List of cultural monuments in Käbschützal

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The list of cultural monuments in Käbschützal includes all cultural monuments in the Saxon community Käbschützal ( district of Meißen ). The monuments contained in the list are current as of September 2017.

For the districts of Barnitz , Deila , Gasern , Görna , Großkagen , Jesseritz , Käbschütz , Kaisitz , Krögis , Leutewitz , Löbschütz , Löthain , Luga , Mauna , Mehren , Mohlis , Niederjahna , Nimtitz , Nössige , Oberjahna , Planitz , Porschnitz , Priesa , Pröda , Schletta , Schönnewitz , Soppen , Sornitz , Stroischen and Tronitz are cultural monuments and are included in the list.

Legend

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

Barnitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Rittergut Barnitz (manor house (No. 1, now kindergarten) and south-eastern farm building (No. 1a) of a manor)
More pictures
Rittergut Barnitz (manor house (No. 1, now kindergarten) and south-eastern farm building (No. 1a) of a manor) Barnitz 1; 1a
(card)
re. 1731, 1912–1913 remodeled (mansion) Manor house stately baroque building, renovation in the reform style of the time around 1910, farm building with neo-Gothic style elements from the 19th century, of architectural and local significance.

Former Manor. Large rectangular manor, on the west side the manor house from 1731, extension 1912/13.

  • Two-storey plastered building with 9: 4 window axes, marked 1731, with the initials of the builder MAG von Köhler, the expanded hipped roof with a relief-decorated diaphragm and the porch on the west side from 1912/13. Narrow garden terrace on the east side, with a flight of stairs and arched openings as entrances to the cellars inserted into its retaining wall. - The interior renewed in 1913.
  • In the manor, large farm buildings from the second half of the 19th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996) massive, baroque gable (filled: Darst. Boy and girl, two deer), two Art Nouveau windows, cf. Gurlitt
09268444
 


Residential building Barnitz 12
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Boarded gable (new), porch, side roof, stable extension

09268445
 

Deila

image designation location Dating description ID
Manor Deila (manor, farm building (with gatehouse) and barn of a manor)
More pictures
Manor Deila (manor, farm building (with gatehouse) and barn of a manor) Deila 1
(map)
re. 1776 (manor house) Distinctive complex, mansion an elongated plastered building with segmented arch portals and mansard roof, gatehouse also with mansard roof, of architectural and local significance.

Former Manor. Rectangular main courtyard in the north, with the mansion from 1793 on the east side, the north gate and the barn in the west, to the south there is a smaller, rising courtyard with farm buildings in the east and west and the exit to the field corridor.

  • Manor house, simple two-storey plastered building with mansard hipped roof, 11: 4 axes, the sandstone entrance portal marked 1793, inside remains of stucco ceilings. Two-storey plastered residential and farm building with hipped gable roofs, its middle part raised, designed as a gatehouse, with a mansard hipped roof (formerly with a crowned rider), the arched sandstone portals of the gate passage with the initials of the client Johann Georg Wolf, inscribed 1776; Coat of arms: Wolf placed over oval, inside the letter W
  • Large barn with two basket arch gates and a half-hipped roof, E. 18th century - The farm buildings in the south courtyard with classicist facade elements, marked 1857. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)
09268110
 

Gassers

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house Meißner Berg 3
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Massively stocky half-timbered structure, ground floor disfigured by large windows, hipped roof.

09267986
 


gym Meißner Berg 4
(map)
End of the 19th century Wood-paneled building, donated by the Jahn Association, which was located at the time, of local historical importance.

Wooden cladding or only made of wood, 2003 deletion of the war memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War (also donated by the Jahn Association, which was located at the time)

09267985
 

Görna

image designation location Dating description ID
Görna-Krögis station;  Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line;  Beet track (so-called);  Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building and remains of the paving)
Görna-Krögis station; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building and remains of the paving) Görna 17 (opposite)
(map)
1909 (train station) wooden waiting hall of a narrow-gauge railway, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, original state of preservation, as a document of the original route of the so-called beet railway and as a type construction of this narrow-gauge line of railway history.

Half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling, design typical of the present narrow-gauge line.

Line kilometers 22,481, railway station facilities originally included a toilet building (demolished) and a car body in addition to the waiting hall, opened on December 1, 1909 for freight and passenger traffic, closure of the passenger and goods station on October 29, 1972. This section of the route is unique that all train stations and their waiting halls have been preserved.

09268312
 

Great collar

image designation location Dating description ID
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War Big collar 10 (at)
(card)
after 1918 (war memorial) of local importance. 09267992
 

Käbschütz

image designation location Dating description ID
Käbschütz stop;  Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line;  Beet track (so-called);  Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building with toilet block and car body)
Käbschütz stop; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building with toilet block and car body) Käbschütz
(map)
1909 (train station) wooden waiting hall of a narrow-gauge railway, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, original state of preservation, as a document of the original route of the so-called beet railway and as a type construction of this narrow-gauge line of railway history.

Waiting hall: half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling, painted green around 2000, original state of preservation, design typical of the present narrow-gauge route, toilet house or free access (later called toilet), car body.

Route kilometers 27,814, built as a train station, stopping point from February 1969, train station facilities originally included a toilet building, a car body and a loading ramp in addition to the waiting hall, opened on December 1, 1909 for goods and passenger traffic, goods traffic ceased in February 1969, passenger traffic not until October 29, 1972. It is a uniqueness of this section of the route that all stations with the associated waiting halls have been preserved.

09268363
 


Residential stable house, side building with integrated barn part and another side building of a former four-sided courtyard, plus gate entrance, cottage garden and retaining wall Käbschütz 1
(card)
Mid 19th century (stable house) all half-timbered buildings on the upper floor, a largely closed farm, evidence of rural life and business in the past, of architectural and economic importance.

Barn part: massive

09268121
 


Residential stable house, barn and attached side building of a three-sided courtyard Käbschütz 2
(card)
1st half of the 19th century All buildings in half-timbered construction, residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and beautiful door portal, of architectural and economic importance. 09268120
 


Residential stable house, barn and attached side building of a three-sided courtyard Käbschütz 5
(card)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Stable house upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic significance.

Stable building: massive.

09268119
 


Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Käbschütz 6
(card)
re. 1836 (stable house) Closed preserved half-timbered farm, half-timbered barn in good original condition, of architectural and economic importance.

all with a hipped roof.

09268118
 


Residential stable house, two stable buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard Käbschütz 7
(map)
around 1800 (stable house) Largest homestead in the village, stately residential stable house, a plastered solid building with a half-hipped roof, farm buildings in half-timbered construction, farmhouse typical of the time and landscape of rare unity, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: half-hip roof
  • Stable farm building: the middle section is emphasized by a neo-Renaissance gable and a crooked hip roof.
09268117
 

Kaisitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house (No. 3), stable building (No. 3c) and paving of a four-sided courtyard Kaisitz 3; 3c
(card)
re. 1810 (stable house) Residential stable house with plastered half-timbered upper floor and beautiful arched portal, solid stable building with triple windows in the roof extension, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: solid timber frame (probably preserved under plaster), keystone with bull's head, hipped roof
  • Farm building: triangular gable with clock, roof bay window, wrought iron gate, (forms four-sided courtyard together with numbers 3a and 3b).
09267987
 

Krögis

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house (No. 4a), stable building, side building (No. 4b), barn and archway of a four-sided courtyard, with a cottage garden and retaining wall, opposite the ice cellar Goertitzberg 4a; 4b
(card)
re. 1835 (side building) old location Görtitz, residential stable house and both side buildings upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, largely closed preserved farm, evidence of rural architecture of bygone times, of architectural and economic importance. 09265030
 


House and barn of a farm Görtitzberg 5
(map)
re. 1831 (residential house) old location Görtitz, upper floor half-timbered house, half-timbered barn, courtyard that characterizes the townscape, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential building: basement solid masonry, upper floor half-timbered
  • Barn: half-timbered, wooden gable panel.
09265027
 


Bergschänke (inn) Görtitzberg 7
(map)
1st half of the 19th century old location Görtitz, upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance.

Solid masonry basement, upper floor half-timbered.

09265028
 


Residential stable house, stable building, attached side building and attached barn as well as gate pillars of a four-sided courtyard Görtitzberg 8
(map)
re. 1824 (stable house) old location Görtitz, ensemble of half-timbered buildings that has been preserved closed, residential stable house with steep pitched roof and segmented arch portal, half-timbered upper floor partially boarded up, of architectural and economic importance.

Keystone on the stable house marked 1824.

09265003
 


Barn (with extension) of a three-sided farm Görtitzberg 9
(map)
1st half of the 19th century old location Görtitz, half-timbered barn, ambitious half-timbering, of architectural and economic importance. 09265029
 


Residential stable house (No. 10b), side building (No. 10a) and entrance to a four-sided courtyard Goertitzberg 10a; 10b
(card)
re. 1834 (stable house) old location Görtitz, stately buildings, stable house and side building, both upper storey half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Stable house marked 1834 in the keystone, keystone with inscription and date: Johann Gotthelf Dietzel 1834, (forms farm together with number 10c and number 10d).

09265001
 


Residential stable house, two side buildings and two gate entrances of a former four-sided courtyard Görtitzberg 11
(map)
re. 1832 (stable house) old location Görtitz, all buildings upper floor half-timbered, courtyard complex preserved largely closed, elaborately designed archways as courtyard access, of architectural and economic importance.

Stable house marked in the keystone 1832.

09265002
 


Residential building Kirchgasse 1
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, also the ground floor partly still in half-timbered (rarity), historically significant, location-defining location near the churchyard.

Monument text: Kirchgasse 1, with the church behind it and other houses, forms an unmistakable urban ensemble.

09304077
 


Residential building (with rear extension) Kirchgasse 3
(map)
End of 18th century Upper floor timber-framed boarded up, historically important, location-defining location near the churchyard.

Wood paneling outbuilding.

09265011
 


Krögiser School; New school: school building (without extension no. 4c), today municipal administration Kirchgasse 4a; 4b
(card)
1912 School building with a picturesque structure with a turret and "Playing Children" relief on the facade, in the reform style of the time around 1910, a remarkable type of building, of architectural, artistic and art historical importance.

Relief “Playing Children” (around 1914/15, GC Bauch) with the inscription “Let our children live”, today (2011) all-day school in Käbschützal.

09265012
 


Kantorat (former); Old school (residential building, former cantorate and school) Kirchgasse 5
(map)
re. 1877, older in essence (Cantorat) Stately plastered building with a classicistic portal, in the immediate vicinity of the churchyard, of architectural and local significance. 09265023
 


Residential building Kirchgasse 6
(map)
re. 1850 (farmhouse) Upper floor half-timbered, beautiful entrance portal, of architectural significance.

belonging to what was then Gut Melner.

09265013
 


Residential building Meißner Strasse 5
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, location that characterizes the townscape directly at the churchyard, of architectural significance. 09265025
 


Alte Schmiede (residential building, formerly forge) Meißner Strasse 6
(map)
re. 1834 (residential building) Upper floor half-timbered, beautiful portal, of architectural and local importance.

Signed above the entrance: "No 4 Schmiede zu Krögis 1834".

09265017
 


Signpost on a corner of a house (in the facade of a residential building) Meißner Strasse 10
(map)
re. 1833 (signpost) of importance in terms of traffic history.

Inscription "Straße nach Meißen", "Weg nach Taubenheim", arrows and dating 1833.

09229239
 


Krögis village church: Church (including furnishings), churchyard with morgue, tomb of the Oehmichen family, Rudert family tomb, memorial for those who died in World War I and soldiers' graves for those who died in World War II Meißner Strasse 13
(map)
re. 1733 Baroque hall church with a strong roof turret, redesigned in a classicist style inside. Significant in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town.
  • Large aisle church, consecrated in 1733, center of an original parish, the tower demolished in 1774 and replaced by a turret in 1835. The portals, prayer rooms, stalls and pulpit altar also date from this period.

Classicist interior alterations in 1850, interior restoration 1968–71. Plastered building with a rectangular floor plan, steep gable roof with bat dormers, the slated roof turret over the west wall with a bell-shaped hood, lantern and slender onion. Two-row windows, arched, the upper ones with keystones, three entrances on each of the long sides of the church, the sloping corners of the building emphasized by smooth plastered pilaster strips. Spacious, simple hall with rounded corners and a simple flat plastered ceiling. Two-storey wooden galleries, built under the lower 1835 prayer rooms with glazed windows and separate entrances from the outside, on the middle room on the north side the coat of arms of the manor owner Krause. In the west, an anteroom separated by glazed doors and windows, here the supporting structures for the roof turret, galleries, above the organ gallery with convex parapet, large, uniform block of seats. Classicist pulpit altar made of wood, with a polygonal basket between fluted Corinthian columns, with a triangular gable. Baptismal font from 1839.

  • At the cemetery gate fragment of a sandstone grave monument with a sleeping child, 18th century
  • lavish landowner grave monuments from the early 20th century in the cemetery
  • War memorial, around 1925 (Dehio Sachsen, Vol. I, 1966).
09265014
 


Residential building Meißner Strasse 17
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, defining the townscape in the immediate vicinity of the churchyard, of architectural significance.

Until 2001 the house was erroneously listed under "Meißner Straße 15" in the list of monuments, the building is Meißner Straße 17, forms a parcel with Meißner Straße 15, number 17 is the back building of the property, number 15, located on the street, is not a monument.

09265015
 


retaining wall Miltitzer Strasse
(map)
19th century Quarry stone wall, characterizing the townscape and significant in terms of building history.

was erroneously recorded in 1993 under the place Krögis, OT Görtitz in the list of monuments.

09265032
 


Retaining wall (with ice cellar) Miltitzer Strasse
(map)
19th century Quarry stone wall, characterizing the townscape and significant in terms of building history.

with ice cellar

09265031
 


Transformer station Miltitzer Strasse 1 (next to)
(map)
1920s Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.

Until 2001, the tower was erroneously listed under “Miltitzer Straße 24b” in the list of monuments.

09265010
 


Residential house (No. 3) and side building (No. 5) of a three-sided courtyard Miltitzer Strasse 3; 5
(card)
1st half of the 19th century Residential house plastered building with triple windows (Palladio motif) in the gable, side building upper floor half-timbered, historically significant.

Solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor (forms three-sided courtyard with number 3).

09265009
 


Residential stable of a former two-sided courtyard Miltitzer Strasse 11
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Company forge master quail.

09265008
 


Residential building Miltitzer Strasse 25
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance. 09265004
 


Parsonage (parsonage and side building of a parsonage, as well as water trough on the side building) Schönnewitzer Weg 3
(map)
around 1700 (rectory) Rectory with segment arch portal and half-timbered upper floor with ancient half-timbered construction (head struts, Thuringian ladder half-timbered, docking in the parapet fields), side building, single-storey solid construction, of architectural, historical and local significance.

Stone trough in front of the house.

09265022
 


Residential house, with retaining wall of the front garden Schönnewitzer Weg 4
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, location at a fork in the road that characterizes the townscape, of architectural significance. 09265019
 

Leutewitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Leutewitz train station; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building and car body) Leutewitz
(map)
1909 (train station) wooden waiting hall of a narrow-gauge railway, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, as a document of the original route of the so-called beet railway and as a type construction of this narrow-gauge line of railway history.

Monument text: In what is probably the most important sugar beet growing area in Saxony, the few remaining evidence of the "beet railway" as the main means of transport for goods and people and as a temporary main employer in the region are of great regional and railway historical importance. The simple but high-quality waiting halls at the train stations, stops and stops - often accompanied by a car body discarded for the purposes of the railway maintenance service - together with the few remaining engineering structures on the route as fragments along the narrow-gauge tracks that have since been dismantled, mark the former route of the "beet railway" ". Together with the partially preserved loading tracks and ramps, they illustrate the purpose of what was once the longest and extremely important Saxon small railroad as a freight and passenger transport route. As type buildings on the Wilsdruff – Gärtitz line, the waiting shelters also have a historical value in addition to the railway history. The large number of structures that have been preserved is an impressive illustration of this structural and creative standardization of a functional building. Although the high-rise buildings of the Royal Saxon State Railways were designed according to uniform building standards and many station buildings are therefore similar within the Saxon narrow-gauge network, there are route-specific and regional-typical solutions, such as the waiting halls here. Half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling, new windows and doors, later extension, otherwise in the original state of preservation, design typical of the present narrow-gauge line

Distance kilometers 26.094, railway station facilities originally included a toilet building (demolished), a car body (demolished) and a loading ramp (demolished) in addition to the waiting hall, opened on December 1, 1909 for goods and passenger traffic, closure of the passenger and goods station on October 29 1972. It is a uniqueness of this section of the route that all train stations with the associated waiting rooms have been preserved. The Leutewitz station was a crossing station. The narrow-gauge railway was built primarily to transport the raw materials and products obtained here. The buildings were originally ocher.

09268314
 


Road bridge over the Käbschützer Bach Leutewitz
(map)
re. 1865 Stone arch bridge with inscription plaque, of architectural significance.

Inscribed on board 1865 AS, Rittergut Leutewitz, owned by the Steiger family.

09268362
 


Individual features of the Leutewitz manor: mansion with side extension, barn, side building (gatehouse), orangery, gardener's house and enclosure wall and stone trough in the courtyard (see group 09303874)
More pictures
Individual features of the Leutewitz manor: mansion with side extension, barn, side building (gatehouse), orangery, gardener's house and enclosure wall and stone trough in the courtyard (see group 09303874) Leutewitz 1
(map)
re. 1828 Manor house at the core of a simple Renaissance building with a flight of stairs, facade redesigned around 1900, pretty terrace garden, of architectural and local importance.

Former Manor. Large rectangular courtyard, almost completely enclosed. In the northwest the manor house, according to the inscription formerly on the northeast gable, built in 1623 by Hieronymus Friedrich von Nitzschwitz. Expansion in the 18th century by the Lords of Friesen.

  • Two-storey building over a high basement, saddle roof with crested hips from the construction period, standing dormers and gable gables as well as facade plaster design from around 1900, in front of the eaves-side main front two-flight high flight of stairs with a platform, based on the arched entrance portal from 1623 with a terrace from the 19th century Another staircase leads up from the courtyard. Inside there is a 17th century spiral staircase, some rooms with groin vaults on the ground floor, the former ballroom on the upper floor, the stucco ceiling from the historicism era now suspended. To the north-east of the large massive barn, plastered, the facade is symmetrical on the courtyard side with three similar round arched gates, two doors on each side of the central arch with arched walls around 1760/80. North-west of the manor house terrace garden with remains of a small Belvedere building and outdoor seating, E. 18th and 19th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)
  • Manor house: open staircase, roof houses, inside large entrance hall, three-door barn.
09268111
 


The Leutewitz manor near Meißen, with the following individual monuments: mansion with a side extension, barn, side building (gatehouse), orangery, gardener's house and enclosure wall and stone trough in the courtyard (see individual monuments 09268111) and the following parts: further farm buildings and estate park with paths, stairs and railings (Garden monument)
More pictures
The Leutewitz manor near Meißen, with the following individual monuments: mansion with a side extension, barn, side building (gatehouse), orangery, gardener's house and enclosure wall and stone trough in the courtyard (see individual monuments 09268111) and the following parts: further farm buildings and estate park with paths, stairs and railings (Garden monument) Leutewitz 1
(map)
1623 and later (mansion) Manor house at the core of a simple Renaissance building with a flight of stairs, facade redesigned around 1900, pretty terrace garden, of architectural and local importance.

Park with garden wall, paths, stairs and railings, old woody stock (Quercus cerris, oaks, beeches), ornamental shrubs and geophytes (winterling, snowdrops) and cut linden arbor.

09303874
 


Residential building Leutewitz 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Side roof

09268112
 

Löbschütz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house, two side buildings, barn and gate entrance of a four-sided courtyard Löbschütz 1
(card)
re. 1828 Buildings partly in half-timbered construction, stately courtyard of Löbschütz, impressive and largely preserved rural ensemble around 1800, significant in terms of building history and local history.

The stable house appears as a representative building with a gable roof and plastered half-timbered upper floor. In front of the entrance portal, dated 1828, is a perfectly shaped semicircular flight of stairs. A spacious, representative hall can be reached via the stairs and the portal. The stable shows Prussian caps on iron supports, probably from the end of the 19th century. The western side building is a solid construction. The stables here are supported by sandstone pillars and cast iron pillars. Across from the stable house is the half-timbered barn with a gable roof. A small part of the barn was demolished. The eastern side building is largely a solid construction with a gable roof. Half-timbered houses have been preserved in the southern area of ​​the upper floor.

09302728
 

Löthain

image designation location Dating description ID
Totality of Royal Saxon triangulation (European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony);  Station 73 Korbitzhöhe (triangulation column)
More pictures
Totality of Royal Saxon triangulation (European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony); Station 73 Korbitzhöhe (triangulation column) (Map) re. 1866 (triangulation column) Second order station, significant testimony to geodesy of the 19th century, of significance in terms of surveying history.

The station is located at the original installation site directly on the main road 101 Meißen – Nossen. It is completely preserved, with a granite cover plate. This was / is not attached to the column. The column is in the ground up to the smoothly hewn surface. The current center is about 15 m northwest of the column. There is little (individual trees) restricted all-round visibility. The approximately 1.70 m high column made of Laußnitz granite was measured and set up in 1866 by the graduation assistant Schanz. The inscription “Station / KORBITZHÖHE / der / Kön: Sächs: / Triangulierung / 1866”, pointing to the southeast, is evidence of this. Under the writing, in the square base, a well-preserved height bolt. This is larger than the generally known and therefore may be appropriate later. The edge length at the top is 44 centimeters. In the period from 1862 to 1890, a land survey was carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony, in which two triangular networks were formed. On the one hand, there is the network for grade measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points. This national survey was led by Christian August Nagel , according to which the triangulation columns are also referred to as "Nagelsche columns". This surveying system was one of the most modern layer networks in Germany. The surveying columns set for this purpose remained almost entirely in their original locations. They are an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany and in Saxony. The system of surveying pillars of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance (LfD / 2013)

09266462
 


Löthain manor;  Römerhaus (manor house (with four house numbers) of a manor)
More pictures
Löthain manor; Römerhaus (manor house (with four house numbers) of a manor) At the Römerhaus 3a; 3b; 3c; 3d
(map)
18th century Elongated plastered building with a central projectile and pillar porch, the manor was for a long time in the possession of the von Römer family (hence called the Römerhaus), of importance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Manor house: two-storey, central axis emphasized by a third storey gable, pillar porch, crooked hip roof
  • the Winkelscheune, which was formerly a memorial, was removed from the list of monuments.
09267976
 


Löthain train station;  Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line;  Beet track (so-called);  Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building with loading ramp including paved road)
Löthain train station; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building with loading ramp including paved road) Bahnhofstrasse 15
(map)
1909 (train station) Waiting hall of a narrow-gauge railway, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State Railways, used today as the "Löthain Narrow Gauge Railway Museum", original state of preservation, of significance in terms of railway history.

Monument text: In what is probably the most important sugar beet growing area in Saxony, the few remaining evidence of the "beet railway" as the main means of transport for goods and people and as a temporary main employer in the region are of great regional and railway historical importance. The simple but high-quality waiting halls at the train stations, stops and stops - often accompanied by a car body discarded for the purposes of the railway maintenance service - together with the few remaining engineering structures on the route as fragments along the narrow-gauge tracks that have since been dismantled, mark the former route of the "beet railway" ". Together with the partially preserved loading tracks and ramps, they illustrate the purpose of what was once the longest and extremely important Saxon small railroad as a freight and passenger transport route. As type buildings on the Wilsdruff – Gärtitz line, the waiting shelters also have a historical value in addition to the railway history. The large number of structures that have been preserved is an impressive illustration of this structural and creative standardization of a functional building. Although the high-rise buildings of the Royal Saxon State Railways were designed according to uniform building standards and many station buildings are therefore similar within the Saxon narrow-gauge network, there are route-specific and regional-typical solutions, such as the waiting halls here. Half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling (since 2006 with green color), includes waiting hall and agency room, construction typical for the present narrow-gauge route, paving made of syenite stones.

Route kilometers 20,543, station facilities originally comprised lavatory buildings, loading ramp for kaolin and clay dispatch, waiting hall, residential building and car body, opened on December 1, 1909 for goods and passenger traffic, shutdown of the station on October 29, 1972. This section of the route is unique shows that all train stations and their waiting halls have been preserved. The Löthain station was primarily used for loading kaolin and clay and was originally the largest station on the route.

09268227
 


Residential stable house in a four-sided courtyard Mehrener Strasse 3
(map)
around 1800 Stately building, upper floor half-timbered plastered, with segmented arch portal, characteristic farmhouse of the Lommatzscher care, of architectural significance.

Sandstone window and door walls, (forms four-sided courtyard with number 1).

09267980
 


Löthain manor: Sheepfold of a manor Siedlerstrasse 24
(map)
18th century (sheepfold) Plastered quarry stone building with a crooked hip roof, in a corner location at the Römerhaus, of economic and local importance.

Half-hip roof, neighboring manor barn (address: Am Römerhaus 4) largely collapsed and demolished before 2011.

09269815
 


War memorial for those who fell in World War I Steigerstrasse
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) of local importance. 09267977
 


Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Steigerstrasse 34
(map)
around 1800 (stable house) Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Massively stocky half-timbering (partially bricked walls), hipped roof.

09267979
 

Luga

image designation location Dating description ID
Stables of a former four-sided courtyard and archway Luga 2
(map)
re. 1857 Half-timbered structure facing the courtyard, nicely designed arched windows in the gable, of architectural significance.

Solid, stocky half-timbering, partly solid (quarry stone).

09268449
 


Stable house of a farm Luga 9
(map)
re. 1794 Upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable, basket arch portal, building typical of the time and landscape in largely original condition, of architectural significance.

Solid, stocky half-timbering, sandstone door frame and window frames, boarded gable, window facings, vine trellis.

09268447
 

Mauna

image designation location Dating description ID
Mauna stop;  Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line;  Beet track (so-called);  Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building)
Mauna stop; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch (station building) Mauna
(map)
1909 (train station) wooden waiting hall of a narrow-gauge railway, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, as a document of the original route of the so-called beet railway and as a type construction of this narrow-gauge line of railway history.

Monument text: In what is probably the most important sugar beet growing area in Saxony, the few remaining evidence of the "beet railway" as the main means of transport for goods and people and as a temporary main employer in the region are of great regional and railway historical importance. The simple but high-quality waiting halls at the train stations, stops and stops - often accompanied by a car body discarded for the purposes of the railway maintenance service - together with the few remaining engineering structures on the route as fragments along the narrow-gauge tracks that have since been dismantled, mark the former route of the "beet railway" ". Together with the partially preserved loading tracks and ramps, they illustrate the purpose of what was once the longest and extremely important Saxon small railroad as a freight and passenger transport route. As type buildings on the Wilsdruff – Gärtitz line, the waiting shelters also have a historical value in addition to the railway history. The large number of structures that have been preserved is an impressive illustration of this structural and creative standardization of a functional building. Although the high-rise buildings of the Royal Saxon State Railways were designed according to uniform building standards and many station buildings are therefore similar within the Saxon narrow-gauge network, there are route-specific and regional-typical solutions, such as the waiting halls here. Half-timbered building on a masonry base, with brick infill and wood paneling, door here on the gable side, the front improperly boarded up, otherwise in its original state of preservation, design typical of the present narrow-gauge line

Distance kilometers 23.851, built as a train station, stop from 1933, train station facilities originally included a toilet building (demolished), a car body (demolished) and a residential building (preserved?) In addition to the waiting room, opened on December 1, 1909 for goods and passenger traffic, closed of the passenger and freight station on October 29, 1972. It is a uniqueness of this section of the route that all stations with the associated waiting halls have been preserved.

09268313
 


Residential stable house (No. 1) and attached stable building, further residential building (No. 1b) and attached side building as well as barn of a three-sided courtyard, with gate entrance and boundary wall at the entrance to the courtyard Mauna 1; 1b
(card)
re. 1695 (residential building) Residential stable house and stable building upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, side building plastered solid building with triangular gable in the roof, unusually large farm, buildings typical of the time and landscape, of architectural, local and economic significance.
  • Manor house / stable house: Solid timber frame, half-hipped roof, sandstone door frame and window frames
  • Barn: with passage, solid timber frame, partly boarded up, second exit at the gable, quarry stone gable, farm building / side building: solid, triangular gable with clock, bat dormers (converted in the middle of the 19th century)
  • Gate pillars with wrought iron gate, cottage garden no longer preserved.
09268452
 


House, side building and small garden of a farm Mauna 2
(map)
re. 1850 Stable house upper floor half-timbered, side building with upper arbor, of architectural significance. 09266463
 


Residential stable house, with cellar on the side and gate pillars of a former four-sided courtyard Mauna 8
(map)
18th century Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and beautiful segment arch portal, characteristic farmhouse of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid, stocky half-timbering, hipped roof, sandstone portal and window frames, motif tiles in the hallway

09268451
 


Maunaer Mühle (residential mill building (with mill technology)) Mauna 12
(map)
re. 1808 (mill) Distinctive building with half-timbered upper storey and half-hipped roof, is one of the externally most distinctive and also fully equipped grain mills (water mills) in the district of Meißen and beyond, significant in terms of building history, local history and technology history.

The residential mill building shows the usual structure of a grain mill with a floor for the main transmission or transmission cellar, grinding floor or roller mill floor, additional floor (tube floor), sifter floor and top floor. The technology has been preserved almost completely. The main transmission is in the transmission basement. On the roller mill floor on the ground floor there are a grinding mill from the Jehmlich company from Nossen, a stone crane, a roller mill from the Jehmlich company, a roller mill from the Grosse company from Lohmen and a crusher. The chairs are probably from the 1930s to 1950s. The grinders will probably be older (chairs and grinders probably built in 1950). The tube sheet (first floor) shows a silo (or dust separator or cyclone for cleaning) and a mixing machine from Jehmlich. On the plan sifter floor there is a plansifter from Jehmlich, the upper part of the already mentioned mixing machine and a suction hose filter (probably for milling). The tractor unit of the Frems elevator stands on the top floor (loft). The brake elevator and elevators can be found in the entire mill wing (chronicle of the Mauna mill in the file archive). The first mill building is said to date from 1580. In its current form, the building dates back to 1808. In 1861 a side building was built. A bakery was added as early as 1877. The side building was redesigned to a solid structure in 1916. Seven years later a residential building is added. The side building burns down in 1923 and has to be rebuilt (no memorial). In 1950 the mill was rebuilt.

09302468
 

More

image designation location Dating description ID
Kaolin mine in Mehren; Mining Museum Mehren "Glückauf-Schacht" Mehren
(map)
from 1763 (mine) Kaolin mine, with woodworking shed (1, 2), building complex for the mine, the compressor station, the storage and for clay drying (3, 5, 6, 14, 15), the former master room (8), the toilet house (13), the clay drying shed (4), the stockpile (12), and equipment: Pit rails, cross plates, Tonhunte, Kaolinhunte, Fahiten, conveyor bucket, hand reel with rope and bucket conveyor, centrifugal pump with suction basket, suction pipe and pressure line, jackhammer with clay edge spade, hammer hatchet and supply line, watertight dam gate with Weather passage, dam gate, weather door (wood with weather box), weather door (rubber), ventilator with hood for tunnel mouth hole with tin duct and spiral duct, section ventilator with tin duct and spiral duct, motor section reel, mine lamps, route signs, clay iron and mallet, cable car head station to the shaft (was made in 1996 by the cable car moved here); Historic mine for the extraction of kaolin (raw material for the production of Meissen porcelain), of regional and technological importance. 09266464
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Mehren 7
(map)
re. 1771 (stable house) Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, typical farmhouse of the time, of architectural significance.

Massively stocky half-timbering, partly boarded up, no longer inhabited, not on the list of proposals, archway, cottage garden and quarry stone wall no longer available (discovered before 2011).

09267982
 

Mohlis

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Mohlis 1
(map)
re. 1818 (stable house) Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, with segmental arch portal, farmhouse typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

Solid timber frame (partly plastered), sandstone walls on doors and windows on the ground floor, half-hip roof.

09267984
 

Niederjahna

image designation location Dating description ID
Rittergut Niederjahna (manor house of a manor, with enclosure wall and attached outbuilding)
More pictures
Rittergut Niederjahna (manor house of a manor, with enclosure wall and attached outbuilding) Dorfstrasse 3
(map)
re. 1691, essentially around 1560 (manor house) Simple Renaissance building typical of the landscape with a sandstone portal and various inscription panels, a gable roof with a cat staircase, valuable interior fittings, of architectural, artistic and local significance.

Former manor. Rectangular manor, in the south the manor house from 1691. Two-storey plastered building with a saddle roof, the east gable with a round-arched top and inscription stone, marked 1691, which Hans Dietrich von Miltitz names as the builder, including the coats of arms of those of von Miltitz and von Pflugk. Round-arched Renaissance portal on the north side, sandstone, square, 16th century, probably from the previous building, with an angel's head on the keystone and the coats of arms of those of Schleinitz and von Sundthausen, above a sandstone relief depicting a knight kneeling in front of the crucified with Miltitzk and Pflugk - Coat of arms, marked 1691. To the north, farm building, marked 1864, the further courtyard renovation changed after 1945 (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)

Outside: various panels set into the walls, sandstone portal, inside: conference room with simple stucco, a heraldic rose in the center of the ceiling.

09267962
 


Rittergut Niederjahna (former farm building of a manor) Dorfstrasse 4
(map)
19th century (farm building) Solid building from the 19th century, with twin windows in the gable, saddle roof with bat dormers, of architectural and local significance. 09267963
 


Rittergut Niederjahna (former farm building of a manor) Dorfstrasse 5; 7
(card)
re. 1864 Simple solid construction from the second half of the 19th century, with twin windows in the gable, the interior largely preserved in its original form, of architectural and local significance.

Monument text: The monument quality of the farm building erected in 1864, on the southern gable of which is the date of construction, results from its importance in terms of local and architectural history. It is part of the Niederjahna manor, which has existed since 1551 and forms a unit of monument value with the neighboring manor house. Numerous manors like the one in Niederjahna have shaped the historical development of the places around Meißen over the centuries and are reminiscent of the earlier life and economy in this region. Apart from that, it is a testament to rural architecture of its time. The massive building shows design elements, twin windows and corner accentuation on the already mentioned gable, as they were typical for the period around 1860. In addition, there is still an impressive stable wing with columns, pillars and vaults as well as strong wooden beams hidden inside. Around the middle of the 19th century, those who could afford it built stone stables with vaults that spanned large areas using elaborate scaffolding. A little later, it was possible to produce light brick vaults without formwork, if necessary with the help of a sliding teaching arch. On the upper floor of Dorfstraße 5/7 there were probably the chambers of servants and maids as well as temporarily employed day laborers. (LfD / 2015).

09267964
 


Residential stable house (with rear extension) Hauptstrasse 3
(map)
re. 1814 (stable house) Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance

Massively stocky framework, gable roof

09267961
 


Alte Schmiede (former forge, now a residential building) Querstraße 1
(map)
re. 1836 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance.

Massively squat framework, roof overhang.

09267965
 

Nimtitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house (without barn extension) Nimtitz 12b
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Cottage property, half-timbered on both sides of the eaves, solidly stocky, boarded gable sides.

09267993
 

Necessary

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house with side stable building Nössige 8
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered house, stable building partly boarded up, of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: solid timber frame, half-hip roof
  • Stable: massive timber frame, partly boarded up
09268440
 


Residential stable house and side building of a four-sided courtyard, as well as courtyard paving Nössige 9
(map)
re. 1814 Both buildings on the upper floor are half-timbered, stately stable house with a splendid segmental arch portal and open staircase, oak paneling in the staircase and hallway, side buildings also with segmented arched portals, one of the largest courtyards in the town, buildings typical of the time and landscape, of historical and architectural importance.

Monument text: The stable house appears as a representative building with a half-hipped roof and half-timbered upper floor. In front of the entrance portal, dated 1814, is a perfectly shaped semicircular outside staircase. A spacious, representative hall can be reached via the stairs and the portal. The side barn has still been preserved. The western side building is also a half-timbered upper floor. Opposite the stable house is the massive barn, which has unfortunately already been changed. Furthermore, two buildings to the east belong to the courtyard, one with a plastered upper floor, the other massive. These are currently (04.05.2012) not recorded. The Käbschützal property, Nössige 9 (9a, 9b and 9c) with its typical landscape buildings is one of the largest courtyards in the town. It appears as a largely authentically preserved testimony to the rural architecture of its own and is therefore of importance in terms of both building history and local history

  • Residential stable house: solid timber frame, sandstone portal, outside staircase, two stone benches, sandstone door frames and window frames, shutters, groin vault in the stable; Residential building with interior fittings (oak paneling in the stairwell and hallway), (forms four-sided courtyard with number 9a / 9b).
  • Stable farm building: solid timber frame, bat dormers
  • Courtyard paving
09268442
 


Residential stable house and two stable buildings of a four-sided courtyard as well as courtyard paving Nössige 14
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) all buildings on the upper floor are half-timbered, a large farm typical of the landscape, largely closed, of architectural and economic significance.

Massive truss,

  • Stable house: half-hipped roof, sandstone door frame and window frames
  • two stable farm buildings: one with a crooked hip roof, sandstone door frames and window frames, archway (between the stable house and side building) demolished before 2011.
09268443
 


Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Nössige 15
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Stately building, upper floor half-timbered with K-struts, of architectural significance.

Solid timber frame, sandstone portal, boarded gable, Göpelring can be seen in the courtyard structure.

09268441
 


Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Nössige 17
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, characteristic farmhouse of the Lommatzscher Pflege, location on a bend in the townscape, important building-historically.

Massively stocky half-timbering, hipped roof, sandstone door frame and window frames, (forms four-sided courtyard with number 17a / 17b).

09268438
 


Residential stable house (with rear extension) Nössige 22
(map)
around 1800 (stable house) small farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable, of architectural significance.

Massively stocky framework, built-in stable, boarded gable.

09268437
 

Oberjahna

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house (No. 2 and 16), in the corner to this side building (No. 15) and another side building (No. 17) as well as gate pillars of a farm Oberjahna 2; 15; 16; 17
(map)
around 1850 stately courtyard, side buildings in half-timbered construction, classical portals on the main building, largely preserved in the original, of architectural and economic importance.

Number 15: Massively stocky half-timbering, half-hipped roof, until 2001 property was only listed as "number 2" in the list of monuments, former horse stable (number 17, recorded as number 17a, originally belonging to farm number 2, today residential building), massive half-timbering, half-hipped roof .

09267969
 


Residential house (No. 5a), with enclosure wall (in front of No. 5) and gate pillar Oberjahna 5; 5a
(card)
18th century (residential building) representative plastered building, central projection accentuated by a volute gable in the neo-renaissance style, of architectural significance.

Ground floor grooves, cornice structure, ornamentation, (Neo?) - Renaissance gable, building was erroneously without a house number in the list of monuments until 2001, probably not a mansion, but a mill or the like.

09267970
 


Side building (stable house) of a farm Oberjahna 10
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Massively stocky half-timbering, bat dormers, (forms farm together with number 3 / 3a and number 9).

09267972
 

Planitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Dorfkirche Planitz (church (including furnishings) and churchyard with morgue, churchyard wall and churchyard gate) Planitz
(map)
1727 Baroque hall church with high ridge turret from 1802, demolition of the tower in 1770, inside circumferential double gallery, parapet fields of the galleries with ornamental paintings from the early 19th century, baroque pulpit altar, in the churchyard morgue from 1855, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the character of the townscape.
  • Evangelical parish church. Simple hall construction from 1727, roof turret 1802/03, repairs after war damage in 1945, restorations 1979/80 (inside), 1993/94 (outside).

Plastered building with large arched windows, entrance portals in the west and east. On the north façade, a high platform porch with a side staircase; three separate, external entrances could be used to enter three special boxes on the lower north gallery of the church (the openings integrated in the window axis system are currently walled up), and barred exits in the platform substructure were vaulted Crypt. Heavy roof turret, sitting on the west gable wall, with hood over lantern, slated. Hall with a flat plastered ceiling, all-round two-story wooden galleries, the lower ones on wooden supports, the parapets in the early 19th century painted ornamentally and with hangers. On the lower north gallery three boxes (prayer rooms) with glazed, arched fronts, formerly with rear entrances from the outside, for the owners of the parish manors Sornitz, Deila and Leutewitz, east of this open prayer room for the local landowners Roßberg, 1818. Gallery stairs in the east and West, sacristy in the northeast corner. Equipment: Pulpit altar made of wood, around 1727, the polygonal basket and the sound cover carrying the tablets of the law richly decorated with carvings, framed in white and gold, both flanked by a pair of Ionic, green marbled columns, above large halos, vase attachments with putti heads and the coat of arms of Watzdorf / from Miltitz. - Stalls probably from the construction period, its rectangular cheeks with small crowns. Oil painting on canvas, depiction of the Last Supper, 17th century. Two Meißner vases, urn shape, painted, inscribed 1829 and with an inscription, which Louise Steiger from Leutewitz names as the donor. (Dehio Sachsen, Vol. I, 1996)

  • Cemetery wall in very poor condition, a gate post at the entrance, two trees flanking it, today (2011) gate post added.
09268109
 


Residential stable house, side building, two migrant houses on both sides of the courtyard entrance and barn of a farm, as well as two courtyard trees, gate pillars (stones of the archway still present) and the enclosure wall of the farm garden Planitz 1
(map)
1793 One of the largest farms in the village, typical landscape stable house with half-timbered upper floor, large massive side building with central projectile and lantern, refugee houses with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural, economic, local and socio-historical importance.
  • Stable house: solid timber frame, bat dormers
  • Farm building with lantern
  • small farm building with dovecote is the second house for migrants.
09268107
 


Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard Planitz 7
(map)
re. 1851 Upper floor half-timbered, stately farmhouse typical of the time and the landscape, of architectural significance.

stately stable house, upper floor half-timbered, half-hipped roof.

08951444
 


Residential building Planitz 9a
(map)
re. 1788 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Crooked hip roof.

09268108
 

Porschnitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Rittergut Porschnitz (residential stable house (with rear extension) and angled farm building of a manor) Porschnitz 1; 1a
(card)
re. 1884 (stable house) representative Wilhelminian style building, residential stable house with lavishly designed twin windows in the gable, farm building facing the courtyard with a central projection with a lantern, of architectural and local importance.
  • Stable house: simple sandstone portals and window frames, gable decoration
  • Stable farm building: with triangular gable and wrought iron turret, sandstone window frames,
  • Manor house burned down in 1963
09268446
 


Residential building Porschnitz 5
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
  • Massively stocky half-timbering, towing roof, bat dormer
  • Hand pump canceled before 2011.
09268450
 

Priesa

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house, stable building and further side building (gatehouse) of a four-sided courtyard and farm garden with enclosure Priesa 2
(map)
re. 1825 All buildings on the upper floor are half-timbered, a large and largely closed farm, evidence of rural life and business in the past, of architectural and economic importance.

Residential stable house: solid timber frame (partly removed or plastered), gatehouse: solid timber frame.

09267989
 


Residential stable house, side building and archway of a four-sided courtyard Priesa 3
(map)
re. 1828 (stable house) both buildings upper floor half-timbered, historically important.

Stable house: solid timber frame, sandstone door walls, stable: solid timber frame

09267991
 

Proda

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house and side building (gatehouse) of a former four-sided courtyard as well as two street-side courtyard trees at the gateway of the gatehouse Pröda 1
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Two rural half-timbered buildings, a stately stable house with a mansard roof, evidence of rural life of bygone times, of architectural significance. 09269813
 


Residential house, angled side building attached to it, stable building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a four-sided courtyard as well as courtyard paving Pröda 6
(map)
re. 1863 (residential house) Closed preserved 19th century farm, plastered solid buildings, a side building with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, residential building with a beautiful door portal, of architectural and economic importance. 09269814
 

Schletta

image designation location Dating description ID
Schletta manor: mansion (No. 13) and farm building (No. 14, with Kumthalle) of a manor
More pictures
Schletta manor: mansion (No. 13) and farm building (No. 14, with Kumthalle) of a manor Schletta 13; 14
(card)
1650 (manor house) Originally the Vorwerk of the St. Afra monastery in Meißen, since 1551 manor, mansion, elongated Renaissance building with several volute gables, farm building with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and local significance.

Former manor. Formerly large four-sided system, mid-17th to 19th century, north and east wings demolished after 1945. The mansion forms the southern part of the west wing, a two-storey plastered building around 1650, with a saddle roof, a round-arched entrance portal on the east facade, a three-zone dwelling in the same axis with volute and C-arch approaches as well as a split gable end. On the east and south facades of the building, which was probably extended to the west in the 18th century, early baroque plaster structures have been preserved. To the north adjoining farm buildings with 16 axes, with dormitories and dormers, late 19th century. South-east of the former horse stable with a three-arched collar hall and half-timbered upper floor, 18th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)

  • Manor house: Renaissance gable and vestments
  • Farm building: solid timber frame.
09267973
 

Schönnewitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house (with attached bakery), side building (gatehouse) and barn of a four-sided courtyard Schönnewitz 4
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Residential stable house and side building, both upper floors, half-timbered, half-timbered barn, largely closed preserved, typical landscape courtyard, of architectural and economic importance.

Solid, stocky half-timbering, barn: half-timbering, stable house: 1937 partly solidly built, gatehouse: bat dormers.

09268448
 

Sieglitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house, barn, stable building and attached side building (gatehouse) with courtyard wall and gate of a four-sided courtyard Jesseritz 2
(map)
re. 1792 (stable house) old location Jesseritz, residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and beautiful segment arch portal, stable building with clogged Kumthalle and dovecote in the roof (rarity), of architectural and economic importance.

Residential stable house: solid timber frame (partly plastered), sandstone portal, crooked hip roof, farm garden with vines - garden probably removed before 2011.

09267967
 


Cottage Jesseritz 4
(map)
1st half of the 19th century old location Jesseritz, upper floor half-timbered, socially important.

Massively stocky framework.

09267966
 

Sopps

image designation location Dating description ID
Landrichtergut (residential stable house (no.2a, with rear annex no.2b), stable building, barn and side building (house for migrants) of a four-sided courtyard, remains of the archway, cottage garden with fountain and retaining walls) Knobs 2a; 2b
(card)
re. 1822 (stable house) Stately residential stable house with plastered half-timbered upper floor and splendid segmental arch portals, upper floor half-timbered stable building, of architectural and economic importance, as a court of a district judge of regional history.
  • Stable house: solid timber frame, sandstone door frame and window frames
  • Residential and farm building: solid timber frame, barn: solid, bat dormers, rebuilt around 1900
  • Exodus house: solid, 2nd half of the 19th century, vault in the stable.
09268436
 


Barn (with extension) of a three-sided farm Soppen 3
(card)
re. 1740 Half-timbered barn with ancient construction (crossed struts), of architectural and economic importance.

Half-timbered partly removed, keystone at the cellar entrance (marked 1740) probably older than the building.

09268435
 


Residential stable house (with attached bakery) of a former four-sided courtyard Soppen 4
(card)
re. 1806 (stable house) Large residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and sandstone door frame, half-timbered also in the gable with older building fabric, farmhouse typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

Solid, stocky framework, sandstone door frame and window frames, framework also in the gable.

09268433
 


Residential stable house and barn of a former four-sided courtyard Soppen 7
(card)
re. 1840 (stable house) Stable house on the upper floor half-timbered clad, door portals with straight roofs, barn with massive quarry stone construction, characteristic rural buildings of the Lommatzscher care, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: solid timber frame (quarry stone), sandstone door frame and window frames, net vault in the entrance area (ridges)
  • Stable farm building: solidly stocky half-timbered structure, prominent central axis with triangular gable, sandstone door frames and window frames, desolate condition, 2003 deletion of stable farm building and then demolition.
  • Barn: quarry stone
09268432
 


Residential stable house (No. 15), stable building and side building (No. 15a) of a four-sided courtyard Knobs 15; 15a
(card)
re. 1799 (stable house) all buildings upper floor half-timbered, residential stable house with beautiful segment arch portal, courtyard typical of the time and landscape, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid timber frame, partly boarded up, half-hipped roof, sandstone door frame (remainder)
  • Farm stable building: solid timber frame
  • Residential and farm building: solid timber frame, sandstone door frames and window frames
  • Farm garden with retaining walls no longer available in 2011.
09268434
 

Sornitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Sornitz Castle (former moated castle of a manor, today a residential building, and enclosure wall)
More pictures
Sornitz Castle (former moated castle of a manor, today a residential building, and enclosure wall) Sornitz 1c
(map)
after 1550 (castle) Remarkable renaissance building with a steep gable roof (formerly with a dwarf house and volute gable), originally a round tower at two corners diagonally to each other, today only a round tower (without a helmet) has been preserved, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.

Castle (former), small mansion from around 1550, originally surrounded by a moat, since 1945 new farmer's position. Two-storey plastered building with a steep gable roof, of the two round towers adjoining the southeast and northwest corners of the building, the latter was removed after 1945, the southeastern one without a hood, and the large dwelling houses and ornamental gables lost. Cell vaults from the construction period (DEHIO, edited) on the ground floor of the southeast tower.

09268116
 


Residential building Sornitz 8
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, small rural house, of architectural and socio-historical importance. 09268115
 


Residential building Sornitz 11
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, small rural house, architectural and

socially important

09268114
 

Stroischen

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house (No. 6), side building (No. 6a, with Kumthalle) and stable building of a four-sided courtyard and courtyard paving Stroischen 6; 6a
(card)
re. 1828 (stable house) Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, side building with a rare Kumthalle and loft extension with lantern, in the attic extension triple windows (Palladio motif), stable upper floor half-timbered, largely closed courtyard complex, of architectural and economic importance.

Residential stable house (parcel 7/1): solid timber frame, farm building (parcel 7/2): triangular gable with clock above the central axis, magnificent columns, stable building: solid timber frame.

09267981
 

Tronitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house Tronitz 1 Residential stable and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard; striking half-timbered ensemble , in parts ruinous, significant building and local history. 09267988
 


Remarks

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

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