List of soil monuments in Mühlberg / Elbe
In the list of soil monuments Mühlberg / Elbe all soil monuments of the Brandenburg city Mühlberg / Elbe and its districts are listed. The basis is the publication of the state monuments list as of December 31, 2015. The monuments are listed in the list of monuments in Mühlberg / Elbe .
District | Hall | Brief address | Ground monument number | comment | image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Altenau | 1 | Village center German Middle Ages , village center modern times | 20046 | Altenau was first mentioned in 1234 as Althena and Alzona. The place was originally on an old Elbarm, which made it severely threatened by flooding by the river. In 1243, 7 Hufen became the property of the monastery in Mühlberg through purchase. The village still had to pay interest payments to the Nimbschen monastery in 1251. | |
2 | Altenau | 5 | Slavic Middle Ages settlement | 20047 | ||
3 | Altenau | 3 | Church modern times, village center German Middle Ages, cemetery modern times, church German Middle Ages, stone cross German Middle Ages, cemetery German Middle Ages, village center modern times | 20048 | The Altenau part of Boragk was first mentioned in a document in 1251 as Borc. The name comes from the old Sorbian bor (pine forest). The Boragker Church is a late Romanesque plastered brick building with a saddle roof, a 17th century square west transverse tower and a recessed 3/8 choir with a three-sided east end. According to tradition, the stone cross was erected because a wandering beggar was killed and eaten at this point during times of starvation. | |
4th | Altenau | 9 | Neolithic burial ground | 20049 | ||
5 | Altenau, Neuburxdorf | 9, 3, 4 | Prison camp modern times | 20081 | In the prison camp it was the Stalag IV-B . This was a main camp for prisoners of war in Wehrkreis IV Dresden built by the Wehrmacht in 1939. After the camp was closed at the end of World War II , the Soviet NKVD set up special camp No. 1 in Mühlberg . Today there is a memorial on the area. | |
6th | Brottewitz | 1, 2 | Bronze Age burial ground | 20036 | ||
7th | Brottewitz | 1, 3 | Bronze Age settlement , modern village center, Bronze Age burial ground, Stone Age settlement , German Middle Ages village center | 20037 | ||
8th | Brottewitz | 2 | Desolation of the German Middle Ages, desolation of modern times | 20075 | ||
9 | Fichtenberg | 3 | Tower hill German Middle Ages, Church Modern Age, village center German Middle Ages, cemetery German Middle Ages, church German Middle Ages, rampart Slavic Middle Ages, cemetery modern times, village center modern times | 20040 | Fichtenberg was first mentioned in 1280 as Vichtimberg (place on the mountain, on which spruce trees grow). The local church was built between 1808 and 1810 using the remains of a previous medieval building. The church is surrounded by the local cemetery. | |
10 | Fichtenberg | 4th | Landwehr German Middle Ages, Landwehr modern times | 20042 | ||
11 | Fichtenberg | 1 | Prehistory settlement | 20044 | ||
12 | Fichtenberg | 3 | Bronze Age burial ground, Iron Age burial ground | 20256 | ||
13 | Fichtenberg | 6th | Modern cemetery, modern village center, Bronze Age settlement, Iron Age settlement, German Middle Ages village center | 20258 | ||
14th | Koßdorf | 2 | Bronze Age burial ground | 20027 | ||
15th | Koßdorf | 1 | German Middle Ages church, modern village center, German Middle Ages cemetery, German medieval village center, modern church | 20028 | Koßdorf was first mentioned in a document in 1234 as Costensdorp. The name probably comes from the Slavic kost (bone). The village church is essentially a late Romanesque plastered hall building made of brick with a mighty west transverse tower from the middle of the 13th century. In the east of the nave, which was rebuilt in 1736, there is a semicircular apse. | |
16 | Koßdorf | 13 | Desolation of the German Middle Ages | 20029 | ||
17th | Koßdorf | 11 | Bronze Age burial ground | 20030 | ||
18th | Koßdorf | 10, 11 | Village center German Middle Ages, village center modern times | 20031 | ||
19th | Martinskirchen | 3 | Church Modern Age, Tower Hill German Middle Ages, Village Core German Middle Ages, Tower Hill Modern Age, Village Core Modern Age, Church German Middle Ages, Cemetery German Middle Ages, Stone Cross German Middle Ages, Cemetery Modern Age | 20034 | The atonement cross Martinskirchen is located west of the village church with the cemetery surrounding it. It was probably moved to its current location in 1934. | |
20th | Martinskirchen | 1 | Church of the German Middle Ages, village core of German Middle Ages, village core of modern times, cemetery of modern times, cemetery of German medieval times, church of modern times | 20035 | The Martinskirchen part of the Altbelgern municipality has its origins in a Wendish settlement. The place is one of the oldest church locations in the Elbe-Elster region. As early as 1251, a church was mentioned here, which was consecrated in 1253 by Bishop Konrad I of Meissen. Today's Altbelgerner church is a plastered hall building with a three-sided east end from 1817. | |
21st | Mühlberg / Elbe | 2, 7 | Burgwall Slavic Middle Ages, Cemetery Modern Age, Settlement Iron Age, Settlement Slavic Middle Ages, Grave Field Bronze Age, Hospital Modern Age, Castle German Middle Ages, Old Town German Middle Ages, Castle Modern Age, Settlement Bronze Age, Hospital German Middle Ages, Cemetery Middle Ages, Old Town Modern Age, Monastery German Middle Ages | 20312 | The city of Mühlberg was first mentioned in a document in 1230. Long before this, Slavic settlements since around 600 AD can be proven through archaeological excavations and grave finds. The city was founded on a valley sand island at the Elbe crossing under the protection of a moated castle. The Cistercian nunnery of Marienstern was founded in 1228 and finally secularized again in 1539. |
Web links
- List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg: Elbe-Elster district (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
- Geodata in the Brandenburg geoportal with soil monuments
Individual evidence
- ↑ Georg A. Kuhlins: "The stone crosses of the Bad Liebenwerda district" in "The Black Elster - Our home in words and pictures" . No. 579 . Bad Liebenwerda 1980, p. 4-9 .