Kötzschenbrodaer Strasse
The Kötzschenbrodaer street is a city road in the Saxon town of Radebeul . It leads from the eastern city limits to the state capital Dresden near Kaditz (as a continuation of Kötzschenbroder Straße ) for about 2.6 kilometers through Serkowitz in a westerly direction to Kötzschenbroda ; its extension through Kötitzer Straße leads the street to the city limits of Coswig . As a continuous former right-hand Elbe trunk road connection between Dresden and Meißen or Leipzig , it was already of supraregional importance in the Middle Ages, the Altstrasse was for a long time the main and military road between the Dresden residence and the Meißen bishopric.
Development
Today's numbering begins at the Dresden city limits as an extension of Kötzschenbroder Straße. With the beginning of the Wilhelminian development of Serkowitz, the house numbers begin with the number 13 on the south side of the Elbe with the odd numbers; these run to no. 201 at the intersection with Neue Straße and Vorwerkstraße. The even numbers can be found on the north side towards the steep slope and start with number 14.
There are a number of cultural monuments on Kötzschenbrodaer Straße , be it that they themselves have the address Kötzschenbrodaer Straße or that corner properties have an address from one of the numerous side streets. The list of streets and squares in Radebeul leads under the 3 sections to Kötzschenbrodaer Straße the cultural monuments and sights that can be assigned to these districts. These are in detail:
- Serkowitz: No. 17, No. 19, No. 37, Gasthof Serkowitz (No. 39) , No. 47, Alte Schmiede (No. 50) , platform 1 , Weiberstein (before No. 60)
- Fürstenhain: -
- Kötzschenbroda: Radebeul-West cemetery (No. 166) , Alter Friedhof (between No. 172 and 180, access from Am Gottesacker [3]), No. 187
There are also two Radebeul client award winners :
- Kötzschenbroda: No. 145, No. 182
Today's house numbers 189, 191, 193, 195 form the 20th to 23rd properties in the Fürstenhain district, which comprises 23 lots .
The two cemeteries that are still in use today, both the old cemetery on the tip between Kötzschenbrodaer Straße and Am Gottesacker and the burial site later known as the New Cemetery , are listed as a whole as well as works of landscape and garden design . The old cemetery was described as an art monument near Gurlitt as early as 1904 .
The Gasthof Serkowitz (No. 39), first mentioned in 1337, as well as the so-called Alte Schmiede (No. 50) as well as No. 37 (younger than No. 50), known in GDR times as Serkowitz Alte Schmiede, were already in existence during the GDR era as monuments of cultural history in Radebeul under protection.
Naming
The medieval or early modern, right-Elbe post and carriage route between Dresden and Meißen was called Meißnische Straße , partly also Leipziger Landstraße . As a result of the devastating Elbe flood in 1784 and the events surrounding Elector Friedrich August the Righteous , which led to the erection of the Weiberstein , the traffic train was relocated further north in 1787/88 to the newly created Art Street Meißner Strasse . The old course of the street was given the name Alte Meißnische Straße or Alte Meißner Straße . In Kötzschenbroda, the street was named Dresdner Straße in the second half of the 19th century . Also Serkowitzer road was used.
In 1935, with the unification of the two cities of Radebeul and Kötzschenbroda , all parts of Radebeul's street were jointly dedicated as Kötzschenbrodaer Straße .
local residents
From 1860 the historian Gustav Wilhelm Schubert lived at Kötzschenbrodaer Straße 187 (at the address Dresdner Straße 5).
literature
- Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (= Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 2007. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on May 23, 2010 .
- ↑ Cornelius Gurlitt : Kötzschenbroda. In: Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the Kingdom of Saxony. 26. Booklet: The art monuments of Dresden's surroundings, Part 2: Amtshauptmannschaft Dresden-Neustadt . CC Meinhold, Dresden 1904, pp. 44-56.
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 0 " N , 13 ° 38 ′ 49.8" E