Hassenhausen (Naumburg)
Hassenhausen
City of Naumburg (Saale)
Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 37 " N , 11 ° 39 ′ 38" E
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Height : | 245 m above sea level NN |
Residents : | 341 (2012) |
Incorporation : | July 1, 1992 |
Incorporated into: | Bad Kosen |
Postal code : | 06628 |
Area code : | 034463 |
The Obergasse
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Hassenhausen is a district of Bad Kösen , a district of the city of Naumburg (Saale) in the Burgenland district in Saxony-Anhalt .
location
Hassenhausen is on federal highway 87 , coming from Bad Kösen leading to Eckartsberga . The district is located northwest of Bad Kösen in a hilly arable plain.
history
The first written mention of Hassenhausen ( Hassenhuseno marca ) took place between 881 and 890 in the Hersfeld tithe directory . Several secular and ecclesiastical lordships owned the place, u. a. the monastery of St. George in Naumburg and the taverns of Saaleck . Since 1289, Hassenhausen gradually came into the possession of the Pforta Monastery , which acquired jurisdiction in 1321 and the neck court over the place from Conrad von Saaleck in 1351. After the secularization of the Pforta Monastery in 1540, Hassenhausen belonged to the Electoral Saxon Office of Pforta from 1543 to 1815 . The decisions of the Congress of Vienna the place to Prussia came only in 1816 the district Naumburg in the administrative district of Merseburg of the Province of Saxony assigned to which he belonged until 1944th
On July 1, 1992 the place was incorporated into Bad Kösen and reclassified to Naumburg (Saale) on January 1, 2010.
Battle of Jena and Auerstedt
The battle of Jena and Auerstedt also took place in Hassenhausen in 1806. Here is an assessment: The battle near Auerstedt / Hassenhausen was a victory for Davout. He had to fight the fighting with his soldiers alone, so that the Prussian forces were not destroyed here. It was only when the defeated Prussian armies on the run came together that the French achieved absolute victory over Davout, because it led to chaos .
In the fighting near Hassenhausen in the course of the battle near Jena and Auerstedt, the following were wounded:
Personalities
- Otto Hänssgen (1885–1956), painter
Monuments
- War memorial for those who fell in the battle of Jena and Auerstedt
literature
- Carl Peter Lepsius : Small writings: Contributions to the Thuringian-Saxon history and German art and antiquity , Volume 2, Creutz, 1834, p. 150-153 digitized
- Gottfried August Benedict Wolff: Chronicle of the Pforta Monastery according to documentary reports , Volume 2: Until the school was founded in 1543 . FCW Vogel, Leipzig 1846.
- Heinrich Bergner : Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the province of Saxony, Naumburg district (Land) , 1905, p. 31 digitized
- Bernhard Heinzelmann: Between Königstrasse and Salzstrasse, On the way on old roads , 2000, ISBN 978-3-98070-250-8 , pp. 225–226
Web links
- Website from Hassenhausen
- Website of the Museum of Hassenhausen
- Hassenhausen on the website of the city of Naumburg
Individual evidence
- ^ Wolfgang Kahl : First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual. Rockstuhl Verlag, Bad Langensalza 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , p. 347
- ↑ Hassenhausen on page 31
- ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas , Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 34f.
- ^ Locations of the Prussian district of Naumburg in the municipal directory 1900
- ↑ Günter Steiger: The Battle of Jena Auerstedt 1806 District Museum Leuchtenburg 1981, p. 68