Hohendorf (Groitzsch)

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Hohendorf
City of Groitzsch
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 58 ″  N , 12 ° 20 ′ 15 ″  E
Residents : 118  (2016)
Incorporation : 1st January 1974
Incorporated into: Berndorf
Postal code : 04539
Area code : 034492
Hohendorf (Saxony)
Hohendorf

Location of Hohendorf in Saxony

Hohendorf is a district of the city of Groitzsch in the district of Leipzig (Free State of Saxony ). The place was incorporated into Berndorf in 1974 and came with this to the city of Groitzsch in 1996.

geography

Hohendorf is located in the Leipzig lowland bay seven kilometers southeast of Groitzsch. The place is east of the Schnauder . In the southwest is the Groitzscher See , which was created in the disused southern part of the Groitzscher Dreieck opencast mine . In the northern part, lignite mining is to be resumed as part of the United Schleenhain opencast mine from 2030. Neighboring towns are the districts of Langenhain and Oellschütz in the north , which also belong to the Saxon town of Groitzsch, and Berndorf , Kleinhermsdorf and Nehmitz in the south.

history

Hohendorf was mentioned in 1210 as "Hondorf". The place celebrated its 900th anniversary in 2005, so it is assumed that it was first mentioned in a document in 1105. Until 1856, Hohendorf was in the Electoral Saxon or Royal Saxon Office of Borna . From 1856 the place belonged to the Borna court office and from 1875 to the Borna district administration .

On January 1, 1948, the northern neighboring towns of Langenhain and Oellschütz were incorporated into Hohendorf. In 1952 the municipality of Hohendorf and its two districts came to the Borna district in the Leipzig district .

The Schleenhain opencast mine (1949-1994), which was opened in 1949, dredged the area east of the village in the 1960s. The neighboring village of Schleenhain to the northeast , which gave the mine its name, was relocated in 1964/65. Its corridor was incorporated into the Hohendorf community in 1965. Since the Groitzscher Dreieck opencast mine (1974-1994) dredged the area west of Hohendorf in the 1970s, the place was in the narrow strip of the Schnauderaue, which was spared from excavation between the two opencast mines.

The incorporation of Hohendorf to Berndorf took place on January 1, 1974. As a district of Berndorf, Hohendorf was assigned to the Saxon district of Borna in 1990 and to the district of Leipziger Land in 1994 . When Berndorf was incorporated into Groitzsch on January 1, 1996, Hohendorf became a part of the city of Groitzsch.

Incorporations

Former parish date annotation
Hohendorf 1st January 1974 Incorporation to Berndorf, with this on January 1, 1996 to Groitzsch
Langenhain January 1, 1948 Incorporation to Hohendorf
Oellschütz January 1, 1948 Incorporation to Hohendorf
Schleenhain 1965 Incorporation to Hohendorf, removed from the Schleenhain open-cast lignite mine in 1964–1965

Attractions

Hohendorf village church

The village's renovated village church has been expanded in its core Romanesque and late Gothic times.

Geological nature trail

Between Hohendorf and Kleinhermsdorf there is a three kilometer long geological educational trail with 186 boulders . The stones, which originally came from the Scandinavian region, were recovered in the surrounding opencast mines. The geological nature trail was officially inaugurated on May 9, 1998.

Memorial stone for the excavated village of Schleenhain

To the southwest of Hohendorf there is a memorial stone for the village Schleenhain, which was dredged over by the Schleenhain opencast mine in 1965/66, whose corridor was subsequently incorporated into Hohendorf.

traffic

Hohendorf is connected to the towns of Groitzsch and the town of Lucka , which is already in Thuringia, with the 7951 district road . This district road forms a road corridor in north-south direction in the Schnauderaue between the former Schleenhain and Groitzscher Dreieck opencast mines. In the north, it opens in the United Stolpen into the federal highway 176 one, which in turn is an east-west corridor through the United Schleenhain coal mine.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hohendorf on www.reitwanderfuehrer.de
  2. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 62 f.
  3. ^ The Borna District Administration in the municipal directory 1900
  4. Hohendorf on gov.genealogy.net
  5. Hohendorf on gov.genealogy.net
  6. ^ Berndorf on gov.genealogy.net