List of cultural monuments in Groitzsch
The list of cultural monuments in Groitzsch contains the cultural monuments in Groitzsch .
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
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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 ; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .
Groitzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Marienbrücke (road bridge over the Schwennigke) | (Map) | 1879 | The two-arched stone bridge over the Schwennigke on the old connection road Groitzsch – Pegau is of historical importance and consists of quarry stone masonry (sandstone), it has flat arches and a console frieze, the railings are not original. |
09305052
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Individual features of the Wiprechtsburg as a whole: castle chapel, fragment of a round tower and a collection of milestones, memorial stones and spoils (see population 09305077) | (Map) | around 1100 | A partially reconstructed castle chapel over a circular floor plan with a circular apse, a round tower fragment in quarry stone masonry up to approx. 3 m high, as the remains of an important high medieval castle complex of great urban, regional and architectural significance - and a lapidarium with traffic-historically significant boundary and road stones.
Foundations and wall remains of a round tower, the chapel and ramparts, approx. 25 old milestones, spoils, mostly sandstone from different eras. → see also Wiprechtsburg |
09257870
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Wiprechtsburg Castle, castle ruins, with castle chapel, fragment of a round tower and collection of milestones, memorial stones and spoils as individual monuments (see individual monuments 09257870) and earth wall as part of the whole | (Map) | around 1100 | An important medieval castle complex of great importance in terms of city history, regional history and architectural history and a lapidarium with boundary stones and road stones that are important for traffic history. Foundations and wall remains of a round tower, the chapel and ramparts, collection of milestones, spoils, mostly sandstone from different epochs (floor stone lapidarium).
→ see also Wiprechtsburg |
09305077
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Old Citizens School (school building in closed development) | Altenburger Strasse 2a; 2b (card) |
re. 1864 | A striking structure with a simple, Biedermeier plastered facade, of urban and social historical importance. The building has three floors and 19 axes, a sandstone portal and window frames made of sandstone, cornices, original front doors, stairwells. |
09257980
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Fire station Groitzsch: Former fire station (Schulgasse 3) and the building attached to it (Altenburger Strasse 2c) in closed development and on the corner of Altenburger Strasse | Altenburger Strasse 2c (map) |
around 1925 | A distinctive plastered building that characterizes the street scene in typical forms of the 1920s with expressionistic stylistic elements, of significance in terms of building history and local history. The buildings consist of two and four storeys in irregular axes, a semicircular porch with exit gates, the plaster facade with sandstone structure, original gates, lanterns, partly also original windows, window grilles, a five-story hose tower. |
09257981
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Residential building in closed development | Altenburger Strasse 6 (map) |
around 1830 | The building with a half-timbered upper floor is a testimony to the small town development in pre-industrial times, of importance in terms of local development and building history. It has two floors, five axes, the ground floor is massive, and the upper floor is exposed half-timbered. |
09257985
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Residential house in semi-open development | Altenburger Strasse 13 (map) |
dat. 1801, lintel | The plastered half-timbered building is one of the oldest residential buildings in the area, originally as part of the immediate suburban development and is of local and architectural significance.
The building has two floors, three axes, a towed roof at the rear, the ground floor consists partly of half-timbered, partly solid, the upper floor of half-timbered, all plastered. Existing inventory: Remnants of plank room with lintel (oak) labeled and dated: "CGVBM (Stern) IGMBM / 18 01", wooden ceiling with profiled girder, ground floor partly still with half-timbered outer wall, lying roof in two parts, entrance part a little later with wind cross, other part under purlin with 45 ° sword, one half-timbered gable still complete, the other one is missing the upper part, courtyard side roof towed in (original?). |
09257982
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villa | Altenburger Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1905 | A well-preserved Art Nouveau villa with a plastered facade, plastered structures and plastered decor, with original furnishings, of significance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has two floors in irregular axes, a strongly structured structure with bay windows, risalits, gables, winter garden, plaster with sparse stucco structure, original front door with handle, porch door, interior doors, stairwell. |
09257813
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Rental villa | Altenburger Strasse 56 (map) |
1906 | A picturesque plastered building between historicalism and Art Nouveau, with clinker brick structures and ornamental framework, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has two storeys with regular axes, two central projections, corner bay windows with a tower top, plastered clinker brick facade with a framework structure, original interior doors, and a staircase. |
09257815
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Rental villa | Altenburger Strasse 58 (map) |
around 1905 | A plastered building in the forms of late historicism with Art Nouveau touches with clinker brick structures and ornamental frameworks, a striking stepped gable, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has two storeys, three axes, the central projectile with an elaborate dwelling, attic house, the plastered clinker brick facade with stucco structure, original front door, blinds. |
09257814
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VVN Memorial (Memorial to the Victims of Fascism) | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse (map) |
around 1950 | The brick stele on a triangular floor plan is a testimony to the monument culture in the GDR and is of contemporary importance. The brick stele on a triangular floor plan is provided with three panels made of polished black granite. |
09257798
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Residential house in open development | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 6 (map) |
around 1880 | A villa-like plastered building in neo-renaissance forms with pilasters on the upper floor and with leaded glass windows has significance in terms of local development and architectural history. A kind of villa with two storeys, five axes, central projection, mansard roof, rubble stone plinth, the side entrance is built over with a wooden winter garden, the original front door, window, terrazzo floor, a leaded glass window on the side and two leaded glass skylights to the rear have been preserved. |
09257797
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Platform roofing | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 7 (near) (map) |
around 1900 (platform roofing) | The wooden construction with original glazing is the last remaining part of the historical platform structures of the Groitzsch train station, of local and transport historical importance. |
09257994
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Residential house in semi-open development | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 12 (map) |
around 1915 | A plastered building in the reform style around 1910/15 with plastered structure, the side template with bay window and gable, important in terms of building history and local development. The building consists of two storeys in non-continuous axes, the side elevation with bay window and dwelling, mansard roof, a side extension with roof terrace (today winter garden), the plastered facade with plaster decoration. The front door is original. |
09257799
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villa | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 14 | around 1905 | A strongly structured, representative plastered building in the forms of the outgoing historicism and Art Nouveau, accentuating plaster decor, lead glass windows, of importance in terms of architectural history and the history of the site. One storey above a high base (basement), extended roof, a strongly structured structure with a side tower, bay windows, risalits, dwarf house, gables, the simple plastered facade with natural stone elements, large lead glass staircase windows, an original front door and original interior doors. |
09257800
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Villa with enclosure | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 16 (map) |
around 1910 | A plastered building in the reform style around 1910 with economical plaster structures, a striking corner tower with a curved hood, of importance in terms of local development and building history. The building consists of two storeys in non-continuous axes, the roof is expanded, natural stone plinth, smoothed plastered facade, heavily structured structure, tower with hood, bay window, risalit, original front door, enclosure, cellar window grille. |
09257801
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villa | Alwin-Schmidt-Strasse 18 (map) |
around 1915 | An attractively designed plastered building in the reform style around 1915, plaster structures and plaster decor, various additions, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. Two storeys in regular axes, cubic structure with several bay windows, hipped roof with large bat dormers, original windows, roller shutters and shutters, plaster with stucco structure, lateral porch with copper cover. |
09257803
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Residential house in open development | At the Schnauder 3 (map) |
around 1810 | The core of the building consists of a half-timbered bundle and is plastered, a largely authentically preserved residential building from the early 19th century, evidence of the historical local development, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. It consists of two floors with two axes and is independent of the gable, the ground floor is solid, the upper floor is plastered half-timbered. |
09257943
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Stadtmühle: Residential house (Mühlstraße 32) with a mill extension (An der Schnauder 14) as well as an outbuilding of a mill property | At the Schnauder 14 (map) |
re. 1928 | A clearly preserved mill building from different construction phases, the house on the upper floor half-timbered, ancillary building also in half-timbered, no technical equipment preserved, of local and technological significance. The old mill building consists of two floors in four axes, mansard roof, the ground floor is solid, sandstone walls, exposed half-timbering on the upper floor, original front door with a date in the wedge stone. The mill extension from around 1900 consists of three floors in three axes, plastered brick, stepped gable, no technical equipment. |
09257966
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Apartment building in closed development | Angergasse 2 (map) |
re. 1898 | The building has a historicist plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations, corner bay windows, shops in a street image-defining location, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. A building with a gate passage and shop and three storeys, 5: 1: 7 axes, a corner bay window with a hooded roof, dwarf house, the plastered facade with rich stucco structure. |
09257868
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Apartment building in half-open development | Bahnhofstrasse 8 | A tenement house in a semi-open development with a historic plastered clinker facade, plaster, clinker and artificial stone incorporations, shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. |
09257861
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Former post office | Bahnhofstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1900 | The building has a late historical clinker brick facade with artificial stone incorporations and is a testimony to the postal service in the Wilhelmine era, of importance in terms of site development and architectural history. With gate passage, two floors, seven axes, three dwarf houses, sandstone plinth, red clinker brick with stucco structure, original gate with handle, staircase, wall tiles, door and handle, outside toilet doors, floor tiles, etched glass panes in the gate passage. |
09257860
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Apartment building in closed development | Bahnhofstrasse 12a (map) |
1909 (according to information) | With a plastered facade in the reform style around 1910, plastered and artificial stone integrations, shops, as a corner building with a striking effect on the street scene, the building, together with Bahnhofstrasse 14 and 16, forms an appealingly designed group of tenement houses typical of the time, of significance in terms of building history and site development. The building has three floors, 9/1/3 axes, a bay window, heavy cornice, a wooden eaves cornice with wave ornamentation, roof structures, the roof is new, the windows in the Bahnhofstrasse area are new, in the area of the eighth street are old, on the ground floor there are still four old shutter box panels. |
09257974
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Apartment building in closed development | Bahnhofstrasse 14 (map) |
1909 | with shop, plastered facade in the reform style around 1910, plaster and artificial stone integrations, together with Bahnhofstrasse 12a and 16, forms an appealingly designed group of tenements typical of the time, significant in terms of building history and local development.
three floors, four axes, new windows, old shop on the first floor, subtle plaster structure, eaves cornice in wave form, same facade design as number 12a. |
09257864
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Apartment building in closed development | Bahnhofstrasse 16 (map) |
around 1910 | A building with a plastered facade in the reform style around 1910, plastered structure, emphasis on the center through flat templates on the upper floors, shop, together with Bahnhofstrasse 12a and 14, forms an appealingly designed group of apartment buildings typical of the time, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. With gate passage and shop, three storeys, five axes, bay window, plastered facade with stucco structure, original roof with bat dormer, gate, window, staircase, AWC doors, apartment doors, two balconies on the back. |
09257948
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Conservatory at a residential building | Bahnhofstrasse 20 (map) |
around 1900 | A wooden construction with lead glazing, a rare example of a well-preserved Art Nouveau winter garden, of architectural significance. The two-storey apartment extension is built from half-timbered houses and has a double-leaf entrance door and six leaded glass windows. |
09257857
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Residential building in closed development | Bahnhofstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1890 | A building with a historical plaster and clinker facade, plaster and artificial stone incorporations, gate passage, and as part of the Wilhelminian expansion of the city, it is of importance in terms of the history of local development. With a gate passage, two storeys, six axes, the ground floor was changed except for the gate passage, on the upper floor yellow clinker bricks with rich stucco structure. |
09257854
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House, stable building and barn of a farm | Borngasse 3 (map) |
around 1800 | The residential building partly in half-timbered construction, the side buildings with two-tone clinker brick structure, a completely preserved farmstead in the center of the town, of architectural and local significance. The residential building has two floors in non-continuous axes, the ground floor is massive, on the upper floor partly exposed half-timbering, the stable has two floors, stepped gables, red and yellow clinker bricks. The large cross barn with plaster and clinker bricks. |
09257989
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Apartment building in closed development | Breitstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1900 | A building with a rich historical clinker facade with artificial stone and plaster structures, a shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The house has three floors, five axes, the ground floor with the original shop, the upper floor with red clinker bricks and very rich stucco structure, five roof houses, original front door and handle, window and stairwell. |
09257866
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Apartment building in closed development | Breitstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 | The clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism, artificial stone and plaster structure, emphasis on the center through a template on the upper floors, above it a dormer window, shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has three floors, six axes, the central projection with a dwelling, the ground floor with a central entrance and two shops, on the upper floor red clinker bricks with stucco structure, original front door with handle, staircase, apartment doors and outside toilet doors. |
09257865
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More pictures |
Residential and commercial building in semi-open development and in a corner location on Altenburger Strasse | Breitstrasse 16 (map) |
1927 | A building that defines the townscape in the expressionistic and traditionalist style of the 1920s, with a tower that defines the street scene, arcade and shop, accentuating sculptural jewelry, including the console figure "Schuster-Greetzsch" on the arcade, of importance in terms of local development, architectural history and urban planning. The building has three floors, seven axes, the ground floor with an arcade, sandstone pillars and corner blocks, emphasized central axis to Breitstraße with balcony, triforial windows and a dwelling, to Altenburger Straße a four-story round tower with a point, original front door. |
09257863
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Residential house in open development | Bruehl 23 (map) |
around 1800 | A half-timbered building that characterizes the street scene, as a testimony to the historical local development in pre-industrial times, of significance in terms of building history and local development. The building has two floors, five axes, a half-hipped roof, sandstone plinth, the ground floor is solid, the upper floor is exposed half-timbering, and clay infills. |
09257977
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Residential house in open development | Frauengasse 7 (map) |
around 1830 | A striking plastered building in late baroque forms, possibly a half-timbered building with a high mansard roof, as part of the historical local development in pre-industrial times of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. Two storeys in non-continuous axes, mansard roof with roof house, probably plastered half-timbering. |
09257890
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Cemetery of honor for the fallen of the First World War | Friedhofsweg (map) |
around 1920 (war memorial) | A horticultural complex with a large central boulder, flanked by stone steles arranged in a semicircle with name inscriptions, stone bench, new stone for the victims of the World War 1939–45, of contemporary and local significance. A large boulder for the fallen of the First World War, in front of it a new stone with the inscription: “Warn the victims of the war 1939–1945”, otherwise some tombs around 1900 - no memorials. |
09257872
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Altes Kantorat (residential building in open development, former school and Kantorat) | Friedhofsweg 6 (map) |
re. 1705 | A half-timbered building, formerly with a surrounding framework, the interior of the Bohlenstube has probably been preserved, used as a cantor's school until 1865, of local, architectural and social historical significance.
Two storeys in irregular axes, crooked hip roof, brick base, former half-timbered house disappeared under cement plaster in 1982. |
09257871
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Shoe factory "Meischke & Söhne", later "Saxonia" (former shoe factory building, today residential building (two addresses: Markt 10a and Graf-Wiprecht-Straße 3), in the corner of Graf-Wiprecht-Straße) | Graf-Wiprecht-Strasse 3 | 1868, later reshaped | The building with a simply structured plastered facade is a Wilhelminian-era factory building of architectural, technical and urban significance. The factory has three floors, 9: 1: 5 axes, a side elevation with a dwelling, segmented arches, four stucco fields (around 1900), plastered facade, cast iron columns. It was the first mechanical shoe factory in Germany with the sewing machines introduced from the USA in 1867, lasting machines set up for the first time in Germany in 1896, from 1916 company name "Saxonia shoe factory", until 1972 privately owned, subsequently state property. |
09257877
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Apartment building in half-open development | Graf-Wiprecht-Strasse 4 (map) |
around 1860 | A building with a historical plastered clinker facade, artificial stone, plaster and clinker brick structures, emphasis on the center through a template, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the site. A tenement house built in the core around 1860, a renovation took place around 1900 with the addition of floors and redesign of the facade. A three-storey building with a clinker facade, its relatively rich structure in plaster, clinker and artificial stone. The three central axes are combined to form a slightly laterally shifted template, between the floors there are cornices, some of which are decorated with rosette friezes and festoons. Inside, various fittings such as doors and banisters have been preserved, which clearly show the building's construction around 1860. |
09257955
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Residential building in closed development | Graf-Wiprecht-Strasse 7 (map) |
1883 | A center-emphasized, richly structured plastered facade with elaborately designed bay windows, plaster, clinker and artificial stone incorporations, a well-preserved historicist building with a character that defines the street scene, on the ground floor probably a former restaurant, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development. The building has two floors in non-continuous axes, a quarry stone base, the plastered facade with rich stucco structure, the bay window with lead glazing, dwarf house, attic house, former shop, original front door and handle, apartment doors, AWC doors, courtyard door, cellar door, handles, stairwell, Floor tiles. |
09257895
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Apartment building in closed development | Hospitalstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1910 | The building with a multi-colored clinker brick facade and an interestingly designed second floor with a plastered half-timbered replica is a distinctive building that defines the street scene and is of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. With gate passage, three floors, nine axes, red and yellow clinker bricks, on the second floor with a plastered half-timbered replica, dwarf house, original gate, cellar window grilles, staircase, apartment doors, AWC doors, verge board. |
09257941
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Apartment building in closed development | Lindenplatz 19 (map) |
around 1890 | The building has a plastered facade with plaster and stone structures as well as stucco decor, a well-preserved historic building in an appealing design, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the site. With gate passage and shop, three storeys, seven axes, plastered facade with stucco structure, quarry stone plinth, original: gate, shop, some windows, eaves box, stairwell, apartment doors. |
09257991
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More pictures |
Town hall, in the corner of Breitstrasse | Market 1 (map) |
re. 1890 | The building has a plastered facade with a rich porphyry structure, an elaborate corner accentuation with a bay window in the neo-renaissance style, a characteristic small-town town hall building from the late 19th century with partially preserved original furnishings, which is important in terms of building history, the history of the place and the townscape. With gate passage, two storeys, 6: 1: 6 axes, corner projection with bay window, dwarf houses and clock tower, side projection with tower structure, attic house, plastered facade with rich porphyry structure, original front door, stairwell, interior doors, gate. |
09257884
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Apartment building in closed development | Market 5 (map) |
around 1895 | The building with shop has a clinker brick facade with plaster, clinker brick and sandstone structures, and is a well-preserved historicist building in a central location, of importance in terms of building history and local development. It has three storeys, six axes, red clinker brick with sandstone and stucco structure. |
09257883
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Apartment building in half-open development | Market 7 (map) |
around 1895 | The clinker brick facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations is in the neo-renaissance style, a lateral template with a house entrance, shop, a well-preserved historicist building in a central location, is of importance in terms of building history and local development. The building has three floors, five axes, side elevation, attic house, red clinker bricks with rich stucco structure, a wooden eaves box, shop with a cast-iron column, front door, staircase, outside toilet doors, two apartment doors, windows, wooden coffered ceiling in the stairwell. |
09257881
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Residential house in semi-open development | Market 8 (map) |
around 1850 | A small-town plastered building in clear forms, the facade design with plaster and stone structures, a side template with a house entrance, shop, part of the historic market square development, of importance in terms of building history and site development. The building has two floors and a mezzanine, six axes, side elevation, plastered facade with stucco structure, timber-framing exposed at the rear on the upper floor. |
09257880
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Residential house in open development | Market 9 (map) |
around 1790 | At its core a half-timbered building with the remains of a plank parlor, formerly the residential building of an arable farm, as part of the historical market development, significance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building is two-story, eaves with a half-hip roof, the ground floor is massive, the upper floor is partly solid, partly half-timbered, the street front is heavily shaped, inside there are remains of a plank room. |
09303230
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Gasthof Weißes Roß (inn in half-open development with a side archway) | Market 10 (map) |
around 1830 (after Brand 1826) | A picturesque plastered building in late historical forms, at its core probably a building from around 1830, of the originally richer exterior design, above all oriels and house signs have been preserved, the oldest privileged inn on site, of architectural and local significance. The building has two floors in non-continuous axes, the ground floor with round arches, an entrance project with a dwarf house and a three-dimensional representation of a white horse, wooden bay windows, side gable with corner pinnacles. |
09257878
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Former shoe factory building, today residential building (two addresses: Markt 10a and Graf-Wiprecht-Straße 3), on the corner of Graf-Wiprecht-Straße | Market 10a | 1868, later reshaped | A simply structured plastered facade, the Wilhelminian style factory building is of architectural, technical and urban significance. It has three floors, 9: 1: 5 axes, a side elevation with a dwelling, segmental arch structure, four stucco fields (around 1900), plastered facade, cast iron columns. It was the first mechanical shoe factory in Germany with the sewing machines introduced from the USA in 1867, lasting machines set up for the first time in Germany in 1896, from 1916 company name "Saxonia shoe factory", until 1972 privately owned, subsequently state property. |
09257877
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Manor house (residential building in closed development) | Market 11 (map) |
1730, changed several times | The so-called manor house was the seat of the Groitzsch rule from 1651-1835, at the same time the patrimonial court, used as a shoe factory since 1850, of local historical importance. A plastered building with a gable roof, the center accentuated by bay windows and roof house with triangular gable.
The house was the place of the meeting of King Friedrich Wilhelm III on the night of May 2nd to 3rd, 1813 . of Prussia and Tsar Alexander I of Russia . Between 1688 and 1835 the seat of the patrimonial court (naming: Herrenhaus), from 1850 as the first mechanical shoe manufacture with division of labor in Saxony by Carl Robert Meischke in the back building, in 1868 production relocated to the Markt 10 building. |
09259409
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Apartment building in closed development | Markt 12 (map) |
re. 1895 | A late historical clinker brick facade with plaster, clinker brick and stone structures, the lateral template with volute gable, a pharmacy on the ground floor, as part of the historical marketplace development, of importance in terms of building history and site development. The building has three floors, four axes, a side elevation with a dwelling, yellow clinker bricks with rich stucco structure, original front door and handle, roof houses with round windows, shop fittings. |
09257876
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Residential building in closed development | Markt 13 (map) |
around 1800 | A building with a simple plastered façade and an interestingly designed shop fitting, one of the older residential buildings on the market, evidence of the town center development in pre-industrial times, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The house has three floors, four axes, shop with stucco around 1900, plastered facade, original: front door, blinds, half-timbered shed. |
09257875
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Residential house (with extension) in semi-open development and in a corner to the tower square | Market 14 (map) |
around 1800 | A building with a historic plastered façade facing the market, plaster and artificial stone structures, the building is essentially older, the gable is probably half-timbered plastered, as part of the historic market square development, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the site. Two storeys in non-continuous axes, half-hip roof, plastered facade with stucco structure around 1890, plastered gable, half-timbering, partly original wooden walls and shutters. |
09257874
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Former farm bourgeois farm with residential house and three side buildings in the corner of the tower square | Market 15 (map) |
1755 | The residential building with a simple plastered facade is essentially a half-timbered building, the side buildings are partly massive, partly half-timbered, an important part of the historical market development with local and architectural significance. The building has two storeys in non-continuous axes, probably half-timbered plastered, extensions with partly exposed half-timbering. |
09257885
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Apartment building in semi-open development and on the corner of Borngasse and Lindenplatz | Marktgasse 6 (map) |
around 1915 | A distinctive, diversely structured plastered building in the reform style around 1910/15 in a street-defining location, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has three storeys in regular axes, a mansard roof and is a strongly structured structure with bay windows, risalits, gables and balconies, original windows, balcony grilles, front door, stairwell, apartment doors. |
09257988
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Residential and commercial building in open development | Mühlstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1900 | A building with a representative clinker brick facade of the late historicism with Art Nouveau elements, sandstone structures, on the ground floor probably originally business premises of a bank, here there are elaborate window grilles, of importance in terms of building history and local development. The house has two floors, eight axes, side elevation, gable and roof house, the clinker brick facade with a very elaborate sandstone structure, the front door, staircase, window, and window grilles on the ground floor are original. |
09257969
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Residential house in open development and in the corner to the cross street, with extension | Mühlstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1800 | A residential building with a simple plastered facade, in the core a half-timbered building, at the back there is a half-timbered extension, as part of the historic town center development of local and architectural significance. The building has two floors, five axes, plastered facade, extension, first floor in clay framework, ground floor massive. |
09257971
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Residential house in open development | Mühlstrasse 21 (map) |
around 1800 | The upper floor consists of two-tier half-timbering, a well-preserved half-timbered house, of local and architectural importance. The building has two floors, four axes, a half-hipped roof, the ground floor is massive, the upper floor with exposed half-timbering. |
09257963
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Residential house in semi-open development | Mühlstrasse 22 (to) (map) |
around 1840 | A building with a simple plastered facade, as part of the historical local development, of local and architectural significance. The building consists of two floors, seven axes, the ground floor solid, the upper floor half-timbered plastered. |
09257965
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Residential house in semi-open development | Mühlstrasse 22 (to) (map) |
around 1800 | A simple plastered building, with plastered half-timbering on the upper floor, as part of a historical local development of local and architectural significance. The building has two floors, 5: 2 axes, half-hipped roof, brick on the ground floor, plastered half-timbering on the upper floor, original wooden window reveals. |
09257962
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Residential house (Mühlstrasse 32) with mill extension (An der Schnauder 14) as well as outbuildings of a mill property | Mühlstrasse 32 (map) |
re. 1928 | A clearly preserved mill building from different construction phases, the house on the upper floor made of half-timbered houses, ancillary buildings also made of half-timbered houses, no technical equipment preserved, of local and technical significance. The old mill consists of two floors, four axes, with a mansard roof, the ground floor is massive, sandstone walls, exposed half-timbering on the upper floor, original front door with a date in the wedge. The mill extension from around 1900 has three floors, three axes and consists of plastered brick, stepped gable, no technical equipment. |
09257966
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Residential building in open development and in the corner of Mühlstrasse, with an extension and gate entrance on Mühlstrasse | Querstraße 2 (map) |
around 1840 | A building with a well-structured plastered facade with sandstone elements, twin windows in the gable, with a classicistic effect, sandstone gate pillars as access to the homestead, as part of the historic town center development of local and architectural significance. The building has two floors in non-continuous axes, the plaster facade with stucco and sandstone structure, a console frieze under the eaves, sandstone plinth, sandstone gate pillar, half-timbered extension. |
09257970
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Residential house in open development and in the corner at Angergasse | Querstraße 3 (map) |
around 1780 | The half-timbered building is one of the few surviving buildings in the town center with half-timbered buildings on the first and second floors, and is of local and structural importance. The building has two storeys in non-continuous axes, a half-hip roof, exposed half-timbering, partly with clay infill, brick extension. |
09257973
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Former fire station (Schulgasse 3) and residential building attached to it (Altenburger Straße 2c) in closed development and in a corner location to Altenburger Straße | Schulgasse 3 (map) |
around 1925 | A distinctive plastered building that characterizes the street scene in typical forms of the 1920s with expressionistic stylistic elements, of significance in terms of building history and local history. The buildings consist of two and four storeys in irregular axes, a semicircular porch with exit gates, the plastered facade with sandstone structure, original gates, lanterns, some windows, window grilles, a five-storey hose tower. |
09257981
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Residential house in semi-open development | Schützenplatz 3 | around 1810 | A simple plastered building, the upper floor in a half-timbered construction, as part of the historical local development of local and architectural significance. The building has two floors, 2: 2 axes, original coverings, probably half-timbered plastered. |
09257935
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Alte Brauerei (Former Brewery) | Schützenplatz 6 (map) |
1886 (brewery) | Formerly a residential and brewhouse, the plastered facade in neo-renaissance forms, plastered and stone structures, box bay windows, some windows with leaded glazing, characterizing the cityscape, of importance in terms of local history and building history. The building has four floors, six axes, the plastered facade with rich stucco structure, a two-story bay window, original front door with handle, blinds, windows, staircase, lead glass windows in the bay window, apartment doors. 1886 as a steam beer brewery for Julius Oskar Rohland with living and brewing house in the front area, ice and storage cellar in the western part as well as boiler house and stable building. The brewery went into operation on May 1, 1887, in 1919 master brewer Erich Trescher took over the brewery, in 1923 beer production was stopped, followed by beer sales only. 1945 expropriation, 1949 return of the brewery to Erich Trescher, 1948–1959 branch of the Riebeck brewery, later state brewery Leipzig, then warehouse for furniture of the trade organization (HO), 1959–1989 fruit and vegetable shop, 1977 death of Erich Trescher - takeover by the state Administration, 1999–2001 conversion and expansion into a cultural, youth and leisure center. (Groitzsch (KJFG / AZUR)). |
09257934
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Primary school Groitzsch (former villa, today school, enclosure and garden pavilion) | Südstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1890 | A historic clinker brick building with plaster, clinker brick and artificial stone structures, the pavilion as an octagonal plastered building, of architectural and local significance. A building with two storeys, four axes, central projection, mansard roof, yellow clinker brick with stucco structure, enclosure: rubble stone plinth, clinker brick posts and wrought iron grating. The pavilion is an eight-sided plastered building. |
09257812
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Residential house with two outbuildings and an archway and garden | Südstrasse 9 (map) |
1928-1929 | An upscale residential building in the expressionist style, formerly a doctor's house with a practice, the building is arranged in the manner of a three-wing complex, the plastered facades with accentuating decorative elements, of architectural and artistic importance as well as of local development. The building consists of two floors in non-continuous axes with rubble stone plinth, the bay window made of sandstone, a sandstone relief above the entrance, two side wings, two-story caretaker's apartment with garages, a rear tower and a balcony with elaborate bars. |
09257811
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New Citizens School (formerly); Oberschule Groitzsch (school building and memorial plaque for August Bebel) | Südstrasse 30 (map) |
re. 1902 | A mighty plastered building in the form of the Neo-Renaissance with Art Nouveau elements with plaster and stone structures, head building with auditorium on the upper floor, with a street-defining effect as a testimony to the school system of the Wilhelmine imperial era of architectural, social and local significance. The building has three floors, 16 axes, a side elevation with a clock gable, a side elevation with inscription cartouche, natural stone base, rich stucco structure, original door, staircase, interior doors, floor tiles, stucco structure in the entrance area, formerly August-Bebel-Oberschule, side plaque for August Bebel . |
09257810
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Water tower | Südstrasse 30a (map) |
re. 1903-1904 | The stand frame and the housing of the high water tank made of steel framework, a structurally interesting engineering work from the turn of the century, the execution was carried out by the company Aug. Klönne (Dortmund), urban landmark, of technical history and urban planning importance, as an open high water tank of the type Barkhausen made of steel framework unique in Saxony .
The 45 meter high water tower in Groitzsch was built in 1903/04 by the renowned steel construction company August Klönne from Dortmund according to plans by the Dresden civil engineer Curt Dachsel. The 300 m³ water tank of the Barkhausen design (spherical bottom tank), which is surrounded by a square steel framework with a tent roof, sits on an upwardly tapering, open steel frame. The water pipes and the stairs are led up in the middle of a shaft. Due to its location in the middle of the city, the water tower is a landmark of Groitzsch. After extensive renovation in 2002/03, it is still part of the drinking water supply. As the only surviving open elevated tank of the Barkhausen type on a steel framework in Saxony, it is of importance in terms of construction and technology. An open steel construction tapering towards the top, a stairwell set in the middle, riveted cylindrical steel container open at the top with a spherical bottom (type Barkhausen), this enclosed: square casing in steel framework, tent roof, weather vane, the upper container edge was drawn inwards, flanged and with the Roof construction positively connected, elevated water tank built in 1903/04 by the company Aug. Klönne from Dortmund (patent holder of the Barkhausen type, construction was developed in close cooperation with civil engineer Georg Barkhausen), war damage, repair with parts of (non-weldable) steel St 37, 2002 renewed repair of the tower, today flow tank with network buffering. |
09257809
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City tower | Turmplatz (map) |
13th century | Originally the west tower of the former town church of St. Aegidien, a Romanesque brick building with a baroque half-timbered tower, significant testimony to the history of the town, one of the landmarks of Groitzsch, important in terms of building history, local history and town planning. A multi-storey tower on a rectangular floor plan, brick, biforic window with porphyry columns, half-timbered tower top with a slate hood (1715). |
09257886
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Residential house in open development | Turmplatz 1 (map) |
around 1800 | A simple plastered building, the upper floor presumably partly half-timbered, as part of the historic town center of local and architectural importance. The building has two storeys, formerly six axes, a half-hipped roof, a plastered facade with a simple structure, presumably half-timbered plastered, the ground floor changed. |
09257887
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City Museum: Residential house (today a museum) in closed development and corner location, with extension | Turmplatz 5 (map) |
around 1800 | A simple plastered facade, gable and extension of the upper floor half-timbered, part of the historic town center development, the museum consists of the main building Turmplatz 5, the city tower and the old guard, of local and architectural importance. The building consists of two floors in non-continuous axes with sandstone plinth, sandstone walls and sills, gable and extension in exposed half-timbering. A renovation took place in 2000/2001 - conversion to a museum. |
09257956
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Rectory and former diaconate as well as the remains of an enclosure | Wiesengasse 1; 3 (card) |
1866 | A striking, historic plastered building, partly in Gothic-style forms, entrance projections accentuated by stepped gables, in a location that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of building history and local history. The building has two floors, 13 axes, two gabled entrance projections, plastered facade with neo-Gothic structure, segmental arches in sandstone, an original door with handle, sandstone plinth, shutters, remnants of a wrought iron enclosure. |
09257892
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Frauenkirche (church (with furnishings) and churchyard with two old tombs on the southern wall of the church) | Wiesengasse 4 (map) |
13th century | A baroque, essentially medieval three-aisled church with a west tower, a change in the choir took place in the 19th century in the neo-Gothic style, which is of importance in terms of building history, characterizing the townscape (urban planning) and local history. In the core Romanesque, three-aisled hall construction in quarry stone and brick masonry, plastered, buttresses, straight choir closure, transverse rectangular tower with baroque top, side stair extensions from 1884, interior flat covered, between central nave and side aisles two large round arches over rectangular pillars, recessed sanctuary with barrel vaults from 1884, Hugo Altendorff. A tomb of the pastor Johann Andreas Thiele (* 1697): sandstone plate with inscription, angel floating above, an unknown tomb from around 1790, sandstone, stump of column on base, oval inscription plate, framed by garlands, upper end (vase?) Missing. |
09257873
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Well house | Zeitzer Strasse (map) |
1879 | The sandstone housing in neo-renaissance forms, originally erected on the market, a rarity, artistically and historically significant. The former market fountain is in the French Renaissance style with a square floor plan. |
09257932
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Apartment building in half-open development | Zeitzer Strasse 21 (map) |
around 1890 | A late-historical clinker brick facade with plaster and stone structures, side curtains with pilaster framing, shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. A building with a shop and gate passage, three floors, six axes, yellow clinker bricks with stucco structure, porphyry walls, the original store, gate, balcony grille, courtyard door, cellar door and handle, stairwell, apartment doors, exterior toilet doors, floor tiles. |
09257933
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Residential house in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 34) | Zeitzer Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1900 | A well-designed clinker brick building from around 1900, with a cracked gable, significance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has two floors, four axes, a half-hipped roof, red and yellow clinker bricks with stucco structure, central projecting with floating gable, two-storey conservatory extension, original windows, front door. |
09257938
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Residential house in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 32) | Zeitzer Strasse 34 (map) |
1901/1902 | A well-designed clinker brick building from around 1900, with clinker brick and artificial stone incorporations as well as decorative framework, significance in terms of local development and architectural history. The building has two floors, five axes, side elevation, half-timbered bay windows, red and yellow clinker bricks with stucco structure, original windows, apartment doors, AWC doors, cellar door, stairwell, floor tiles, |
09257939 |
Altengroitzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House, barn and stable building of a farm as well as courtyard paving, gate pillars, courtyard wall and enclosure of the front garden | Saasdorfer Strasse 2 (map) |
1904 | The house has a representative clinker brick facade in the style of historicism as well as twin windows in the gable, the side buildings with half-timbered upper floor, a massive barn, all in all a well-preserved closed courtyard, evidence of rural life and work in earlier times, of architectural, local and local history of importance. The house has two floors, 3: 6 axes, the clinker facade is provided with a rich stucco structure, the farm buildings are partly brick, partly half-timbered, a large transverse barn made of plastered brick, brick gate pillars and fencing, iron grating.
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09258017
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Residential house and stable of a farm | Teichstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1750 | The house with an ancient half-timbered construction (St. Andrew's cross) is one of the rare examples of a visibly preserved surrounding area in the Groitzsch region, of great importance in terms of local history and building history. The half-timbered house has two storeys and irregular axes, exposed half-timbering, original openings and was already listed in the GDR list of monuments. |
09258001
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Residential house, two side buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Teichstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1800 | Rural farm buildings in half-timbered construction, a well-preserved courtyard complex with a character that defines the townscape and is of importance in terms of local history and architectural history. The house has two storeys, probably half-timbered plastered, and has been heavily modified, a large half-timbered barn with exposed half-timbering, original openings, farm buildings. |
09258000
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Residential house, attached stable building and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Teichstrasse 4 (map) |
End of the 18th century, later reshaped | The upper floor of the house has half-timbering on the courtyard side, twin windows in the gable, an important part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural significance. The residential building has two storeys and is independent of the gable, partly with exposed framework, the gable side was plastered around 1900, stucco structure of the farm buildings, exposed framework and boarding. |
09258002
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Side building of a farm on an angular floor plan | Teichstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1830 | On the upper floor half-timbered with a Thuringian ladder motif, significance in terms of local history and building history, defining the townscape. The building has two floors, irregular axes, the ground floor is massive, and the upper floor is exposed half-timbered. |
09255338
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House and gate (with gate) of a farm | Teichstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1760 | Half-timbered on the upper floor, three sandstone gate pillars as access to the courtyard, as part of the historic town center development of local and architectural importance.
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09258016
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Residential house (surrounding area), stable building and gate entrance (with gate) of a farm | Teichstrasse 10 (map) |
1784 | The house has half-timbering on the upper floor, a rare example of a visibly preserved surrounding area, of importance in terms of local history and architectural history. A half-timbered house with two storeys, irregular axes, open framework on the upper floor, the gable side plastered, stable building, solid brick, exposed framework, gate pillars, sandstone, marked 1814.
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09258004 |
Audigast
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Rectory and side building of a rectory | Audigast 2 | The parsonage and side building of a parsonage in half-timbered and plastered form are an important ensemble with the rarely preserved example of an upper arbor, of architectural, ecclesiastical and local history. |
09258043
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Memorial to the fallen of the First World War | Audigast 2 (opposite) (map) |
around 1920 (war memorial) | The stele with a crenellated wreath and three individual panels is of local significance. |
09258031
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St. Martinskirche Audigast: Church with furnishings | Audigast 3 (card) |
2nd half of the 15th century, 1680–1685 | A medieval choir tower church, remodeled in the baroque style, of importance in terms of architectural, artistic, local history and character. The church has a polygonal Gothic choir from the second half of the 15th century, redesigned in Baroque style between 1680 and 1685, the choir tower has a Romanesque substructure and an octagonal tower with an onion dome. In the baroque nave there is a Gothic sacraments niche and a baroque cross altar, the sacristy extension is built in half-timbered construction. |
09258029
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Audigast manor: mansion of a manor and manor park | Audigast 4 (card) |
1753 | The house with a simple plastered facade with sandstone integration is a well-preserved baroque building of local, regional, architectural, cultural and artistic importance, the park with a moat is of garden artistic importance. The building has two floors, nine axes, a central projection and a mansard roof, plastered facade. The original windows and door frames made of sandstone, the front door and the stairwell have been preserved. (Recorded in 1962 by R. Sturm-Francke and I. Kittel). |
09258425
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Residential house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Audigast 10 (card) |
around 1820 | An ensemble of half-timbered buildings, courtyards that characterize the townscape with well-preserved details, of importance in terms of local history and building history. The house has two floors, irregular axes, a half-hip roof, the ground floor and gable are solid, the upper floor with exposed half-timbering. The large barn consists of exposed clay framework, the side buildings on the upper floor are half-timbered, the stable with vaults on natural stone pillars. |
09258032 |
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House of a farm | Audigast 63 (card) |
around 1800 | The upper floor consists of clad half-timbering, in the core a well-preserved example of village architecture, of importance in terms of local history and building history. The building has two floors in irregular axes, partly massive, partly exposed half-timbering, small window openings on the upper floor. |
09258041
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Residential building with workshop shed | Audigast 69 (card) |
around 1780 | A rural house, half-timbered on the upper floor, a well-preserved building with a character that characterizes the townscape and is of importance in terms of local history and building history. The building has two floors in irregular axes, a crooked hip roof, the ground floor is massive with plastered brick, the upper floor and the gable with exposed half-timbering with clay infills, the transverse shed has one floor and consists of plastered brick. |
09258039 |
Auligk
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 73 left Elbisch (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | after 1828 (boundary stone) | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones No. 1 - 212, left Elbe No. 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between No. 1 and No. 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From No. 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. |
09305507 |
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Dorfkirche Auligk: Church with furnishings | Auligk (map) |
core 14th century or older, later reshaped | Simple plastered building, hall church, pointed arched choir windows, retracted choir tower with tail hood, of importance in terms of local history, architectural history, artistic, church history and urban planning (characterizing the townscape).
Choir tower church with straight choir closure, baroque dome. |
09258137
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Auligk cemetery: enclosure wall with cemetery gate, memorial stone for 13 victims of fascism | Auligk (map) |
19th century (cemetery) | Enclosure, plastered brick wall with posts and wall fields, sandstone gate pillars, memorial slender stone stele with inscription, of local and contemporary importance.
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09258153
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Two side buildings and entrance gate of a farm | Auligk 10 (map) |
around 1850 | a side building with a half-timbered upper floor, the second a plastered solid building with twin windows in the gable, access to the courtyard with sandstone gate pillars, part of the historical town center development, of local and architectural importance.
A transverse stable with two floors, exposed half-timbering on the upper floor, ground floor and gable side plastered around 1850, a gable-side stable with two floors, solid plastered, around 1900, two sandstone gate pillars, wheel deflectors. |
09258154
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Stone cross | Auligk 13 (bei) (map) |
14./15. Century | Sandstone, possibly once the boundary stone between the dioceses of Zeitz and Merseburg, historically significant.
Sandstone cross, not in the original location. |
09304761
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Manor Auligk lower part, Oberhof: residential house (probably the administrator's house) and dovecote of the manor Auligk lower part, Oberhof | Auligk 16 (map) |
around 1780 | Both buildings, upper floor, half-timbered and mansard roof, significance in terms of building history, local history and regional history, characterizing the townscape.
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09258158
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Manor Auligk lower part, Oberhof: Manor house of the manor Auligk lower part, Oberhof | Auligk 20 (map) |
around 1790, later reshaped | Simple plastered building with a mansard roof and central projectile with triangular gable, regional, local, architectural and cultural-historical of importance, characterizing the local image.
Two storeys, five axes, central projection with triangular gable, mansard roof, striking baroque building. |
09258148
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Residential building | Auligk 25 (map) |
around 1800 | Rural house with an elaborate half-timbered construction, a building that characterizes the townscape with original details, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two storeys, two axes, independent from the gable, massive ground floor, upper storey exposed half-timbering, clay infill. |
09258147 |
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Auligk manor lower part, Unterhof: mansion, two farm buildings and gate system of the lower part Auligk manor, Unterhof | Auligk 31 (map) |
re. 1810 | representative classicist manor house, farm building with half-timbered upper floor, three sandstone pillars as access to the courtyard, importance in terms of local history, artistic, cultural history and the townscape (urban development).
The village of Auligk divides into two halves, the upper part and the lower part. A manor belonged to the upper part, called Auligk upper part. The lower part even had two knight seats that belonged together until 1603. Since then they have been independent and divided into the manorial rights. To distinguish between the two manor complexes, which were separated by the Dorfstrasse, they were called the Unterhof and Oberhof. The Unterhof described here is located on the west side of the street in the immediate vicinity of the church. The manor house, the elongated side building on the south-west side and the side building on the north-east side have been preserved from the buildings on his extensive estate. The historical buildings that complete the courtyard on the northwest side are missing today. The mansion was built according to the street-side inscription in 1810. It is possible that the building contains older components. At that time, the builder and owner was Friedrich August Immanuel von Goerschen. In keeping with the taste of the time, the manor house shows the stylistic features of classicism or - as a classicist variant - Biedermeier. It is characterized by an elegant, overall rather simple design. The two-storey building with a hipped roof is particularly effective thanks to its balanced proportions and fine accents. A three-axis risalit emphasizes the center of the main facade. A frieze is arranged under its triangular gable, decorated with reliefs (cupids and women's masks). The plaster and windows of the building are largely from a renovation made in GDR times. On the basis of historical representations, however, it is easy to understand that the original exterior design once included smooth plaster, multiple-split windows with simple frames and shutters on the ground floor. The appearance of the side buildings of the lower courtyard also dates back to the early 19th century. Presumably they were built around the same time as the manor house. These are two-story buildings, massive on the ground floor and half-timbered on the upper floor. The south-west side building has a head section made entirely of masonry; to the rear (north-west) it is extended by a lower building wing, the upper floor of which is boarded. The farm building, which stretched over the entire south-western side of the courtyard, mainly housed stables, and there were probably a few servants' rooms in the front area of the upper floor. The side building on the opposite side of the courtyard, which stands in the rear, obviously served as a coach house and probably also as a horse stable. The decisive factor for the overall appearance of the side buildings is the pronounced regularity of their two-tier half-timbered construction. The Auligk manor, Unterhof, remained in the possession of the von Goerschen family until the 20th century. The historical information of the former Unterhof manor complex in Auligk is complex. On the one hand, it is an important document for local history. But the historical significance extends far beyond the local framework. For centuries, the nobility and the knightly estates associated with them were key elements of the economic and social structure in the rural areas of Saxony. Thus the social and cultural-historical aspect also plays an important role in the significance of the monument. The manor complex testifies to the way of life and economy of a social class that has ruled for a long time in the past. She specifically illustrates this using the example of the von Goerschen family , who belonged to the primeval nobility of Central Germany and experienced their heyday from the 18th to the 20th century. This also included the existing structural characteristics of the Auligk lower courtyard, which was one of the headquarters of the von Goerschen family. The buildings of the manor form a functional structure that is of great importance for understanding such a system. In the architecture of the manors, especially their mansions, the privileges and claims of the owners found visible expression. In addition to the churches, the mansions are usually the architecturally prominent buildings on site, as this case also shows. For the historical and artistic development of the mansions in West Saxony, the residential building of the Unterhof has an important role due to its classicist or Biedermeier character, as comparable buildings of this style are relatively rare in the region. The townscape-defining (urban development) importance of the buildings of the former Auligk manor, Unterhof, results from the location in the local structure, with the manor house in particular contributing to the unmistakable appearance of the village in interaction with the neighboring church. (LfD / 2010).
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09258139
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Residential stable house and side building of a former three-sided courtyard, plus courtyard wall with gate entrance and gate | Auligk 52 (map) |
around 1750 | Two half-timbered houses, side buildings with ancient half-timbered construction (St. Andrew's cross), upper arbor of rarity, significance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258149
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Manor Auligk upper part: Farm building of the manor Auligk upper part | Auligk 53 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building, significance in terms of local and regional history.
The building, which was probably erected in the first third of the 19th century, once belonged to the extensive courtyard of the former Auligk manor upper part (remarkably, Auligk once had three manors), which was located in the southwest part of the village. Unfortunately, hardly anything of the buildings of this knight's seat, which goes back a long way in its history, has been preserved in its historical state. In particular, the loss of the manor is to be lamented. It was in the back of the courtyard, on the south side. The economic buildings of the manor Auligk obern part largely still exist in their basic structure, but due to distorting changes, the majority are without further reference value. So only this half-timbered building, which is part of the south side development of the former knight's manor, remains as a historical relic with monument-relevant informative value. On the one hand it refers to the existence of the former manor complex Auligk upper part. In this sense, it embodies an informative value in terms of local history. On the other hand, as a farm building, it also bears general testimony to the way agriculture was done in the past. The building has interesting features, including the partially preserved half-timbered construction of the ground floor. The entrance openings preserved here show that the building was used for keeping animals (dovecote) on the one hand. The ground floor was probably once completely or largely used as a stable. On the other hand, the building on the upper floor served as a storage facility. The regularly arranged ventilation openings, which indicate the drying of the crop, are striking. Perhaps this took place in connection with the brewing and distilling justice that the manor owned. But it is also known that the cultivation of chamomile, spices and onions was widespread in the area, for which drying places were also needed. The farm building shows how convincing, also aesthetically motivated design solutions emerged from functional requirements in rural architecture. From this point of view, it is a testimony to the general rural building development in the regional framework. On the other hand, as a building characterized by special use, it differs significantly from the majority of the regionally typical agricultural buildings that have been handed down in historical form and are therefore also rare. (LfD / 2010). Two floors in non-continuous axes, ground floor partially solid, gable solid, upper floor exposed clay framework, sandstone door walls, original front door |
09258150
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Cottage | Auligk 55 (map) |
around 1790 | Half-timbered construction, socio-historical and architectural significance.
Two storeys in non-continuous axes, independent from the gable, massive ground floor, upper floor partly exposed timber frame, partly plastered. |
09258151
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House of a farm | Auligk 62 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered with a Thuringian ladder motif, part of a historic row of streets, of local and architectural significance.
Two floors, two axes, independent from the gable, ground floor and solid gable, upper floor exposed half-timbering. |
09258152 |
Berndorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Saxon postal mile pillars (totality): Post mile pillar | Berndorf (map) |
re. 1722 | Copy of a quarter milestone (partly original), offset, of importance in terms of traffic and regional history.
Saxon quarter milestone made of sandstone with various inscriptions "AR", "1722", the row number 49 and the post horn mark was on the little important post road Borna – Lobstädt – Schleenhain – Berndorf – Langendorf – Töglitz – Zeitz. In 1935 the stone, which had been used for other purposes, was restored and put up again. In 1960 it was restored again and set up again with a supplemented top opposite the former Chaussee-Geld-receipt between Berndorf and Lucka, the former border between Electoral Saxony and the Duchy of Altenburg. In 1975, the stone was moved again, so that it was finally placed in its current location in 1980 due to the open-cast lignite mining. The granite base was renewed. Stele-shaped, widening towards the bottom, inscribed on both sides: AR 1722 and post horn mark, originally. Location across from the former customs house in Lucka, transferred to Berndorf in 1980, and restored before 2013. In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began to erect the Saxon post-mile pillars. Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679 - 1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km). This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in the history of traffic as part of the nationally significant postal system. (LfD / 2013). |
09258330
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House of a farm | Berndorf 4 (map) |
around 1820 | Upper floor half-timbered, part of the historical local development, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys in non-continuous axes, half-hipped roof, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed half-timbering, plastered gable. |
09258332
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House of a farm | Berndorf 8 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered, plastered, exposed at the gable, part of the historical town center development, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys in non-continuous axes, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable exposed half-timbered. |
09258328 |
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Residential house in a four-sided courtyard | Berndorf 10 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered with a Thuringian ladder motif, part of the historic village development, of local and architectural importance.
Two floors in non-continuous axes, independent from the gable, ground floor and gable massively renewed, upper floor exposed clay framework, some old windows. |
09258327
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Berndorfer Mühle: Mill building, two side buildings, barn and mill ditch of a mill property, with mill technology | Berndorf 28 | around 1737 | Well-preserved mill complex with special details that go back to the 16th century, partly half-timbered, partly solid construction, in the north side building remarkable room decoration in rococo style, of architectural, local, cultural and technological history of importance.
Mill first mentioned in 1537 under bailiff Günther von Bünau, today's mill built in 1737 (marked with weather vane in the annex 1737) Mill property consisting of mill building, two side buildings, barn and mill ditch, with mill technology.
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09258357 |
Bruise
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building of a farm | Am Anger 1 (map) |
around 1820 | Upper floor half-timbered, well-preserved stables from the 19th century, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed timber frame - (demolition approved 02/25/98). |
09258220
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Residential house, side building and gate entrance (with gate) of a three-sided courtyard | Am Anger 3 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor residential building high-quality timber-frame, building with a character that characterizes the townscape, entrance gate with sandstone pillars, of local and architectural importance.
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09258218
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Side building of a four-sided courtyard | Am Anger 5 (map) |
around 1850 | Half-timbered structure with clay infills on the upper floor, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Stable two floors, ground floor and base made of sandstone, upper floor exposed half-timbering with clay infills. |
09258216
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Köhlerhof: residential stable house, gatehouse, side building, pigeon house and courtyard paving and front garden with the enclosure of a former four-sided courtyard | Am Anger 6 (map) |
re. 1723, later expanded | Mainly half-timbered buildings, large and largely closed courtyards of local, architectural and local historical importance.
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09258213
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Residential stable house, side building and gate pillar of a farm | Am Anger 7 (map) |
around 1820 | Stable house upper floor close-fitting half-timbered structure, side building plastered building with clinker brick structure, location-defining location, of local and architectural importance.
Stable house two storeys, irregular axes, half-hipped roof, gable, upper storey exposed half-timbering, ground floor solid around 1820, stable building two storeys, gable-independent, complex plaster clinker structure |
09258214
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Side building of a farm | Am Anger 8 (map) |
1851, according to the inscription | Upper floor half-timbered, elaborate gable inscription, of local and architectural significance.
Side building: two storeys, independent from the gable, massive ground floor, upper floor partly exposed half-timbering, partly plastered, gable exposed half-timbered, barn exposed half-timbered on eaves side, massive gable ends, 2012 partial demolition determined - 2014. Deletion |
09258215
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Side building and gate entrance (with gate) of a farm | Am Anger 10 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor close-fitting half-timbered structure, sandstone gate pillars, buildings with a character that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history and architectural history.
Two storeys, irregular axes, at the gable end, hipped roof, ground floor solid brick plastered, upper storey and gable exposed clay framework, four sandstone gate pillars around 1880. |
09258222 |
Cöllnitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential house in a four-sided courtyard | Cöllnitz 4 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor close-fitting half-timbered structure, well-preserved part of the historic town center development, of architectural significance.
Two storeys in non-continuous axes, eaves, ground floor and rear part massive, upper storey exposed half-timbering. |
09258302
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Barn and gate of a four-sided courtyard | Cöllnitz 5 (map) |
around 1880 | Barn half-timbered construction, significance in terms of local history and building history.
large half-timbered barn, gate with sandstone pillars. |
09258301 |
Droßkau
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential house, stable building, moving house and barn of a four-sided courtyard, plus courtyard paving, fencing of the garden and gate system (with archway and two gates) | Droßkau 4 (map) |
around 1900 | the two side buildings, upper floor half-timbered, residential building a Wilhelminian style plastered building with brick structure, massive barn, important and closed-preserved courtyard complex with a strong character that defines the townscape and is of importance in terms of building history and local history.
Two-storey residential building, four axes, heavily structured structure with risalits, gables, brick and plaster around 1900, two large barns, brick and half-timbered, stable and old part around 1750, solid ground floor, upper floor exposed half-timbered. Large brick gate, dated 1749, renovated before 2001. |
09258311 |
Gatzen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Transformer station | Gatzen | around 1925 (transformer station) | Pagoda type, testimony to the development of the energy supply in the region, of technical significance |
09304765
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More pictures |
Gatzen village church: Church (with furnishings), enclosure of the churchyard with three gates and a memorial stone for the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig in the churchyard | Gatzen (map) |
12th century | The core of the Romanesque hall church with a transverse rectangular west tower, redesigned in Gothic and Baroque style, of importance in terms of building history, local history, artistically and characterizing the townscape.
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09258196
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Barn of a four-sided yard | Gatzen 2 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered barn, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural importance.
exposed framework. |
09258199
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House of a farm | Gatzen 6 (map) |
around 1750, later reshaped | Upper floor partly half-timbered, outside with K-struts, twin windows in the massive gable, of importance in terms of local history and architectural history.
Two storeys, irregular axes, partly massive, partly half-timbered, Wilde Mann figure on the upper floor. |
09258204
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Gatzen 14 (map) |
around 1820 | Upper floor half-timbered, part of the historic town center development, of architectural and local importance.
Two storeys, independent from the gable, hipped roof, ground floor and gable plastered, upper floor exposed timber frame. |
09258207
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Gatzener school: school building | Gatzen 28 (map) |
1895-1896 | Sparingly designed plastered facade, historic school building of local and socio-historical importance.
Two storeys, eight axes, plastered building with plastered structure. |
09258201
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House, stable building, barn and gate (with gate) of a three-sided courtyard | Gatzen 34 (map) |
around 1750 | Closed preserved farmstead in half-timbered construction, historically significant courtyard in the historic town center, image-defining location at the churchyard, of architectural and local importance.
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09258198
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Residential building | Gatzen 35 (map) |
around 1840 | Rural building, upper floor close-fitting half-timbering with Thuringian ladder motif, part of the historic town center development in the immediate vicinity of the churchyard, probably formerly a church school, importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two floors, irregular axes, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed framework, roof shape changed. |
09258197
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Residential house (No. 38), moving house (No. 38a), side building, barn and two gate entrances (with gates) of a four-sided courtyard as well as courtyard paving | Gatzen 38; 38a (card) |
around 1905 | Elaborately designed clinker plastered buildings, large and closed courtyards from the beginning of the 20th century, of architectural and local significance.
Two-storey residential building, 6: 3 axes, half-hipped roof, central projectile, elaborate clinker brick and plaster structure, farm building: two storeys, partly half-hipped roof, partly gable roof, elaborate clinker brick and plastered structure of the facade, large transverse barn. |
09258200 |
Großpriesligk
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Villa Horn (villa with enclosure) | Cöllnitzer Strasse 4 (map) |
around 1905 | Cubic plastered building with Art Nouveau decor, main front with bay window, side roof turret, historically significant.
Two storeys, strongly structured structure, bay window, tower, mansard roof, plastered facade with stucco structure, original: window, front door with handle, wall tiles, stairwell, floor tiles, stairwell window with colored glazing, blinds. |
09258007
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Gasthof Großpriesligk (inn with annex) | Cöllnitzer Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1840 and around 1900 | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, historic inn with a character that defines the townscape, its significance in terms of local history and urban development (characterizing the townscape).
Two storeys, five axes, heavily modified, tower-like extension with a tent roof and hall extension around 1900. |
09257995 |
Großstolpen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Großstolpen watermill: House and mill building of a watermill | Großstolpen 14; 14a (card) |
1820 | Residential house with half-timbered upper floor, mill plastered building, converted for residential purposes, originally clinker brick structure, of local and technological importance.
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09256061
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Side building (stable house) of a farm | Großstolpen 29 (map) |
around 1800 | old location Kleinstolpen, upper floor half-timbered, part of the historic village structure, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, independent from the gable, hipped roof, massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable exposed half-timbered. |
09258382
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Residential house, side building with attached stable and gate entrance of a former three-sided courtyard | Großstolpen 32 (map) |
around 1800 | Residential house in the core probably half-timbered construction, plastered, gable roof, side building upper floor half-timbered, half-hipped roof, courtyard access with sandstone gate pillars, courtyard that characterizes the townscape in the old location of Kleinstolpen, of local and architectural importance.
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09258380
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Side building and gate entrance (with gate) of a four-sided courtyard | Großstolpen 38 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building, gate entrance sandstone pillars in classicist forms, part of the historic village core development, of local and architectural importance.
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09258386
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Residential house and side building of a four-sided courtyard, plus gate entrance (with gate) and enclosure of the front garden | Großstolpen 39 (map) |
around 1780 | Distinctive half-timbered buildings, residential house in late Baroque form, with a mansard roof and closely spaced half-timbered construction, front garden with original iron fencing, a defining part of the townscape, of importance in terms of building history, local history and urban planning (characterizing the townscape).
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09255954
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House, side building and gate entrance of a farm | Großstolpen 42 (map) |
around 1780 | Residential building upper floor half-timbered, side building plastered building with elaborate clinker brick structure, three sandstone gate pillars of the courtyard access, importance in terms of local history and building history.
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09255955 |
Hemmendorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building with an angled floor plan and gate entrance (with gate) of a former four-sided courtyard | Hemmendorf 1 (map) |
around 1825 | Half-timbered building with a Thuringian ladder motif, typical regional courtyard access with three sandstone gate pillars in classicist shapes, of local and architectural importance.
Angular building made of stable and old part: two storeys, irregular axes, one-sided crooked hip roof, plastered ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbered, three sandstone gate pillars. |
09258359
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Side building (with upper arbor) over an angled floor plan and gate system (with archway and gate) of a former four-sided courtyard | Hemmendorf 3 (map) |
late 18th century | Half-timbered building with Thuringian ladder motif, as an upper arbor house of particular value, stately gate system with decorative elements in sandstone, of local and architectural importance.
Angular building made of stable and senior part: two storeys, irregular axes, crooked hip roof, plastered ground floor, upper floor exposed half-timbered structure, upper arbor facing the courtyard, original window openings, partly lattice windows. |
09258360
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House of a farm | Hemmendorf 4 (map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, partly with St. Andrew's crosses, of local and architectural significance.
Two floors, irregular axes, plastered ground floor, natural stone plinth, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering, original window openings in the gable and upper floor, partly lattice windows. |
09258361 |
Hohendorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Hohendorf village church: Church (with furnishings), plus a cemetery with surrounding wall and a baroque tombstone and a baroque tombstone in the churchyard | Hohendorf (map) |
around 1500 | Gothic church with a distinctive west tower, brick stepped gable on the side extension, historical churchyard area with an enclosure wall made partly of natural stone, partly of brick, of importance in terms of architectural history, architectural design, local history and character of the townscape (urban planning).
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09258318
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Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard | Hohendorf 4 (map) |
1780 according to the inscription | Half-timbered building, formerly with surrounding framework, part of the historic town center development, significance in terms of local history and building history.
The building was once the residential building of one of the typical three-sided courtyards on the village square; it was built in 1780 according to an inscription on the lintel of the farmhouse parlor. Two-storey building with non-continuous axes, the living area on the ground floor is massive - albeit with remnants of the former surrounding framework - and on the upper floor in two-tier half-timbered construction with a large eaves overhang, with the gable being particularly rich. 19th century doors on the upper floor, horizontal roof truss. The stable area facing away from the square consists mainly of younger brick masonry, originally this part of the building was also built with half-timbering, as can be seen on the outer eaves of the house. Inside, historical furnishing elements have been preserved, particularly noteworthy is the profiled board ceiling of the living room and the inscribed and dated lintel (unfortunately expanded) labeled: "Gott + mit uns / CTZBH (heart) CSTDBM / 1780" and the original door, upper floor and gable exposed clay framework, ground floor and stable around 1900 massively renewed. The farmhouse refers to the regional (West Saxon) development of rural construction around 1800. In the former surrounding construction and the form of the half-timbered structure, there are close connections to the rich half-timbered construction of the Altenburger Land. In addition, it illustrates the former village life and economic conditions. Under these aspects, the property embodies information about the history of the home and the building history. (LfD / 2013). |
09258325
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Rectory with rectory, side building and barn | Hohendorf 24 (map) |
around 1800 | Rectory plastered solid construction, side building upper floor half-timbered, clay corrugated barn, partly brick repairs, half-timbered gable, importance in terms of local history, church history and local history.
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09258322
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Hohendorfer School (former school and barn) | Hohendorf 27 (map) |
1878 | School building simple plastered construction, barn partly half-timbered, partly plastered brick masonry, significance in terms of local history and social history, location at the churchyard that defines the townscape.
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09258320 |
Kleinhermsdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a farm | Kleinhermsdorf 9 (map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, location that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Residential house of a small farm, single-storey, plastered eaves, exposed half-timbered gable, one of the few preserved and only slightly changed half-timbered buildings in the town in a central location. |
09258368 |
Kleinprießligk
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential house, two side buildings, barn and gate entrance to a four-sided courtyard | Kleinprießligk 3 (map) |
around 1800 | Residential house with half-timbered upper floor and classicistic door frame, side building and barn solid buildings, stately four-sided courtyard with an impact on the townscape, significance in terms of local history and building history as well as shaping the townscape.
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09258028 |
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Residential building | Kleinprießligk 4 (map) |
1842 (according to information) | Rural house with half-timbered upper floor, Thuringian ladder motif, important in terms of building history and local history.
Two floors, irregular axes, ground floor and gable solid brick, upper floor exposed half-timbering with clay infills, original front door. |
09258026 |
Langenhain
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building and gate entrance of a former farm | Langenhain 4 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building with a Thuringian ladder motif, three sandstone gate pillars as access to the courtyard, location that characterizes the townscape, of local and architectural significance.
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09258225
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Residential house, two stable buildings, barn and entrance gate (with gate) of a four-sided courtyard | Langenhain 7 (map) |
around 1790 | Upper floor residential building half-timbered with Thuringian ladder motif, farm buildings plastered buildings with clinker brick structure, large, well-preserved courtyard with buildings from several construction phases, of architectural and local significance.
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09258228
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Residential house (surrounding area) of a three-sided courtyard | Langenhain 10 (map) |
around 1720 | Half-timbered construction, rich gable design, K-struts, oldest preserved half-timbered house in the village with rare motifs, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, irregular axes, facing the gable, clay framework |
09258230
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Barn of a farm | Langenhain 11 (map) |
around 1840 | Half-timbered building, two-door, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Half-timbering, saddle roof, boarding of the gable side. |
09258231
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Residential house (with barn extension), side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Langenhain 13 (map) |
around 1820 | Residential house and barn half-timbered buildings, the Thuringian ladder motif on the residential building, stables and side buildings, massive plastered buildings, largely authentic courtyards, significance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258232
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Residential house in a four-sided courtyard | Langenhain 14 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered construction, half-timbered construction in a regular grid, Thuringian ladder motif, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural significance.
Two storeys, irregular axes, independent of the gable, hipped roof, gable side and ground floor plastered, ground floor massive, upper floor exposed, close-fitting framework. |
09258233 |
Löbnitz-Bennewitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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More pictures |
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 72 (left Elbe) as well as 106 runner stones (see also general document - Obj. 09305644) | after 1828 (boundary stone) | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones No. 1 - 212, left Elbe No. 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between No. 1 and No. 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From No. 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. |
09305506
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War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Löbnitz-Bennewitz (map) |
around 1920 (war memorial) | Obelisk over a multi-tiered base, cast concrete, of local and contemporary importance.
Obelisk over a multi-tiered base, relief. |
09258180
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House and eastern barn of a former four-sided courtyard | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 12 (map) |
around 1780 | Upper floor residential building close-fitting half-timbered structure with Thuringian ladder motif, rich half-timbered structure typical of the landscape, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, irregular axes, solid ground floor, upper storey and gable exposed clay framework, barn framework around 1830. |
09258193
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Side building of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 13 (map) |
around 1800 | rebuilt for residential purposes, upper floor half-timbered, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural significance,
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09258192
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Residential house and two side buildings of a former four-sided courtyard | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 14 (map) |
around 1800 | Residential building and side building on the eaves, half-timbered buildings, other side building, more recent solid construction, courtyard that characterizes the townscape with historical details, significance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258191
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Residential house, two side buildings over an angular floor plan and barn of a farm, plus gate entrance to the barn | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 16 (map) |
around 1830 | Residential house, stately half-timbered building, massive gable, stable building plastered buildings, barn largely plastered brick building with clinker brick sections, three sandstone gate pillars as a courtyard entrance, large courtyard with a structure-defining character, of architectural and local importance.
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09258190
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Residential house (surrounding area and log room), side building, shed and courtyard gate of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 17 (map) |
1822 re. (Door frames) | Half-timbered buildings, remarkable courtyard gate in wooden construction, authentically preserved courtyard with significant details, evidence of the West Saxon half-timbered house landscape, of local and architectural importance.
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09258189
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Gate entrance to a former three-sided courtyard | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 19 (map) |
around 1850 | two sandstone gate pillars with vase attachments in a classicist design, detail that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history.
Two gate pillars, sandstone with vase attachments. |
09258188
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Residential stable house (surrounding area) of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 30 (map) |
around 1780 | A striving half-timbered building with a striking effect on the street scene, testimony to the western Saxon landscape of surrounding houses, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two storeys, irregular axes, half-hip roof, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed framework. |
09258178
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Residential house (surrounding area), side building, shed and gate entrance (with gate) of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 34 (map) |
around 1790 | Half-timbered residential building with Thuringian ladder motif, example of the typical regional framework construction, side building, upper floor half-timbered, three sandstone gate pillars as access to the courtyard, characterizing the townscape, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
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09258179
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Manor Löbnitz b. Groitzsch: Former mansion | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 37 (map) |
1798 | Elongated plastered building in the classicistic style, birthplace of Ulrike von Levetzow with high cultural and literary historical testimony value, as the main component of the Löbnitz manor, which was once important in the region and of regional, local, architectural and cultural significance.
Two storeys, massive ground floor, upper storey possibly half-timbered, plastered overall, saddle roof, once with bat dormers, ground floor windows originally probably closed arched, upper storey windows with shutters, building currently strongly influenced by recent changes. |
09304764
|
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Manor Löbnitz b. Groitzsch: residential building, formerly the head section of the sheep barn of the manor | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 38 (map) |
around 1800 | Plastered half-timbered building, as a former part of a manor of local and cultural significance, also evidence of sheep farming in earlier times.
Two storeys, irregular axes, hipped roof, half-timbered frame construction, plastered. |
09258182
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House and gate (with gate) of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 43 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building, three sandstone gate pillars as access to the courtyard, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, half-hip roof, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed framework in a regular grid, plastered gable, three sandstone gate pillars, wheel deflectors. |
09258184
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House of a farm | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 44 (map) |
around 1810 | Half-timbered building, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural importance.
Two floors, irregular axes, massive ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering. |
09258185
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House of a three-sided courtyard | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 45 (map) |
1790 | Half-timbered building with remains of a surrounding area on the ground floor, rich gable design, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural significance.
Two storeys, irregular axes, massive ground floor with remains of a framework, upper storey and gable exposed half-timbering. |
09258186
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Residential stable house | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 48 (map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, part of the historic village development on the outskirts, of local and architectural importance.
Two floors, irregular axes, massive ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering. |
09258187
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Residential building | Löbnitz-Bennewitz 64 (map) |
around 1800 | Striving half-timbered building, Thuringian ladder motif, location that characterizes the street scene, of importance in terms of local history and architectural history.
Two floors, irregular axes, massive ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering. |
09258195 |
Maltitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 76 left Elbisch (see also material document - Obj. 09305644); | after 1828 (boundary stone) | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones No. 1 - 212, left Elbe No. 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between No. 1 and No. 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From No. 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. |
09305508 |
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House and side building of a former four-sided courtyard | Maltitz 2 (map) |
1656 Dendro | Half-timbered buildings, residential house with Wilder Mann figure and K-struts, building with significant house history and rare details, one of the oldest half-timbered houses in the Leipzig region, of local and architectural importance.
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09258177
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Stable building and archway of a four-sided courtyard | Maltitz 6 (map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, archway plastered masonry, evidence of the historical village development, of local and architectural importance.
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09258173 |
Methewitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a farm | Methewitz 6 (map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, formerly surrounding framework, Thuringian ladder motif, younger side, part of the historical town development, of local and architectural significance.
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09258170
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Residential house, two side buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Methewitz 7 (map) |
around 1820 | Courtyard complex preserved largely closed, predominantly in half-timbered construction, significance in terms of local history and architectural history.
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09258172
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House of a three-sided courtyard | Methewitz 8 (map) |
around 1840 | Half-timbered building, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, half-hip roof, plastered ground floor and gable, upper floor half-timbered in a regular grid. |
09258171 |
Michelwitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
More pictures |
Michelwitz village church: Church (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure wall and archway as well as a war memorial in the churchyard | Michelwitz (map) |
14.-18. Century | The core of the Gothic hall church with an attractive, baroque west tower, cemetery gate, bricked and plastered archway with driveway and gate for people, cemetery surround in brickwork, war memorial artificial stone stele with Art Deco ornamentation, of architectural and local significance.
Hall building with 5/8 choir closure, inserted west tower with baroque dome. |
09258160
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Former rectory and side building of a rectory | Michelwitz 3 (map) |
1782 dated | Half-timbered buildings, on the parsonage Thuringian ladder motif, also a single-storey side building with a striving construction, parsonage testimony to the western Saxon landscape of surrounding houses, location that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history, church history and architectural history.
Rectory: two floors, 3: 7 axes, half-hipped roof, ground floor partly renewed, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering with clay infills, side building: one floor, exposed half-timbering |
09258166
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Residential house and two side buildings of a former four-sided courtyard | Michelwitz 5 (map) |
1820 | Half-timbered buildings, residential house with ancient half-timbered construction (St. Andrew's cross), part of the historical local development, of local and architectural significance.
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09258168
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Residential house, attached stable building and barn of a farm | Michelwitz 10 (map) |
around 1780 | Half-timbered farmhouse, largely closed, part of the historical local development in a structurally defining location, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258164
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Stable building and gate entrance to a farm | Michelwitz 12 (map) |
around 1905 | Solid construction with an elaborate plaster and clinker structure, testimony to the rural architecture around 1900, a location that characterizes the street scene and is of importance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258165
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House of a farm | Michelwitz 17 (map) |
around 1840 | Half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two storeys, irregular axes, half-hipped roof, ground floor and gable massive, plastered, upper storey exposed half-timbering. |
09258163 |
Nehmitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a farm | Nehmitz 21a (map) |
around 1790 | Half-timbered construction, Thuringian ladder motif, characterizing the street scene, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two floors, irregular axes, plastered ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering, with partly original window openings on the upper floor. |
09258364 |
Obertitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House and side building of a farm | Obertitz 5 (map) |
around 1800 | both buildings upper floor half-timbered, partly plastered, location that defines the street scene, of local and architectural importance.
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09258305
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Obertitz 6 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered construction, half-timbered construction with a regular grid and Thuringian ladder motif, building that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two storeys in non-continuous axes, hipped roof, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed half-timbering, original windows. |
09258303
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Obertitz 9 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building with a Thuringian ladder motif, part of the historic village center development, significance in terms of local history and building history.
Two floors in non-continuous axes, independent of the gable, massive ground floor, upper floor exposed half-timbering. |
09258304
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War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Obertitz 14 (next to) (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Artificial stone pedestal with helmet as a crown, of local and contemporary importance.
War memorial with the inscription: "In memory of the victims of both world wars" |
09257264 |
Oellschütz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a former three-sided courtyard | Oellschütz 3 (map) |
re. 1734, more recent changes | Half-timbered construction, inside the older part board ceiling, evidence of the historical local development, of local and architectural importance.
Two floors, two axes, independent from the gable, ground floor and solid gable, upper floor exposed half-timbering. |
09258237
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Residential building, western side building with old part and eastern side building of a former four-sided courtyard, plus courtyard paving and gate entrance (with gate) | Oellschütz 8 (map) |
around 1820, later reshaped | Stately buildings, predominantly with half-timbered upper storeys, with a defining effect on the townscape, elaborate gate system with sandstone pillars, significance in terms of local history and building history.
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09258234
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Syringe house | Oellschütz 9 (opposite) (map) |
around 1870 | Small half-timbered building, evidence of the fire service history in the region, of local and social history.
square floor plan, saddle roof, exposed framework. |
09258238 |
Pautzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building, gate entrance and courtyard paving of a four-sided courtyard | Pautzsch 1 (card) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building, large archway in plastered brickwork with keystone, of local and architectural significance.
Stable building with bat dormers, open half-timbering on the sides, plastered gable side, gate entrance with round arch, fighter plate, wedge stone, plastered. |
09258159 |
Pödelwitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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More pictures |
Pödelwitz village church: Church (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure | Pödelwitz (map) |
17th century | Baroque hall building with drawn-in long choir and tower with onion dome, of importance in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town.
Church with furnishings, octagonal choir tower with onion dome and lantern top, classical nave, cemetery enclosure made of brick masonry, mid-19th century. |
09256063
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Two side buildings, barn and entrance gate (with gate) of a four-sided courtyard | Pödelwitz 3 (map) |
around 1860 | Half-timbered building, well-preserved parts of a courtyard with a defining character, three sandstone gate pillars with vase attachments as the entrance to the courtyard, of local and architectural importance.
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09258389
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House and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Pödelwitz 8 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor close-fitting half-timbered house, residential house with twin windows in the gable, of local and architectural importance.
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09256084
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House and side building of a former three-sided courtyard | Pödelwitz 10 | around 1800 | half-timbered buildings typical of the landscape, of local and architectural importance.
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09256082
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Pödelwitz 13 (map) |
around 1820 | Half-timbered building with a Thuringian ladder motif, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
Two storeys, irregular axes, half-hipped roof, gable-independent, ground floor massive, upper floor exposed framework. |
09256078
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Residential house (surrounding area) of a former four-sided courtyard | Pödelwitz 20 (map) |
1786 | Half-timbered building with surrounding framework, testimony to the western Saxon landscape of surrounding houses, location that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of local history and building history.
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09256073
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House of a farm | Pödelwitz 27 (map) |
inside re. 1731 | Upper floor half-timbered, probably plastered surrounding framework, inside living room with beams as well as an inscription and jumping deer on the door beam, of local and architectural significance.
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09257282 |
Saasdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Transformer station | Saasdorf (map) |
around 1925 | Pagoda type, well-preserved example from a group of similar structures, historical evidence of electrification, of significance in terms of technology history.
square floor plan, tent roof, lantern attachment, clinker base, wooden eaves box. |
09258018
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House of a three-sided courtyard | Saasdorf 2 (map) |
around 1720, later reshaped | Half-timbered building with block room and arcade, this one with St. Andrew's cross, of local and architectural significance.
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09258021
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Side building, gate entrance (with gate) and courtyard paving of a farm | Saasdorf 3 (map) |
around 1840 | Half-timbered building with a Thuringian ladder motif, part of the historic town center development, of local and architectural importance.
|
09258022 |
Schnaudertrebnitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a farm | Schnaudertrebnitz 9 (map) |
around 1820 | Essentially a half-timbered building, originally probably with an arcade, of local and architectural significance.
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09258212
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House of a farm | Schnaudertrebnitz 18 (map) |
around 1730 | Half-timbered building with an angular floor plan, St. Andrew's crosses in the gable, one of the oldest preserved buildings in the village, of local and architectural importance.
Two storeys, independent from the gable, massive ground floor, upper floor and gable exposed half-timbering |
09258209 |
Mopping perennials
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gut Kleinwischstauden: residential building and two side buildings of a former four-sided courtyard | Leipener Strasse 7 (map) |
around 1780 | Stately-looking residential house in late baroque forms, plastered half-timbered upper floor, mansard roof, side buildings half-timbered buildings, farms that stand out due to their shape and size, characterizing the local history and building history.
|
09258015 |
Remarks
- ↑ 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 .
Detailed memorial texts
-
↑ Saasdorfer Straße 2 in Altengroitzsch :
The well-kept courtyard complex Saasdorfer Straße 2 is an essential part of the local structure due to its size and shape. It is a stately four-sided courtyard, the buildings of which give an insight into the structural development of a typical regional farm in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During this time, the courtyard buildings were largely renewed in apparently very short succession. The original three-sided courtyard became a four-sided courtyard. For the clarity and comprehensibility of this process it is essential that with the northern side building a courtyard component in the traditional half-timbered construction has been preserved. This building from the period around 1800 is in itself a significant statement due to its upper arbor.
The new buildings built around 1900, built in modern solid construction, testify to the clearly increased productivity of agriculture at the time, and the demands and need for representation of the Farm owner. This is particularly evident in the house built in 1904. The two-storey building, which is based on urban forms, is richly decorated, with the two-tone clinkered upper storey in particular being lavishly decorated with decorative shapes. As a result, and with its massive cubature, the residential building stands out clearly in the street scene. In the churchless place, it forms the essential urban dominant. The small side building that runs along the street is also fitted out with strips of brick to match the urban situation, while the stables and barn at the rear are designed in a very simple way in the sense of utility buildings.
The Vierseithof documents the rural way of life and work in earlier times in the region and thus acquires local and local historical significance. In addition, it illustrates how traditional building forms were to a certain extent consciously abandoned due to changed economic and social conditions in the recent past and how the owners of peasant goods emulated the city's building fashions whenever possible. It becomes clear how industrial production with its products (clinker brick, stucco elements, etc.) also affected the development of rural construction. Its structural historical value is connected with it.
The importance that the Saasdorfer Straße 5 farm complex has for the townscape results from its position in the local structure. While the other farmsteads in the village are slightly hidden towards the valley of the Schwennigke, the property in question presents itself in a stately size on the road passing by. -
↑ Teichstrasse 10 in Altengroitzsch :
The two-storey house still clearly shows the characteristics of a half-timbered house. According to the date on the door frame in the living room, the building was built in 1784. The history of the house includes some changes, including the renovation of the front gable carried out in GDR times (1968). In contrast, the long sides of the building with the half-timbering on the upper floor are in their original form. The two-tier construction of the framework is typical of the time it was built. Another characteristic element is the central stem in the compartments of the window parapets. also referred to as the Thuringian ladder motif (not preserved throughout). The sequence of the framework shows that the arrangement of the windows has been changed from time to time. It can be strongly assumed that the parts of the plank room, including a board ceiling with a joist, which were described in the 1952 monument registration, are still preserved.
The side building, which mainly served as a stable, is also a two-storey, but massive construction. It has a gable roof. There is a lower extension towards the entrance to the courtyard. According to the appearance, the side building and the extension date from the 19th century. 1874 (according to the inscription) the entrance with the three gate pillars and the people's gate covered by a very flat arch was created. The soft Zeitzer sandstone used is a typical regional material for the design of such gate systems.
The two buildings mentioned and the gate system at Teichstraße 10 in Altengroitzsch illustrate the development of rural construction in western Saxony in earlier times. The execution of the house as a half-timbered house plays a special role. It documents that this construction method was also widespread in the Leipzig area, especially in the Pegau and Groitzsch area, and was carried out at least until the late 18th century. The informational value for building development is closely related to the informational value for the rural way of life. The monument objects show how people lived and worked in the past in the place and in the region. Under these aspects, they gain importance in terms of local history and building history.