held in the tavern in Fischendorf, which included almost all of the villages in the Leisnig district. Several executions “on the sand at Fischendorf” and the Galgenberg are certainly connected with this.

The place was always parish after Tragnitz .

literature

  • Jens Kunze: The Leisnig Office in the 15th Century , pp. 354–355, Leipzig, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86583-027-2 .
  • Johann Kamprad: Leisnigker Chronika from 1753, copy commissioned by the Leisniger Geschichts- und Heimatverein (2013), ISBN 978-3-00-043035-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. see under Web Links: Digital Historical Directory of Places
  2. see under web links
  3. Harald Schieckel : Regesten of the documents of the Saxon State Main Archive Dresden . Berlin 1960, Regest 1002, p. 238.
  4. Hans Beschorner (Ed.): Registrum dominorum marchionum Missnensem (1378). Leipzig-Berlin (1933). Entry LXXIa / 34, p. 309.
  5. ^ Manfred Kobuch: Leisnig in the table goods directory of the Roman king . NASG 64/1993, pp. 29-52.
  6. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 9171. Printed by Schöttgen, Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 275.
  7. see under web links: Repertorium Saxonicum of the ISGV
  8. Original certificate SHStA Dresden: 10001, older documents, No. 193. Printed by Schöttgen , Codex Diplomaticus Monasterii book, as No. 4.
  9. Kamprad, p. 286.
  10. Kamprad, p. 287, which reports even more interesting details about the tavern.
  11. Kamprad, pp. 471-472.

Web links

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