Lissa (Wiedemar)

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Lissa
community Wiedemar
Lissa coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 32 ′ 2 ″  N , 12 ° 15 ′ 0 ″  E
Height : 99 m above sea level NHN
Area : 40.27 km²
Residents : 508  (2009)
Population density : 13 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1994
Incorporated into: Neukyhna
Postal code : 04509
Church in Lissa

Lissa is a district of the municipality of Wiedemar in the district of North Saxony in the Free State of Saxony (Germany). The community was created on July 1, 1950 through the merger of the previous communities Groß Lissa and Klein Lissa. From 1994 to 2013 Lissa belonged to the Neukyhna community . On January 1, 2013, it was incorporated into the extended community of Wiedemar.

Geographical location

Lissa is located in the northwest of Saxony in a wide plain of the Leipzig lowland bay not far from the border with Saxony-Anhalt .

history

The district Lissa was first mentioned in 1158 as Lisszow. It was first mentioned as a manor in 1161 under Tomme von Lissau, and in 1222 the place belonged to Egelolfus de Liszowe. In 1350 the settlement was in the margraviate of Meißen in the "districtus Deltsch". In 1445 the electoral Saxon care was called Delitzsch and later the Saxon office Delitzsch . Under Nickel von Czemen ( Zehmen ), it was mentioned as a knight's seat in 1445, as he had to provide knight horses as an Erbarmann . Thyme v. Czemen sold the place in 1478. Other owners were the von Plaussig lords in 1486, the von Maschwitz lords in 1513, and the von Schieke family in 1634. Further changes of ownership followed. In 1782 Christoph Troitzsch was enfeoffed with Lissa and converted into an allodial property in 1788 . Finally upgraded to a manor in 1816 . As a result of the resolutions of the Congress of Vienna , Lissa and the surrounding towns became part of Prussia in 1815 and in 1816 was assigned to the Delitzsch district in the Merseburg administrative district of the province of Saxony , to which it belonged until 1952. The last owners of the manor were from 1854 Adolph Heinrich August Barthels, from 1878 the Lüdicke family and finally Richard Dietrich. In the course of the district reform in the GDR in 1952, Lissa was assigned to the newly tailored Delitzsch district in the Leipzig district, which was added to the Delitzsch district in 1994 .

In 2008 Lissa celebrated its 850th anniversary. For a long time the place was characterized by open-cast lignite mining. With the recultivation you are in the immediate vicinity of a recreation area. The district also became known through the women's football of SV Lissa.

traffic

The federal motorway 9 is west of the place (connection (14) Wiedemar / Delitzsch ). The Autobahn 14 and Leipzig-Halle Airport are also nearby .

literature

  • Eckart Winkler: Family book Lissa near Delitzsch with Groß- and Kleinlissa, Peterwitz and Kattersnaundorf (district of northern Saxony), Saxony 1594-1875. Leipzig: AMF 2013 (= Central German local family books of the AMF 74)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Manfred Wilde: The knights and free estates in northern Saxony. Their constitutional status, their settlement history and their owners. , CA Starke Verlag, Limburg an der Lahn 1997, ISBN 3-7980-0687-3 , pp. 299-303
  2. ^ Hanns-Moritz von Zehmen: Genealogical news about the Meißnian nobility of Zehmen, 1206 to 1906 . Wilhelm Baensch, Dresden 1906.
  3. ^ The district of Delitzsch in the municipality register 1900