Kobschütz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kobschütz
City of Groitzsch
Coordinates: 51 ° 10 ′ 50 ″  N , 12 ° 17 ′ 46 ″  E
Height : 139 m
Incorporation : October 1, 1948
Incorporated into: Audigast
Postal code : 04539
Area code : 034296
Kobschütz (Saxony)
Kobschütz

Location of Kobschütz in Saxony

Kobschütz is a district of the city of Groitzsch in the district of Leipzig (Free State of Saxony ). The place was incorporated into the town of Groitzsch in 1948 after Audigast and with this in 1996.

geography

Kobschütz is located in the Leipzig lowland bay between Zwenkau in the north and Groitzsch in the south. The place is on the right bank of the White Elster , into which the Schnauder joins west of Kobschütz . Kobschütz is located in the central German lignite district . The area southeast of the village was excavated in the 1980s by the Peres opencast mine (in operation from 1963 to 1991). The area has now been renatured.

history

In 1300 a "Conradus de Copschicz" was mentioned. The manorial rule over the small cul-de-sac village was in the Groitzsch manor around 1551 . From 1590 to 1856 Kobschütz was subordinated as an official village directly to the Electoral Saxon or Royal Saxon Office of Pegau . From 1856 the place belonged to the judicial office of Pegau and from 1875 to the district administration Borna .

On October 1, 1948, it was incorporated into Audigast . With the place Kobschütz came to the Borna district in the Leipzig district in 1952, to the Borna district in Saxony in 1990 and to the Leipziger Land district in 1994 . When Audigast was incorporated into Groitzsch on January 1, 1996, Kobschütz became part of the city of Groitzsch.

The Peres open- cast mine, opened in 1963, dredged the area southeast of Kobschütz in the 1980s. After its temporary closure in 1991, the area was renatured.

traffic

Kobschütz is located directly on Bundesstraße 2 . Between 1874 and 1998 the Gaschwitz – Meuselwitz railway ran past Kobschütz to the east without stopping. On the section from Schnaudertrebnitz to the southern city limits of Zwenkau, the route was subsequently converted into an asphalt foot and cycle path.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 62 f.
  2. ^ The Borna District Administration in the municipal directory 1900
  3. Kobschütz on gov.genealogy.net
  4. Audigast on gov.genealogy.net
  5. Description of the Peres opencast mine in a LMBV document
  6. New cycle path between Zwenkau and Groitzsch. Retrieved August 10, 2015 .
  7. Achim Bartoschek: Groitzsch – Zwenkau. Retrieved August 10, 2015 .