Großkamsdorf
Großkamsdorf
Municipality Unterwellenborn
Coordinates: 50 ° 38 ′ 36 ″ N , 11 ° 27 ′ 10 ″ E
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Height : | 325–365 m above sea level NN |
Incorporation : | July 1, 1950 |
Incorporated into: | Kamsdorf |
Postal code : | 07333 |
Area code : | 03671 |
Village church
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Großkamsdorf is a district of Kamsdorf in the municipality of Unterwellenborn in the Saalfeld-Rudolstadt district in Thuringia .
location
Großkamsdorf is located on the northeastern edge of the Thuringian Slate Mountains . A few kilometers to the south is the Hohenwartestausee recreation area . The federal highway 281 leads from the direction of Saalfeld to Triptis to the federal highway 9 and after the completion of the bypass Unterwellenborn .
history
Wolfgang Kahl records March 6, 1275 for Groß- and Kleinkamsdorf from the document book Coburg- Saalfeld II 134 for the first documentary mention. The local chronicle reports about the year 1381 to great Kampstorff . The Kamsdörfer then became part of the Ranis office (later enclaves of the Arnshaugk office of Electoral Saxony ). In 1442 there were disputes between the two villages. After further regulatory submissions, the villages came to Prussia as exclaves after the Congress of Vienna in 1815 ( district of Ziegenrück ). In 1820 a stone Dutch mill was built above the customs house in place of the old post mill . In the 20th century it was provided with an electric drive. With the dissolution of Prussia, the place came to Thuringia in 1944 and after 1952 to the Gera district . On July 1, 1950, the municipality of Kamsdorf was created through the merger of the previous municipalities of Großkamsdorf and Kleinkamsdorf. Since 1994 the place belongs to the district of Saalfeld-Rudolstadt. With the construction of new housing estates and the redesign of the Maxhütte , the two places Großkamsdorf and Kleinkamsdorf have been combined. Großkamsdorf inaugurated the new Johann Gottlob Glaser square in 2002 . Kamsdorf was incorporated into Unterwellenborn in 2018.
Attractions
Personalities
- Peter Scher (1880–1953), writer and journalist
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Wolfgang Kahl : First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual. 5th, improved and considerably enlarged edition. Rockstuhl, Bad Langensalza 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , p. 137.
- ↑ Werner Dietzel: Mills between the upper Saale and Thuringian basin. Water wheels and turbines in mills, hammer mills and smelters in the Saale catchment area as well as windmills on the surrounding plateaus. Rockstuhl, Bad Langensalza 2012, ISBN 978-3-86777-453-6 , p. 156.
- ^ Website of the municipality of Kamsdorf.Retrieved on April 4, 2012