Grumbach (Wilsdruff)
Grumbach
City of Wilsdruff
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Coordinates: 51 ° 1 ′ 47 ″ N , 13 ° 33 ′ 1 ″ E | |
Height : | 281 m |
Residents : | 1680 |
Incorporation : | July 9, 1998 |
Postal code : | 01723 |
Primaries : | 035203, 035204 |
Location of Grumbach in Wilsdruff
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Grumbach is a district of the small Saxon town of Wilsdruff in the Saxon Switzerland-Eastern Ore Mountains district and is located about two kilometers south of Wilsdruff. In 1834 Grumbach had 1,132 inhabitants. A peak was reached in 1950 with 2003 inhabitants. Today about 1680 people live there.
geography
Grumbach is the largest area in the city of Wilsdruff. The districts of Wilsdruff, Kaufbach , Braunsdorf , Fördergersdorf , Pohrsdorf , Herzogswalde and Helbigsdorf border the town clockwise . With the exception of Fördergersdorf and Pohrsdorf, which belong to Tharandt , all the surrounding villages are part of Wilsdruff.
The federal highway 173 ( Dresden - Freiberg ) runs straight through the town in an east-west direction. There are connections to Wilsdruff, Tharandt and Braunsdorf via state and district roads.
The Wilde Sau flows through Grumbach from south to north.
history
Grumbach emerged in the 2nd half of the 12th century during the settlement of the Mark Meissen . In 1215, the vassal of the Margraves of Meißen , Boriwo de Tarant , who was resident at Tharandt Castle , established his property in the Grumbacher Flur to supply the castle as Boriwos Dorf ( Pohrsdorf ). In an episcopal Meissen document from February 9, 1223, Grumbach is first mentioned as Villa Grombach . Grumbach was originally laid out as a forest hoof village and characterized by agriculture with mainly rural elements, as there was never a manor house .
In the 14th century the village was subordinate to three different offices : the Niederdorf to the right of the Wilde Sau brook to the Dresden office , the upper village to the Tharandt office and the largest part on the left bank to the Meißen office . After several changes in ownership, Grumbach grew into a unified municipality in the 16th century.
Until 1833, the place was on the supraregional postal route Dresden - Nuremberg in the course of the Alte Frankenstrasse , later Hofer Chaussee and today's B 173 with an escort and relaxation (former inheritance court, now Gasthof Grumbacher Hof ) at the intersection with an old pilgrim route and the regional postal route Tharandt - Wilsdruff . A Royal Saxon whole milestone from the Freiberg –Wilsdruff postal route and a Saxon royal half milestone from the Tharandt – Wilsdruff postal route have been preserved from the period from 1859 to 1900, and have been standing at the reconstructed escort barrier next to the inn since 2011 . In the same year, a post-mile pillar in the form of a half-mile pillar from 1723 was reproduced there, the original of which was still in Grumbach around 1800. 1886 to 1972 there was a connection to the narrow-gauge railway Freital-Potschappel - Wilsdruff of the Wilsdruffer narrow-gauge network , of which u. a. the station building was preserved as a residential building.
The school in Grumbach has been teaching since 1883; today it is used as a Protestant elementary school. The town hall was inaugurated in 1926. In 1975 the newly built kindergarten was opened. After the voters on 8 March 1998 referendum had agreed to a merger of the municipality Grumbach and the city Wilsdruff, the incorporation was completed on July 9, 1998th
Development of the population
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Place name forms
The name of the place Grumbach changed historically as follows:
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Personalities
- Johann Christian Gottlieb Irmler (born February 11, 1790 in Obergrumbach, † December 10, 1857 in Leipzig), piano maker
Parish and House of Silence
The parish of Grumbach belongs to the Evangelical Lutheran regional church of Saxony , specifically to the church district of Meißen.
The church in Grumbach has been documented since 1303. In it there is still a Romanesque portal from the 13th century. Your famous picture ceiling was only created after the Thirty Years War .
The last parish priest was Pastor Heiner Bludau (2000–2006). He headed the parish and until 2010 the House of Silence. Under his guidance, the Grumbach labyrinth was built from stones by visitors to the house in August 2002 and can be found in the parish garden. After a structural reform, the rectory for Grumbach was canceled and the parish was looked after by the parish of Wilsdruff-Kesselsdorf. Pastor Schönfuß, who lives in Grumbach, has been running the House of Silence since 2010.
The sister parish of Kesselsdorf is led by Pastor Volker Geißler, the partner parish is Pattensen in the Lüneburg Heath .
The old Grumbach rectory has been expanded in recent years to offer retreats within the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony and is now known as the House of Silence on the Saxon Way of St. James on the Frankenstrasse .
literature
- Michael Blümel, Norbert Demarczyk: Brunnenweg (= contributions to the history of house land in Grumbach, issue 1). 3rd, improved edition. Grumbach 2008.
- Hermann Clausnitzer:
- Boundaries between land reform and market economy. 2nd Edition. winterwork, Grimma 2009, ISBN 978-3-942150-06-4 .
- A review of Grumbach's village chronicles. Self-published in 2003
- Water that Wilde Sau tells. Self-published in 2004
- Sorry, I'm the Triebisch. winterwork, Grimma 2009, ISBN 978-3-942150-04-0 .
- Cornelius Gurlitt : Grumbach. In: Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the Kingdom of Saxony. 41. Issue: Administrative Authority Meißen-Land . CC Meinhold, Dresden 1923, p. 164.
- Norbert Demarczyk: The picture ceiling in the church in Grumbach . 1st edition. Heimat- und Kulturpflege e. V. Grumbach (Ed.), Grumbach 2013
- Norbert Demarczyk: The center of Grumbach near Wilsdruff. An attempt at design . In: Bauernhäuser und Bauernhöfe in Sachsen , Dresden, Verein Ländliche Bauwerte in Sachsen, 2013, no. 3, pp. 6–12.
Web links
- Grumbach on wilsdruff.net
Individual evidence
- ^ StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 1998
- ↑ a b Grumbach in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
- ^ Johann Christian Gottlieb Irmler in the Saxon Biography
- ↑ Johann Gottlieb Irmler ( Memento of the original from January 9, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on hammerfluegel.net
- ↑ Pastor Bludau on the website of Haus der Stille ( Memento of the original from August 5, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (accessed October 29, 2015)
- ↑ Grumbach parish
- ↑ House of Silence