List of cultural monuments in Beicha

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The list of cultural monuments in Beicha contains the cultural monuments in the Döbelner district of Beicha .

This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .

Legend

  • Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
  • Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
  • Location: If available, street name and house number of the cultural monument; The list is basically sorted according to this address. The map link leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
Map view to set coordinates. In this map view, cultural monuments are shown without coordinates with a red marker and can be placed on the map. Cultural monuments without a picture are marked with a blue marker, cultural monuments with a picture are marked with a green marker.
  • Dating: indicates the year of completion or the date of the first mention or the period of construction
  • Description: structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the monument properties
  • ID: is awarded by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony. It clearly identifies the cultural monument. The link leads to a PDF document from the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony, which summarizes the information on the monument, contains a map sketch and often a detailed description. For former cultural monuments sometimes no ID is given, if one is given, this is the former ID. The corresponding link leads to an empty document at the state office. The following icon can also be found in the ID column Notification-icon-Wikidata-logo.svg; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .

Beicha

image designation location Dating description ID
Beichaer Schule (former school and outbuilding) Am Schmiedeberg 2
(map)
re. 1894 The plastered building from the end of the 19th century, as well as the older half-timbered outbuilding, both of architectural historical value and the school also of local historical value.
  • School: two-storey, plastered solid construction, rectangular floor plan, nine-axis, front door with portal, there inscribed: 1894, horizontal beams above portal, front door and window from the construction period, saddle roof,
  • Outbuildings: possibly rebuilt after the fire around 1834, single-storey barn part and two-storey part of the house, there solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered partly boarded-up, half-hipped roof, partly with beaver tail covering.
09305621
 


Church with furnishings and tomb of the pastors Graun and Ehrlich in front of the church
Church with furnishings and tomb of the pastors Graun and Ehrlich in front of the church Gödelitzer Weg
(map)
1834 The classicist church, which has a major impact on the townscape, is largely furnished in a period of construction and is of architectural and historical importance.

Classicist hall church with west tower, rebuilt in 1834 after a fire in the previous building. The construction was in the hands of the council carpenter Karl Friedrich Opitz from Meißen and the mason Johann Gottlieb Maudrich from Beicha. The compact plastered building, which just ends in the east, with its narrow windows, the classicist door portals, the high hipped roof with bat hatches and its simple bell and clock tower in the west significantly shapes the village image. The building impresses with its unchanged design. The same is true of the interior of the church. Inside, flat-roofed with two-storey galleries on the north and south sides and a single-storey organ gallery. The stalls and the pulpit altar are from the construction period. The organ was built by the organ builder Karl Gottlieb Hecker from Borna and consecrated in 1836. In 1887 the organ was completely overhauled by the organ builder Franz-Emil Keller from Ostrava . The church furnishings also include a wooden baptism (oak), which was donated by the local pastor in 1834, as well as colored glass windows from 1935 and a small tombstone to the side of the pulpit altar for the son of the pastor Arras and Beicha from 1627. The church and the tower were restored or respectively in 1886. partially renewed (crowning of the tower). Further restorations took place in 1934 and 1990. In front of the church there is a tomb for the pastors Graun and Ehrlich, sandstone, around 1900. The monument value of the church and the furnishings results from the great importance of the local history, the artistic and the local image.

On a rectangular floor plan, hipped roof with ridge turret, laying of the foundation stone after the fire of the previous building on April 19, 1834.

09208900
 


Pfarrhof Beicha (former rectory and outbuilding of the rectory) Gödelitzer Weg 2
(map)
re. 1790 Half-timbered building typical of the landscape and the time, or plastered quarry stone building in a dominant position opposite the church, of importance in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town.

The former parsonage, originally a four-sided courtyard with parsonage, outbuildings, barn and tenant house, is located opposite the church. After the old rectory burned down in 1789, the house was rebuilt in 1789/90. The master carpenter Schicketanz from Planitz and the master mason Bäurig from Neckanitz are documented as builders. The two-storey rectory has the construction features typical of the time around 1800. It is a two-storey building on a rectangular floor plan with a solid ground floor and a two-bar framework on the upper floor with a few tapped struts. Later the half-timbered gable was massively replaced. The house is completed by a half-hip roof. Since the parsonage has the three-way division of the ground floor, which is common for farmhouses in Saxony, with a transverse hallway, living area and stable part, the house was accessed almost in the middle of the eaves. The original door portals with keystones were preserved. In the last few years the house was renovated while largely preserving the original building stock. Of the farm buildings already mentioned, only a small single-storey solid building with a steep pitched roof remained, the time of which is unknown. At the time when the cultural monuments in Beicha were re-recorded in 2000, the roof structure was still clearly recognizable, which, due to its design features, suggests that it was built before 1800. This house was also renovated. The quarry stone building, which was originally exposed to stone, including the half-timbered gable, was plastered. It is likely to be the outbuilding mentioned in the Neue Sächsische Kirchengalerie in the chapter on “Die Parochie Beicha”. As a historical component of the rectory and as an example of the building trade of the 18th century, the house gains architectural significance. In addition to its architectural significance due to its training typical of the time, the parsonage also acquires local historical significance due to the position and duties of the pastor in the village as well as great importance for the townscape due to its dominant location.

Solid ground floor, portal with basket arch and dating, upper floor half-timbered, half-hipped roof, side building: 1-story, quarry stone, gable roof, gable: wooden pegs with clay infill.

09208902
 


Geßner Hof (residential building (former residential stable?) And side building of a four-sided courtyard) Gödelitzer Weg 5
(map)
re. 1834 Magnificent half-timbered house and massive pull-out house in the immediate vicinity of the church, of architectural value.
  • Residential house: Solid ground floor, two sandstone portals with roofing, upper floor half-timbered, gable half-timbered, gable roof with bat dormers, renovated, built by the same builder who rebuilt the church after the fire in 1834, the builder Maudrich was the owner of this property, which was the fire of the church was also canceled,
  • Side building (pull-out house): built in 1879 by Ernst Reinhold Brühl, the owner of the farm at the time, two-storey, broad storage, plastered solid structure, largely preserved in its original form.
09208901
 


Beicha cemetery: Mausoleum, memorial stones (including World War II), war memorial (World War I) and gravestones (see monument text) at the Beicha village cemetery Meilaer Strasse
(map)
probably 1944 (mausoleum) Tombs and memorial stones of local historical importance.

In 1844, the community acquired a piece of field adjoining the village to the north as a church and paved it. Presumably after a break in occupancy, the Gottesackers was re-occupied from July 1900. The mausoleum of the Zieger family from Thirty (first occupancy presumably Oswald Zieger 1944) is stylistically linked to a Greek temple and is of architectural historical value. Judging by their design, some of the monument-protected tombstones were built before 1900. The memorial stones, memorials and tombs are particularly worthy of monument due to their local historical, but also artistic value.

  • Mausoleum: burial place of the Zieger family from their thirties, landowners, temple-like architecture,
  • Memorial stones: neo-Gothic design, surface heavily weathered,
  • Gravestone: 1874, Hennig family, weathered sandstone,
  • Monuments / memorial stones:
    • I. War memorial for those who fell in World War I, around 1920, neo-baroque monument, sandstone base with inscription (names of those who fell in World War I) and mourning angel and large urn, also sandstone,
    • II. Memorial plaque for Corporal Emil Bruno Roßberg, fallen in 1916 near Verdun, soldiers' grave,
    • III. Memorial stone for those who fell in the Battle of Lommatzsch, all fell on April 29, 1945, red granite, erected after 1945,
    • IV. Memorial stone, front side badly weathered, an inscription has been preserved in the base: "The grateful church community 1935", presumably rededicated tombstone from around 1870, on the back a relief - depiction of a mourning woman with a Bible in her hands and depiction of a cross, Porphyry tuff,
  • Gravestones:
    • 1st neo-Gothic tombstone, today without inscription, around 1870, sandstone heavily weathered,
    • 2. Tomb of the manor owners on Gödelitz, the Schmidt family and Schmidt-Gödelitz, around 1924, neo-baroque tombstone, the base with name inscriptions, above moving plastic representation (relief and three-quarter relief), representation of two female kneeling angels next to a tombstone with the inscription "Schmidt family Rittergut Gödelitz ", the tombstone is crowned by a simple cross,
    • 3. Tomb of the Hennig family, landowners from Schwanitz, around 1874, sandstone with inset black granite panels,
    • 4. Mausoleum of the Zieger family from Thirty (first occupancy probably Oswald Zieger 1944), stylistically linked to Greek temples, influenced by the architecture of the Third Reich, sandstone, mausoleum rarely found in its design.
09208899
 

Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

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