Klosterhäseler

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Klosterhäseler
Municipality of An der Poststrasse
Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 48 ″  N , 11 ° 36 ′ 42 ″  E
Height : 196 m above sea level NN
Area : 19.9 km²
Residents : 773  (Dec. 31, 2007)
Population density : 39 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 2009
Postal code : 06647
Area code : 034463, 034465, 034467

Klosterhäseler is a district of the municipality An der Poststraße in the Burgenland district in Saxony-Anhalt . The districts of Klosterhäseler, Burgheßler , Gößnitz and Pleismar belonged to Klosterhäseler .

Naumburger Strasse in Klosterhäseler

geography

Geographical location

Klosterhäseler is located at an altitude of 196 meters between Weimar and Halle (Saale) .

history

Village church from 1766/67 with crypt extension and crypt in Klosterhäseler Castle
Village church, organ by Wilhelm Heerwagen, 1871
Village church, pulpit: coat of arms of August von Haeseler, 1766
Central column of the crypt of the former Cistercian nunnery Klosterhäseler

The place was first mentioned in October 786 as Heselere in Hersfeld documents. In the year 815, today's Klosterhäseler is mentioned in a document as Heselere in a list of the goods of the Hersfeld Monastery, built by Archbishop Lullus († 786) of Mainz . Different spellings of names were in the following period: 1197 Heslere , 1239 Hesilere , 1267 Heseler, Heselere , 1274/1280/1368 Heseler , 1271 Hesilere, Hesellere , 1318/1322 Markhessler .

The place was the seat of the ministerial family of the same name von Hessler , which was mentioned for the first time in 1197. The monastery that gives the place its name, a Cistercian nunnery, was donated by the von Heßler family in the middle of the 13th century. It was first mentioned in a document in 1318. In the course of the Reformation it was dissolved and bought by the von Hessler family in 1543 and united with the manor. This branch of the family died in 1771 with Hans Heinrich III. from Hessler. The estate went bankrupt.

After the death of Christian Moritz von Heßler, the manors Burgheßler and Klosterhäseler fell to the Duke of Saxe-Weimar and were placed under the administration of the Roßla office by the duchy . Since the Electorate of Saxony confiscated the two estates during the Duke's lifetime, disputes arose between the Electorate and the Duchy. On June 16, 1732, the Klosterhäseler manor was acquired by the Magdeburg merchant and councilor Gottfried Haeseler (the Haeseler family is not related to the von Heßler family and was only raised to the nobility by the Prussian king in 1736) for 50,100 thalers. As a result, the spelling "Klosterhäseler" gradually gained acceptance for the place.

In 1766/67 today's village church was built, a hall building with a square east tower and crypt extension, as a replacement for the dilapidated monastery church. As a result of the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Klosterhäseler and most of the Eckartsberga office were ceded to Prussia and assigned to the Eckartsberga district in the province of Saxony , to which the place belonged until 1944.

In 1855 Wilhelm Heerwagen (1826–1875) founded the Heerwagen organ building workshop in Klosterhäseler , which existed there until 1892. The organ of the village church, built in 1871 and donated by August and Emilie von Haeseler out of gratitude for the return of their sons from the war against France, comes from his workshop. The instrument has thirteen registers on two manuals and a pedal. Wilhelm Heerwagen's son Emil, who succeeded him as an organ builder, was born in Klosterhäseler in 1857.

On July 1, 1950, the previously independent communities of Gößnitz and Pleismar were incorporated.

On July 1, 2009, Klosterhäseler was incorporated into the new municipality of An der Poststrasse . The last mayor was Iris Eckmann.

economy

Henglein GmbH from Wassermungenau in Bavaria has been operating a production facility for ready-made dough products in Klosterhäseler since 1995.

traffic

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the church

People connected to the place

  • Wilhelm Heerwagen (1826–1875), founder of the organ construction company Heerwagen, which existed until 1935

Attractions

music

Klosterhäseler, village church, organ by Wilhelm Heerwagen (1871), Johann Gottfried Walther : "Well praise, my soul, the gentlemen" (Rolf Walther, organ)

literature

  • Louis Naumann : On the history of the Cistercian nunneries Hesler and Marienthal, a contribution to the history of the Eckartsberga district , Volume 3 of contributions to the local history of the Eckartsberga district , 1885
  • Gustav Sommer: Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the province of Saxony and adjacent areas, Der Kreis Eckartsberga , by the Historical Commission for the Province of Saxony and the Duchy of Anhalt, published by Hendel, 1883
  • W. Faust: In the valley of the Hasel , Bad Kösen, 1927
  • Handbook of German Art Monuments / Saxony-Anhalt / 2nd administrative districts Dessau and Halle, 1999
  • Peter Pfister : monastery leader of all Cistercian monasteries in the German-speaking area. 2nd edition, Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg 1998, p. 454.

swell

  1. Klosterhäseler and Burgheßler in the book "Geography for all Stands", p. 38
  2. Places of the Eckartsberga district in the municipality register 1900
  3. StBA: Area changes from January 2nd to December 31st, 2009
  4. Regal 2/2014 ( Memento from April 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )

Web links

Commons : Klosterhäseler  - Collection of images, videos and audio files