Goßberg (Striegistal)

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Goßberg
Striegistal municipality
Coordinates: 50 ° 59 ′ 22 ″  N , 13 ° 12 ′ 14 ″  E
Height : 320 m above sea level NN
Area : 3.13 km²
Residents : 93  (2014)
Population density : 30 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1994
Postal code : 09661
Area code : 037207
Goßberg (Saxony)
Goßberg

Location of Goßberg in Saxony

Goßberg is a district of the Striegistal community in the district of central Saxony in the Free State of Saxony . The place merged on January 1, 1994 with three other places to form the Striegistal municipality, which in turn was expanded to include the Tiefenbach municipality on July 1, 2008 .

geography

Entrance to Goßberg

Geographical location

Goßberg is located on a hill between three smaller rivers: the Aschbach , which drains the southern part of the Zellwald , the Langhennersdorfer Bach coming from Langhennersdorf and the Great Striegis , into which the other two brooks flow. South of Goßberg is the Lichtenstein settlement belonging to the village in the Berzebach valley.

traffic

Goßberg is located in the south-east of Striegistal in the immediate vicinity of junction 74 Berbersdorf on Autobahn 4 north of the town . The place is only connected to the 691 bus line by a bus stop 1 kilometer away at the fork to Pappendorf and Mobendorf.

Neighboring places

Berbersdorf Schmalbach
Pappendorf Neighboring communities Reichenbach
Mobendorf Seifersdorf

history

View of the town of Goßberg
View of the town of Goßberg
Goßberg volunteer fire department

Goßberg was first mentioned in 1428 as Gogisperg . This year it has existed for more than two centuries. Goßberg is parish to Pappendorf . However, the setting judge had to give part of the court differences to the judge in Reichenbach. With a size of 18 hooves, Goßberg forms a small part of the area that belonged to the monastery territory from the beginning, out of a total of 800 hooves within the foundation of Margrave Otto . It can be assumed that it was cleared after 1162. There is no documentary evidence for this, but there is a lot of evidence. The majority of the villages founded by Otto, which belonged to the foundation area of ​​the Altzella monastery, are row villages with forest hooves , often larger than 30 hooves. Goßberg is a street green village with a corridor . In the majority of villages in the region governed Erbrichter coexistence and contact with the landlord in Goßberg it was a setting judge.

Until the Reformation in 1540, the Altzella monastery was the landlord of the place. Then the village came from the possession of the secularized Altzella monastery into the possession of Ulrich von Mordeisen . After his death, his son Rudolph sold the five inherited villages Berbersdorf , Goßberg, Kaltofen , Mobendorf and Pappendorf in 1587 to Margrave Christian . Henceforth, the village belonged until 1856 as office Village for Saxon and Royal Saxon Office Nossen . From 1856 Goßberg belonged to the Hainichen court office and from 1875 to the Döbeln administration , which was renamed the Döbeln district in 1939.

With the second district reform in the GDR in 1952, the Goßberg community was incorporated into the newly founded district of Hainichen 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 2008 rose in the Central Saxony district.

On January 1, 1994 the municipality of Goßberg merged with the municipalities of Pappendorf (with Kaltofen ), Mobendorf and Berbersdorf (with Schmalbach ) to form the municipality of Striegistal. This in turn merged on July 1, 2008 with the municipality of Tiefenbach to form the new municipality of Striegistal.

Place name forms

  • 1428 Gogisperg
  • 1470 Cospergk
  • 1497 Gaußpergk
  • 1542 Goßberg
  • 1590 Gottesberg
  • 1670 Goßbergk
  • 1828 Gosberg vulgo Gußbrich

Interpretation / origin of the name

In the historical book of place names of Saxony one can read: “The reconstruction of the late medieval name must remain open. Maybe an original [field name]. Also a [personal name] to mhd. Gogen gogelen , to be exuberant, to move foolishly back and forth, is possible. ”With this, all assumptions that a connection of the name with the Altzella monastery , caused by the spelling of Gottesberg from 1590, are in connection bring it to absurdity.

Sights / tourism

Goßberg is the nature reserve Aschbach and the conservation area bounded Striegistäler. Along the Striegis, a hiking trail from Hainichen leads up the Große Striegis via Berbersdorf, Kaltofen, Pappendorf and Goßberg. From Goßberg to Bräunsdorf it is signposted as a geology hiking trail. Many geological outcrops are named and described on boards.
The immediate area can be explored on two shorter, signposted circular hiking trails.
The starting point can be the parking spaces a little above the former Goßberger Mühle. At the mill, on the banks of the Große Striegis, there is a covered seating area. There is a restaurant with an attached pension in the village.

literature

Johannes Langer: Local history forays through fields and places of the Ore Mountains and its foreland , Schwarzenberg / Saxony 1931, pages 74-77.

Web links

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

Goßberg in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Lichtenstein in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  2. ^ Ernst Barth: Goßberg, Hainichen district. In: Freiberger Land (= values ​​of our homeland . Volume 47). 1st edition. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1988, pp. 36-38.
  3. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 70 f.
  4. The Döbeln administrative authority in the municipal register 1900
  5. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. doebeln.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  6. ^ Goßberg on gov.genealogy.net
  7. Tiefenbach on gov.genealogy.net
  8. Karlheinz Blaschke (ed.): Historical local directory of Saxony , new edition, Leipzig 2006, ISBN 3-937209-15-8 , page 270
  9. Ernst Eichler , Hans Walther (Ed.): Historisches Ortnamesbuch von Sachsen , Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-05-003728-8 , Volume I, page 341