List of cultural monuments in Kasten

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The list of cultural monuments in Kösser contains the cultural monuments in the Grimma district of Köss that are listed in the official list of monuments of the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony .

Legend

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

Kasten

image designation location Dating description ID
Pavilion, lime tree avenue (garden monument) and enclosure (Map) re. 1820 (pavilion) Classicist pavilion, dedicated to Wolf Dietrich von Erdmannsdorf, of cultural-historical importance and of importance for the landscape
  • Pavilion: two-storey, window and door walls in porphyry tufa, main entrance door with roofing (in porphyry tufa) and inscription: "Dedicated to Wolf Dietrich von Erdmannsdorf" "Anno FFA MDCCCXX", profiled wooden eaves, tent roof, iron balcony to the Muldeufer (renewed), steps in front Entrance door in porphyry tuff
  • Enclosure: plastered quarry stone wall, cover plates in porphyry tuff, right and left of the pavilion
  • Avenue: made of opposed winter linden trees (Tilia cordata), leading from the northeast to the pavilion
08974510
 


Dog gravestones (Map) Mid 19th century of cultural and historical importance

two Porphyrtuff steles, inscription: "EvA" "1887" "1912", inscription: "1863" "1878" "1903"

08974912
 


Viaduct Kiessen;  Railway line Borsdorf - Coswig (railway bridge over the Mulde)
More pictures
Viaduct Kiessen; Railway line Borsdorf - Coswig (railway bridge over the Mulde) (Map) 1866–1867, later reshaped (viaduct) See also the municipality of Colditz, western part of the Sermuth bridge (see object 09305773 ), eastern part of the Kösser bridge, significant in terms of traffic history

Railway line Borsdorf – Coswig (BC 6386), orientation from north-west to south-east, formerly double-track line is led across the river valley in separate steel troughs that were designed as single-span girders, piers in rubble, trough bridge made of riveted steel girders, length of the bridge : 309.8 m, width: 5.2 m, height: 9.1 m, type 15 NP, the field lengths in the foreland vary between 18 and 20 meters. The spans of the three trough fields across the trough are around 28 meters. The bridge piers with a height of about 3.5 meters and a thickness of about two meters consist of natural stone masonry and were supplemented by concrete in the upper part.

08974507
 


Former bridge toll house (now residential building) and outbuildings Am Brückenberg 9
(map)
re. 1888 (customs house) of local historical importance
  • Residential building: one-storey plastered solid construction, door walls in porphyry tuff with keystone, keystone with inscription: "AvA (Alfred von Abendroth) 1888", window with segment arch and keystone (keystone in porphyry tuff), gable roof with plain tile covering (crown covering)
  • Outbuildings: single-storey plastered solid construction (quarry stone), gable roof with beaver tail covering
08974509
 


Road bridge over the Mulde
More pictures
Road bridge over the Mulde At the Muldenbrücke
(map)
1888 Six-arched stone bridge, in the direction of Großbothen, of historical importance

Bridge runs over two districts: Kösser (Flstke. 272/1 and 464/1), Grimma, OT Kösser and Leisenau (Flstk. 308/1), Colditz, OT Leisenau Viaduct: six-arched single-lane road bridge over the Mulde, made of granite quarry stone, to Part of Cyclops masonry, unplastered, six wide-span segment arches (corner blocks made of ashlar masonry), massive bridge piers on a U-shaped floor plan, supports partly with a spherical end, partly as a pilaster-like wall template leading upwards and closed by bay windows supported on consoles or exits with quarry stone parapet wall, bevelled bridge cheeks, street fence with original iron grating

08974459
 


Residential house with outbuildings At Muldenbrücke 1
(map)
1920 (weekend house) as a log house that appears to be original in the forest, massive, clad with pounded slab boards, summer house of the Dresden pharmacist and factory owner Ottomar Heinsius von Mayenburg (1865–1932), producer of Chlorodont toothpaste, of regional and cultural significance, location on the Mulde that characterizes the landscape

The building was built around 1920 on behalf of the Dresden industrialist Ottomar Heinsius von Mayenburg. In all likelihood, it was originally used as a hunting lodge. In accordance with this function, it is designed as a rustic wooden structure. In terms of construction, however, the building consists of brickwork, the visual character of a wooden house is achieved by wooden cladding elements. The country house embodies a memorial relevant informational value in several respects. The former owner Ottomar Heinsius von Mayenburg was one of the most successful Saxon entrepreneurs. He was the inventor of the toothpaste (Chlorodont) and marketed oral and dental care products and other cosmetics worldwide. In line with his economic success, Heinsius von Mayenburg developed a demanding lifestyle. On the one hand, the country house in Kösser is reminiscent of the world-renowned Saxon toothpaste manufacturer. The connection between the country house and the toothpaste inventor is evident in the color scheme of the building. Blue, green, and white were the chlorodont colors. On the other hand, the object documents the way of life and the living standards of the business elite in the past. Thirdly, the property is one of those architectural testimonies that show that the lovely Muldental had become a preferred area for summer retreats in the 1920s and 30s. As a result, the building also refers to a typical regional development phase.

08974460
 


Residential stable house, with enclosure Fischerberg 1
(map)
re. 1806 Half-timbered building, evidence of rural living of bygone times, of architectural and socio-historical importance

presumably former three-sided farm with Fischerberg 3

  • Residential stable house: two-storey, ground floor quarry stone, partly plastered, upper floor half-timbered with adobe infill, solid gable, ground floor porphyry tufa window and door walls, segment arch portal with keystone, labeled: "JGN 1806", upper floor old windows partly with shutters, towed to the rear, saddle roof, Beaver tail covering, garage fittings
  • Enclosure: quarry stone wall, partly plastered, porphyry tufa cover with moss and grass growth
08974497
 


Ferry house, boat shed and mountain cellar Fischerberg 18
(map)
1893 Located on the Mulde, landscape-defining ferry house of local historical importance
  • Fährhaus: two-storey, solid, plastered, windows with shutters and plastering flaps, lintel marked 1893, saddle roof
  • Boat shed: single-storey half-timbered building, brick infill, double-winged wooden barn door on the gable side, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Mountain cellar: with a carnelian arch-shaped end, quarry stone masonry, segmental arch entrance with keystone made of porphyry tuff (marked 1723, keystone possibly Spolie )
08974498
 


Weekend house with enclosure Fischerberg 22 (next to)
(map)
1927 (weekend house) Wooden house, cultural and historical testimony to the culture of summer retreat in the country, architectural historical value
  • Residential building: single-storey log house on a brick base, recessed entrance with original door, in front of it a railing made of board docks (green, red and cream colored) on a brick wall, original windows, two square windows in the gable with shutters, saddle roof (roofing felt)
  • Enclosure: quarry stone pillars (granite) with bevelled cover plates and wooden picket fence on a granite base
08974499
 


Weekend house Fischerberg 26
(map)
1927, later rebuilt (weekend house) Wooden house, weekend house of a Dr. Müller from Leipzig, cultural and historical testimony to the culture of the summer resort, building historical value

Two-storey log house on a square floor plan, saddle roof, boarded up upper floor, gable-side shed extension, saddle roof with a wide roof overhang, spoils from the Wurzen Castle: three lead glass windows (figurative images, lion and tree of life), original windows and shutters

08974500
 


Residential building Förstgener Strasse 3
(map)
Mid 19th century In good original condition, evidence of rural living in the 19th century, of architectural importance

Two-storey, solid, plastered, original plaster structure (cornice strips, corner pilasters, window sashes), original windows, some with winter windows, door with straight, profiled roof, gable roof, twin windows with round arches in the gable (walled up) and round windows

08974682
 


Cemetery Kösser-Förstgen: cemetery chapel and free-standing belfry in the cemetery
Cemetery Kösser-Förstgen: cemetery chapel and free-standing belfry in the cemetery Förstgener Strasse 31
(map)
1928 (cemetery chapel) old location Förstgen, chapel with pointed arch windows, of local and architectural importance
  • Bell chair: half-timbered construction, gable roof, bell
  • Chapel: single-storey plastered solid construction, gable roof, wooden eaves, vestibule with pointed arch windows, in the east pointed arched windows with leaded glass windows
08974515
 


Pilitzberg forest house; Forester's lodge Kösser (forester's house, side building and enclosure of a forester's yard) Keiselwitzer Strasse 5
(map)
re. 1725, later changes Baroque plastered building typical of the region with a segmented arch portal, part of Erdmannsdorf's hunting lodges in Kösser, of architectural and local significance
  • Two-storey plastered solid construction (quarry stone), door and window frames in porphyry tuff, door frames with keystone in porphyry tufa, keystone with inscription: "CW Ober Förster Erbaut Ao 1725", older door, profiled plaster eaves, crooked hip roof with bat dormer, later renovations
  • Side building: single-storey plastered solid construction, wooden eaves, hipped roof
  • Enclosure as a quarry stone wall
08974503
 


Old hunting lodge (hunting lodge with gardens (garden monument) and enclosure)
More pictures
Old hunting lodge (hunting lodge with gardens (garden monument) and enclosure) Kösserner Dorfstrasse 1
(map)
re. 1695 Wolff Dietrich von Erdmannsdorf's hunting lodge, harmoniously structured baroque building (presumably designed by Pöppelmann), with orchard, enclosure, portal, axis references and visual connections from the gardens, of great architectural and art historical importance, of local importance as well as of regional garden history

Baroque gardens at the hunting lodge, hunting lodge built around 1711, client Wolf-Dietrich von Erdmannsdorff (electoral Saxon chief hunter and minister of elders), presumed to have been an architect of Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann , defining the townscape. Event location, support by the association “Das Jagdhaus. Village development and culture association Kösser / Förstgen eV ".

  • Inscribed 1695 (coat of arms on the ground floor), two-storey, solid, plastered, mansard hipped roof, beaver tail covering, crown covering, porphyry tuff plinth, window and door frames in porphyry tuff (white and red), street side: segment arch portal in the central axis, keystone with arkanthus leaf, pilaster framing (upper floor ) made of porphyry tufa (white framed), eleven symmetrically arranged window axes (drilled windows), elaborate facade design through illusionistic painting, vertical structure through painted grooved pilaster strips, parapet fields with mask motifs, windows on the ground floor with straight window roofing, windows on the upper floor partly with segmented arch roofing, for Part of triangular gable, central window highlighted by head relief and volute framing, strongly profiled main cornice with marble-imitating painting, festoon painting, original windows, window gable fields with oval medallions, slightly protruding central projection, simulated S. Eitenrisalite (on the ground floor painted bossing, on the upper floor grooved corner pilasters), garden side: structure similar to the street side, former segment arched doorway to the window removed, ground floor: keystone as a lion's head, upper floor: keystone as a woman's head, two side entrances with keystone and straight roofing, mansard hipped roof to the rear with two dormers (added later), eaves side: drilled twin windows, inside in the large hall on the upper floor designed as a false vault, throats with stucco cartouches, ceiling painting depicting Mount Olympus, enclosure: quarry stone wall, partly plastered, the remains of the two obelisks are stored in the garden
  • Enclosure: All-round quarry stone wall (unplastered), in the northeast the remainder of a large portal (quarry stone granite porphyry, porphyry tuff stone) with archway. Another entrance from the southwest, pillar masonry, plastered, with wooden slatted gate. Outbuildings southeast of the entrance.
  • Vegetation: lawn area without structure, baroque structure (cross-shaped path) through fruit plantings (tall trunks, old trees, replanting) legible, no paths.
  • To the north of the hunting lodge, fragments of two obelisks with inscriptions, originally in the hunting lodge garden, later placed in the terrace garden.
  • Disturbing elements: steel railings and children's play equipment, cellars and pits with boundaries, fire protection stairs at the hunting lodge, conifers in the edge area.
08974462
 


Cavalier house; Old school (former cavalier house, later school) Kösserner Dorfstrasse 2
(map)
re. 1718 Plastered building with a beautiful baroque segment arch portal, as part of the Erdmannsdorf hunting lodge area of ​​cultural and historical importance

two-storey, plastered, solid construction, window frames in porphyry tuff, door frames with keystone (inscription and coat of arms) and roofing in porphyry tufa, marked 1718 (keystone), brick eaves, hipped roof

08974505
 


Gasthof Zum Hirsch (inn with annex) Kösserner Dorfstrasse 3
(map)
1st half of the 19th century, essentially older as a manorial tavern, part of the Erdmannsdorf complex, of local historical importance
  • Two-storey, plastered solid construction, door and window frames in porphyry tufa, door frames with roofing, plastered eaves, hipped roof
  • Hall extension, two-storey, porphyry tuff window frames, arched windows, cornices and arches in plaster, gable roof
08974506
 


War memorial for those who fell in World War I Mauergasse 1 (near)
(map)
around 1920 (war memorial) in the immediate vicinity of the hunting lodge, of local historical importance

Semicircular concave wall corner with bench, Cyclops masonry with rounded cover plates, sides emphasized by spherical attachments, memorial stone in front of the wall system was removed

09259879
 


Residential building Mauergasse 5
(map)
18th century as a former craftsman's house of the Erdmannsdorf settlement around the hunting lodge of socio-historical importance

Two-storey, massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, massive gable renewed, gable roof

08974504
 


Teichmühle Kösser (house of a mill property and mountain cellar on the property)
Teichmühle Kösser (house of a mill property and mountain cellar on the property) Tanndorfer Strasse 30
(map)
Mid 19th century old pond mill at the Schwarzen Teichbach, local historical significance
  • Two-storey, solid ground floor, quarry stone, windows partly porphyry tuff walls, entrance porphyry tufa walls, upper floor half-timbered (partly renewed), curved St. Andrew's cross in the gable, hipped roof, pond brook
  • rear mountain cellar
08974501
 


Barn of a three-sided farm To the Kösserner Rittergut 1
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Evidence of the rural economy of bygone times

Half-timbered construction, single-storey half-timbered construction with clay infills, on rubble stone plinth, plastered, gable half-timbered, wooden barn door, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering

08974502
 


Individual features of the totality of the knightly manor of Kösser (see Obj. 09305775): mansion (No. 9), residential and farm building with former horse stable (No. 7), cowshed (next to No. 14), retaining walls and enclosure of a manor
More pictures
Individual features of the totality of the knightly manor of Kösser (see Obj. 09305775): mansion (No. 9), residential and farm building with former horse stable (No. 7), cowshed (next to No. 14), retaining walls and enclosure of a manor To the Kösserner manor 7; 9
(card)
re. 1695 Manor house of the Rittmeister von Abendroth, in the neo-renaissance style, with local and architectural significance since 1772 in the von Abendroth family , formerly in the von Erdmannsdorff family ,
  • Manor house (zum Rittergut 72b, today 2008 number 9): on an angular floor plan, two-storey, plastered brick, original plaster structure (cornice strips, window canopies with double keystones), on the upper floor window sills on consoles and window canopies with segmented arched gables in porphyry tuff, in the gable-corner roofing with a triangular roof and inscription "AvA 1894" and crown relief, in the parapet fields of the side windows garlands, above the coat of arms and the year 1695, gable end made of porphyry tufa in convex and concave curved arches, pinnacles in between. Stele-like and pillar-like with spherical top, frontispiece as triangular gable on consoles and large round window (porphyry tuff), portal with keystone at an angle, straight roof above, original classicist entrance door with skylight, single staircase (porphyry tufa), courtyard side sandstone window garments, profiled eaves, gable side to the hollow Arched portals to the former terrace (remains preserved), on a semicircular floor plan
  • Residential and farm building with horse stable (Zum Rittergut 72c, today 2008 number 7, marked 1808 in the keystone in the gate of the residential and farm building): two-storey, solid rubble stone, plastered, hipped roof, partly beaver tail covering (crown covering), large gate passage (segmental arch) with keystone (coat of arms, marked 1808), two further segment arch entrances with keystone, window on the ground floor as segment arch (finely profiled from porphyry tufa), a window in sandstone, upper floor rectangular window
  • Cowshed (no house numbers, today 2008 next to Zum Rittergut 14): two-storey, solid, quarry stone, plastered, saddle roof, corner blocks made of porphyry tufa, segment arched windows in porphyry tuff on the ground floor, rectangular windows and loading hatch in porphyry tufa on the first floor, in the gable (top floor) round arched windows in porphyry tufa and three Round windows, brick eaves stepped on the eaves, stable entrances segmented arch portals in porphyry tuff with keystone, vaulted Prussian caps, pilaster structure (brick)
  • Enclosure: north of the castle, ornamental lattice fence with gate, wall pillars (bricks) with crenellated ends,
08974461
 


All of the items of the manor of Kissen, with the following individual monuments: mansion (No. 9), residential and farm buildings with a former horse stable (No. 7), cowshed (next to No. 14), retaining walls and fencing (see object 08974461), plus the manor park ( Garden monument) and with the following material parts: further manor buildings (including outbuildings no.14)
More pictures
All of the items of the manor of Küßen, with the following individual monuments: mansion (No. 9), residential and farm buildings with a former horse stable (No. 7), cowshed (next to No. 14), retaining walls and fencing (see object 08974461), plus the manor park ( Garden monument) and with the following material parts: further manor buildings (including outbuildings no.14) To the Kösserner manor 7; 9; 14
(card)
19th century and earlier Locally and historically significant mansion of the Rittmeister von Abendroth, in the neo-renaissance style, the manor park with terraces, remains of a pavilion and visual connections, of local and regional garden-historical importance

since 1772 in the von Abendroth family, earlier in the von Erdmannsdorff family,

  • Manor house (zum Rittergut 72b, today 2008 number 9): on an angular floor plan, two-storey, plastered brick, original plaster structure (cornice strips, window canopies with double keystones), on the upper floor window sills on consoles and window canopies with segmented arched gables in porphyry tuff, in the gable-corner roofing with a triangular roof and inscription "AvA 1894" and crown relief, in the parapet fields of the side windows garlands, above the coat of arms and the year 1695, gable end made of porphyry tufa in convex and concave curved arches, pinnacles in between. Stele-like and pillar-like with spherical top, frontispiece as triangular gable on consoles and large round window (porphyry tuff), portal with keystone at an angle, straight roof above, original classicist entrance door with skylight, single staircase (porphyry tufa), courtyard side sandstone window garments, profiled eaves, gable side to the hollow Arched portals to the former terrace (remains preserved), on a semicircular floor plan
  • Residential and farm building with horse stable (Zum Rittergut 72c, today 2008 number 7, marked 1808 in the keystone in the gate of the residential and farm building): two-storey, solid rubble stone, plastered, hipped roof, partly beaver tail covering (crown covering), large gate passage (segmental arch) with keystone (coat of arms, marked 1808), two further segment arch entrances with keystone, window on the ground floor as segment arch (finely profiled from porphyry tufa), a window in sandstone, upper floor rectangular window
  • Cowshed (no house numbers, today 2008 next to Zum Rittergut 14): two-storey, solid, quarry stone, plastered, saddle roof, corner blocks made of porphyry tufa, segment arched windows in porphyry tuff on the ground floor, rectangular windows and loading hatch in porphyry tufa on the first floor, in the gable (top floor) round arched windows in porphyry tufa and three Round windows, brick eaves stepped on the eaves, stable entrances segmented arch portals in porphyry tuff with keystone, vaulted Prussian caps, pilaster structure (brick)
  • Garden at the manor house (neo-renaissance): Large terrace area southwest of the manor house with quarry stone walls (granite porphyry), exit (outside staircase) with exedra-shaped expansion and wall pillars with a porphyry tuff cover. Remnants of a grotto integrated into the upper retaining wall? south of the manor.
  • Courtyard area: Enclosure ornamental grille, wall pillars (brick) with crenellated endings, north-west of the manor house terrace with retaining wall made of porphyry tuff (not renovated).
  • Manor park: north-west of the manor house, former terracing recognizable as a floor relief, access from the north-west to the castle through the park, along the driveway low accompanying walls, at the driveway location of two obelisks (parts currently stored at the hunting lodge).
  • Terraces southwest of the manor house with fruit trees, conifers, kitchen gardens, a solitary tree (oak)
  • North-east of the hill manor park with remains of the foundations (quarry stone) of a former lookout point, designated in the park registration 1989 with "Freemauererloge".
  • Disruptive elements: Extinguishing water pond near the "Freemason Lodge", conifers and fixtures, little maintenance and poor state of preservation.

Additional note: 45 farm workers' houses southeast of the hunting lodge garden (Schenkengasse) with a uniform architectural style and floor plan, furthermore the "Kavalierhaus" and the "stately inn" (Gasthaus "Zum Hirsch"), the mill and the baroque hunting pavilion with lime tree avenue in the broader sense of the entity .

09305775
 

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Grimma  - Collection of images, videos and audio files