Goes (Dohma)

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Goes
Dohma municipality
Coordinates: 50 ° 55 ′ 45 ″  N , 13 ° 56 ′ 45 ″  E
Height : 180 m above sea level NN
Residents : 226  (May 9, 2011)
Incorporation : March 1, 1994
Postal code : 01796
Area code : 03501
Goes (Saxony)
Goes

Location of Goes in Saxony

Goes is a district of the municipality of Dohma in the Saxon Switzerland-Eastern Ore Mountains district , Saxony .

geography

Goes is situated on the western edge of Saxon Switzerland , which is part of the Elbe Sandstone Mountains . It is located on the flatness between the valleys of the bier to the west and the Gottleuba to the east. Goes is located a good kilometer northeast of the district of Dohma, which gives the municipality its name, not to be confused with the nearby town of Dohna . To the northeast is the Pirna district Südvorstadt , southeast Rottwerndorf . Zehista lies northwest of Goes . The Dürrhof district is located in the southeast of the Goes district .

Goes consists of its town center, a classic round with a village pond in its center, as well as a small settlement directly northeast of it along Neue Straße. The corridors around Goes are used for agriculture, there are allotment gardens on the municipality border with Pirna. In the east of the district lies the Kuhbusch, a small piece of forest, and the wooded slopes of the Gottleubatals. South of the village, the Galgenberg rises to 237  m above sea level. NN .

The village street crosses the village and Flur Goes in a north-south direction. It connects him to the Pirnaer Südvorstadt as well as to the Hohe Straße, which leads from Zehista to Berggießhübel . The Hohe Strasse is now the State Road 173 and was formerly part of the Neue Dresden-Teplitzer Poststrasse . The nearest public transport stop is on Franz-Schubert-Straße in Pirnaer Südvorstadt. The RVSOE bus routes N, 209, 216 and 218 stop there .

history

Goes on a map from the 19th century
Village green, Rundling Goes
Village green, Rundling Goes. House panel from 1794

The place name is of Old Sorbian origin. It is derived from Gos , the name of a Slavic locator and short form of the first name Gostimir, and thus means roughly settlement of a Gos . The place name was first mentioned in 1350 as part of the personal name "Fridricus de Goszow". Therefore, historians suspect that there was a manor house in the village at that time. In 1388 a "Gerung von der Gozze" appears as a documentary witness. In the centuries that followed, a variety of spellings were used, including "Goeß", "Goß", "Goys", "Gois" and "Goßau". In 1551 an incident "zcum Czoesse" was reported, in 1791 the form "Goos" was also used, which most closely corresponds to the pronunciation.

A Gewann - Gelänge -Mischflur developed around the Rundling , the area of ​​which in 1900 was about 261 hectares. In 1501 the place was parish to Dohna, from 1539 to Pirna. For the year 1548 it is documented that the land rulership was incumbent on the owners of the manor Großsedlitz , partly also to those of the manor Rottwerndorf. While the Rottwerndorfer part still existed in 1606 and 1764, the other part was already under the Zehista manor in 1606. Administrative sovereignty was the responsibility of the Pirna Office until the 19th century, and then the Pirna Court Office in 1856. In 1875 Goes was part of the Pirna Authority , which was renamed the Pirna District in 1939 . In its place came the Pirna district , which in 1994 - the year Goes was incorporated into Dohma - became part of the Saxon Switzerland district. From this, in 2008, the district of Saxon Switzerland-Eastern Ore Mountains emerged.

Population development

year Residents
1551 14 possessed men , 4 residents in the Rottwerndorfer part
1764 15 possessed men, 1 gardener, 5 cottagers
1834 155
1871 248
1890 299
1910 325
1925 240
1939 273
1946 305
1950 302
1964 278
1990 289
2011 224
2012 227
2013 225
2014 224

Web links

References and footnotes

  1. Small-scale municipality gazette. (PDF; 0.23 MB) Population, households, families and their housing situation on May 9, 2011. State Statistical Office of Saxony, accessed on November 3, 2015 .
  2. ^ Ernst Eichler / Hans Walther : Historical book of place names of Saxony. Vol. 1, Berlin 2001. p. 321.