Flemmingen (Naumburg)

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Flemmingen
Community Naumburg (Saale)
Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 56 ″  N , 11 ° 46 ′ 6 ″  E
Height : 230 m
Residents : 579  (Dec. 31, 2003)
Incorporation : April 1, 1992
Postal code : 06618
Area code : 03445
Bad Kösen Crölpa-Löbschütz Eulau Flemmingen Janisroda Kleinjena Neidschütz Prießnitz Wettaburg Naumburg (Saale) Burgenlandkreismap
About this picture
Location of Flemmingen in Naumburg (Saale)
St. Lucia Church
St. Lucia Church

Flemmingen is a district of Naumburg (Saale) and is located in the Burgenland district in Saxony-Anhalt .

location

It is located about 1 km southwest of Naumburg after the Saale heights on a higher terrain level with partially loosened arable soils.

history

On September 26, 1030, Emperor Konrad II gave Bishop Kadeloh of Naumburg the right to forest in the beech forest near his city (= Buchholz between Flemmingen and Naumburg). Tribun was the old Slavic place name that was replaced in the 12th century by the Dutch colony of Flemmingen. In 1140 the Dutch colony Hollandesium is mentioned for the first time . 1154 the villa Tribune dicta hollandensem is mentioned in a document. The place name Flemmingen probably developed from the name of the colonists of the Flemings , Flämingern, because in 1152 Hollandini qui et Flamingi appears . Around 1160, the place came into the possession of the Pforta monastery under Bishop Berthold II . This is a consequence of the swap of the ground by the Pforta monastery , which gives up its holdings Steinbach, Stockheim and Dumerich in favor of Flemmingen and Tribun. The name Tribun lasted until the beginning of the 13th century and was then finally replaced by the name Flemyngin (1234), Flemingen (1250) by the middle of the century .

A ministerial family named after the place, probably from the line of the episcopal Burgmann family from Schönburg Castle , appears in Pforta and Naumburg documents. A Hugo de Sconenberg (1161), who also called himself Hugo de Tribun (1172), is documented. In 1187 he bequeathed his property in Flemmingen to his wife and sons Hugo, Bodo, Adalbert and Hermann. a. a vineyard, a wood, a stone house with the farmyard there. In 1205 a knight named himself Albert, presumably Hugo's son, after the place Tribun. Further mentions in 1271 and 1277 with the knight Albert named von Flemingen and 1304 with Conradus dictus de Vlemingen on Flemmingen.

From 1294 to 1322 a Herr Petrus, Pleban in Flemmingen is mentioned in a document.

In 1271, Landgrave Albrecht von Thuringia gave Pforta the court over Flemmingen. In 1352, Friedrich III. the blood spell over the places Flemmingen and Altenburg (Almrich) . This led to an increasing dependence of the two villages on the Cistercian abbey of Pforta. With regard to the sovereign sovereignty, both places initially belonged to the Eisenberg district office , which came to the Ernestines when Leipzig was partitioned in 1485 and to the Albertines when the Wittenberg surrender took place in 1547 . When the Eisenberg district office was ceded again to the Ernestines in the Naumburg Treaty in 1554, the two places were separated from the latter and placed under the Freyburg office of the Electorate of Saxony , from which they were, however, territorially separated. After the dissolution of the Pforta monastery from 1543, jurisdiction over the two places lay with the Albertine office of Pforta .

In 1592 the places Flemmingen and Altenburg (Almrich) were united to a parish . Until 1852 these belonged to the parish Eckartsberga . The decisions of the Congress of Vienna came Flemmingen 1815 to Prussia and in 1816 the county Naumburg in the administrative district of Merseburg of the Province of Saxony assigned to the part of the site to the 1944th

Due to the topographical altitude, the people of Naumburg built a drinking water reservoir on the Kohlenstraße in 1915.

On April 1, 1992, the town was incorporated into Naumburg.

Personalities

Attractions

The local church of St. Lucia was built in the middle of the 12th century. Inside the church there are Romanesque frescoes and cube capitals as well as numerous wall paintings and a baroque pulpit altar .

literature

  • August von Wersebe: About the Dutch colonies, which were donated in northern Germany in the twelfth century, further research with occasional comments on the simultaneous history , Volume 2, 1816 p. 923ff
  • Walter Schlesinger : Flemmingen und Kühren , In: Ostsiedlung und Landesausbau in Sachsen: The Kührener deed of 1154 and its historical environment by Enno Bünz , Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2008
  • Louis Naumann : Dorf und Flur Flemmingen , Verlag Sieling Naumburg 1914
  • Carl Peter Lepsius : Small writings, contributions to the Thuringian-Saxon history and German art and antiquity , Volume 2, 1834, pp. 141-142
  • Carl Peter Lepsius: History of the Bishops of the Naumburg Monastery before the Reformation , 1846, pp. 268–269
  • Heinrich Bergner : Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the province of Saxony , Naumburg district (Land), 1905, pp. 26–28
  • Günter Hummel et al: The houses of worship in the Flemmingen parish . In: The little sacred art guide . Beier and Beran, Langenweißbach 2005, ISBN 978-3-937517-37-7 , pp. 92 .

Web links

Commons : Flemmingen  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. RI III, 1 n.162
  2. Small stories on Saxon-Thuringian history, Volume 2, pp. 140f.
  3. ^ Locations of the Prussian district of Naumburg in the municipal directory 1900