Hagenest (Regis-Breitingen)

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Hagenest
Coordinates: 51 ° 5 ′ 12 ″  N , 12 ° 21 ′ 39 ″  E
Incorporation : 1st August 1973
Incorporated into: Ramsdorf
Postal code : 04565
Area code : 034492
Hagenest (Saxony)
Hagenest

Location of Hagenest in Saxony

Hagenest is part of the Ramsdorf district of the city of Regis-Breitingen in the Leipzig district (Free State of Saxony ). In addition to Ramsdorf and Hagenest, the Ramsdorf district also includes Wildenhain , which was incorporated into Hagenest in 1948. The Löschützmühle belonging to Hagenest had to give way to the Schleenhain opencast mine in 1957/58 .

geography

Hagenest is located on the border between Saxony and Thuringia between Lucka in the Altenburger Land in the west and Regis-Breitingen in the east. To the east of the neighboring village of Wildenhain is Haselbacher See , which separates the two villages from Regis-Breitingen. The Schnauder runs north of Hagenest . Hagenest is located in the central German lignite mining area , due to which the place was surrounded on several sides by opencast mines at the time of active lignite mining. Today these areas have been renatured, only in the north is the United Schleenhain opencast mine still active.

history

Hagenest was first mentioned in a document in 1260. The oldest part of the village founded by Slavs consists of a round lump . The noble von Hagenest family had their ancestral home in the village since the 13th century . In 1526 they acquired the neighboring Teuritz manor . The property of those of Hagenest around their home town, d. H. the place and the manor Hagenest as well as the manor Teuritz belonged like the neighboring villages Wildenhain and Nehmitz until 1815 as exclaves to the Amt Zeitz , which had been under Electoral Saxon sovereignty since 1561 and belonged to the secondary education principality of Saxony-Zeitz between 1656/57 and 1718 . The place Teuritz itself, however, belonged to the Altenburg office in the Duchy of Saxony-Altenburg or Saxony-Gotha-Altenburg . The von Hagenest owned the von Hagenest manor until the 18th century. After that, the Kirchbach, Schubert, Joseph and Ehrlich families were the owners.

With the appointment of the Electorate of Saxony to the Kingdom , Hagenest belonged to the Kingdom of Saxony from 1806 . In 1814 the Naumburg-Zeitzer Stiftsgebiet was dissolved as part of the Kingdom of Saxony under Governor General Nikolai Grigoryevich Repnin-Volkonsky . After Napoleon's defeat , the Kingdom of Saxony, allied with him, had to cede a large part of its territory, including the Zeitz office, to the Kingdom of Prussia following the resolution of the Congress of Vienna in 1815 . The eastern enclave locations, i.e. H. the Breitingen office with Regis, Breitingen and Blumroda and the Zeitz offices of Nehmitz, Hagenest, Wildenhain and the Teuritz manor remained with Saxony and were incorporated into the Borna office.

In 1856 the village and manor Hagenest came to the Borna court office and in 1875 to the Borna district administration . At the beginning of the 20th century, lignite mining began around Hagenest . In 1898 a lignite plant opened in the neighboring town of Ramsdorf . After 1945, a large part of the Hagenest manor was demolished. Only a farm building remained, which is now privately owned.

On October 1, 1948, Wildenhain was incorporated into Hagenest. In 1952 Hagenest came to the Borna district in the Leipzig district . The incorporation of Hagenest with Wildenhain to Ramsdorf took place on August 1, 1973. In the middle of the 20th century, several large open-cast mines were opened around the place. These were the opencast mines Ruppersdorf (1944–1957) and Phönix-Ost (1940–1963) in the south, the Haselbach opencast mine (1955–1977) in the east and the Schleenhain opencast mine (1949–1994) in the north. The latter has been continued as the United Schleenhain opencast mine since 1994 . The "Löschützmühle" belonging to Hagenest was devastated by him in 1957/58. 20 people were relocated.

In 1990, as part of the municipality of Ramsdorf, Hagenest belonged again to the Saxon district of Borna, which was added to the district of Leipziger Land in 1994 . With the incorporation of Ramsdorf into Regis-Breitingen on January 1, 1999, Ramsdorf with Hagenest and Wildenhain became part of the city of Regis-Breitingen.

Attractions

Hagenest water tower

The town's water tower was planned as a reinforced concrete structure in 1963. However, after the tower shaft was completed, construction was halted for four years, as technical problems prevented the heavy steel container from being lifted onto the shaft.

The new project from 1967 was completed by the Magdeburg chemical plant construction and put into operation in 1969/70. The filling quantity of the approx. 48 meter high water tower is max. 1000 cubic meters with a service water level of approx. 43 meters above the site. The diameter is max. 16 meters and 9 meters in height. The tower is used to supply Hagenest with water.

Ponds and Luther oak from Hagenest

There are two ponds in Hagenest, called the upper and lower pond. At the lower pond there is a Luther oak that was planted in 1846 on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of Martin Luther's death .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Mention of the Teuritz manor on p.333
  2. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 , p. 86 f.
  3. Mention of the Teuritz and Hagenest manor in the book "Geography for all Stands", p. 700
  4. The Hagenest Manor at www.sachsens-schloesser.de
  5. ^ The Borna District Administration in the municipal directory 1900
  6. ^ Description of the Hagenest manor
  7. Hagenest on gov.genealogy.net
  8. The Löschützmühle in the Historical Directory of Saxony
  9. ^ Description of the Schleenhain opencast mine in a LMBV document
  10. ^ Ramsdorf on gov.genealogy.net