List of cultural monuments in Klipphausen
The list of cultural monuments in Klipphausen includes all cultural monuments of the municipality of Klipphausen and its districts in the Saxon district of Meißen (as of July 2017). The notes are to be observed.
This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .
Legend
- Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
- Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
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Location: If available, street name and house number of the cultural monument; The list is basically sorted according to this address. The map link leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
- Map view to set coordinates. In this map view, cultural monuments are shown without coordinates with a red marker and can be placed on the map. Cultural monuments without a picture are marked with a blue marker, cultural monuments with a picture are marked with a green marker.
- Dating: indicates the year of completion or the date of the first mention or the period of construction
- Description: structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the monument properties
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ID: is awarded by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony. It clearly identifies the cultural monument. The link leads to a PDF document from the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony, which summarizes the information on the monument, contains a map sketch and often a detailed description. For former cultural monuments sometimes no ID is given, if one is given, this is the former ID. The corresponding link leads to an empty document at the state office. The following icon can also be found in the ID column
; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .
Batzdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Totenhäusel (vineyard house with surrounding linden grove (garden monument)) | (Map) | 1630 Dendro | Baroque garden and pleasure house near a former vineyard with a unique view of the Elbe Valley, plastered building with segmental arched portal, coat of arms stone above, building in high original condition, of architectural and cultural significance. |
09267658
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Upper mill | Rehbocktal 3 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Former mill, later forester's house, today residential house, with side building. Upper floor timber frame boarded up, of architectural and local significance |
09267656
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Rehbockschänke (guest house with side extension) | Rehbocktal 5 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance. Half-timbered, solidly stocky, windows on the upper floor mostly original. |
09267657
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Batzdorf Castle | Schlossstrasse 1; 2 (card) |
1687 Dendro | Batzdorf Palace complex (No. 2) with an angled floor plan with three main buildings attached to one another (mansion, administrator's house and hall), an auxiliary building and a former chapel, furthermore a former farm building (No. 1), plus two courtyard trees, terraces with gardens (garden monument), support - and enclosure walls, archway and war memorial for the fallen of the First World War as well as the enclosure wall of the court garden. originally a medieval small hilltop castle, expansion to a castle especially in the 17th century in the Renaissance style (stair tower with seat niche portal), baroque and historicistically remodeled, of architectural, regional and art historical importance, see Dehio Sachsen, 1965, p. 366 |
09267655
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Residential stable house and barn of a farm | Teichweg 10 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, massive barn, of architectural and economic significance.
Stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, barn: quarry stone partially plastered. |
09267654 |
Bockwen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Stone cross | (Map) | 15./16. Century | Early modern or medieval murder and atonement cross, local historical significance. |
09267919
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Material component of the manor Siebeneichen : only the part of the park on Bockwener Flur (garden monument, see also material group 09301118 , City of Meißen, OT Meißen, Siebeneichener Schloßberg 2) | (Map) | since 1805 (park area) | Significant country estate of the well-known Meissen noble family von Miltitz , complex of construction, regional and local history, artistic, urban planning and landscape design significant. |
09303803
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm | Reichenbacher Weg 10 (map) |
around 1800 | Both buildings are upper floor half-timbered, on the side building half-timbered construction with a Wilder Mann figure, of architectural significance.
Gate post probably removed before 2011, (forms farm with number 12). |
09267852 |
Burkhardswalde
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Groitzscher Strasse 3 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Barn: half-timbered, stable and farm building: massive, stocky framework. |
09268524
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm | Groitzscher Strasse 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, in a location that characterizes the street scene, of architectural significance.
Both buildings with massive squat half-timbering, stable and farm buildings: old windows, boarded gables. |
09268525
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Groitzscher Strasse 5 (map) |
around 1700, later reshaped | All buildings in half-timbered construction, residential stable house and side buildings with ancient half-timbered construction (St. Andrew's cross, profiled threshold), side buildings with protruding upper storey, of architectural, economic and domestic historical importance.
Barn: half-timbered, farm building: massive, sturdy half-timbered house, solid or plastered half-timbered structure, sloping roof. |
09268526
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Burkhardswalde church (including furnishings), churchyard with enclosure wall and churchyard gate as well as some tombs | Kirchweg 1 (map) |
in the core probably 12th century | Three-aisled hall church of the late Gothic, with a picturesque effect located on a hill above the village, of importance in terms of building history, art history, local history and the local image.
Evangelical parish church. Large late Gothic hall church, in its non-uniform overall shape with a picturesque effect, inscription on the south-east pillar of the ship, formerly marked 1451. In the walled, formerly fortified cemetery to the northwest above the town, in the pre-Reformation period the destination of a Marian pilgrimage. Interior restoration 1972. |
09268522
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Memorial to the fallen of the First World War | Kirchweg 1 (near) (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | of local importance |
09268521
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Parsonage with parsonage (No. 1), side building, barn, further side building (No. 3, stable house), gate pillar, heiste in the courtyard and on the access road as well as enclosure wall | Market 1; 3 (card) |
1824 | Rectory simple plastered building with half-hipped roof and bat dormers, all other buildings with half-timbering, upper floor residential stable house with half-timbered construction (K-struts, wild man figure), old half-timbered barn with cross-struts, of architectural, local and socio-historical importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, wall enclosure, barn and side building: timber frame, rectory: solid, entrance hall with groin vault, crooked hip roof, Biedermeier door. |
09268520
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Former inn, with a younger inn building (hall extension) and parts of the building on and in the rear historic old building, including a seating niche portal and a sundial | Market 5 (map) |
re. 1864 (inn) | Rear wing of the upper floor richly designed half-timbering in ancient construction (St. Andrew's cross, head struts, tooth-cut frieze below the threshold), this part of the building is one of the oldest and most valuable half-timbered structures in the Meißner Land (half-timbering from 1674 (demdro), 1648), also a remarkable seat niche portal probably from the first half or the middle of the 16th century, the hall extension, a plastered solid building with a classicist door portal, of architectural and local significance.
Formerly with a sundial on the house, solid timber frame, sundial, St. Andrew's cross, crooked hip roof, seat niche portal, wine trellis, stone trough (marked 1864) in front of the house was no longer available in 2012, therefore recorded as a demolition, inn in the door portal marked 1864 and the inscription "W. Oelschlägel ". |
09268519
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Burkhardswalde primary school | Schulstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1900 | Historicizing plastered building, with neo-Gothic portal and architectural decorations, location near the church that characterizes the townscape, of architectural and local significance |
09268523
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Lime kiln | Schulstrasse 4 (near) (map) |
19th century | of significance in terms of technology history |
09268549
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Side building (with Kumthalle) of a former four-sided courtyard | To Bayerhöhe 7; 9 (card) |
Mid 19th century | Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, rare three-arched Kumthalle, historically important.
Massively stocky half-timbering, former horse stable. |
09268528
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Burkhardswalde earthenware (residential house (over a U-shaped floor plan) with courtyard wall, terrace extension and attached farm building of a monastery courtyard) | To Bayerhöhe 35 (map) |
1690 dendro | Burkhardswalde earthenware - castle-like building, partly in half-timbered, segmented arch portal in the courtyard wall, probably originally the cloister courtyard of the Altzella monastery, of architectural and local significance.
V-shape, closed at the front for defense, from the Middle Ages or Renaissance, perhaps from a fortification, built using the same technique as the church, assumption that the property was connected to the church - it may have been a monastery with a corridor led to the church. (Saxon Church Gallery, Ephorie Meißen, p. 638) |
09268529
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | To Bayerhöhe 37; 39 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered building, of architectural and economic importance, half-timbered. |
09268530 |
Constappel
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Transformer house | Old way to school (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history. |
09267692
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Old school (former school building, now residential building) | Old way to school 3 (map) |
1845 | Simple plastered building with an accentuated central axis through the elaborately designed gable, at this point the birthplace of the composer Carl Ferdinand Adam (1806–1868) and the tenor Peter Schreier's (born 1935) residence for a few years during his youth, of architectural and personal significance.
Eclectic gable (classicism, renaissance) above the entrance portal, windows only partially preserved. |
09267686
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Residential house (with extension) and stable building as well as signpost (embedded in the house wall) | Old way to school 13 (map) |
re. 1832 (signpost) | Small homestead at a fork in the road, residential building with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and local significance.
Floor plan of the house adapted to the geographical location, head building, half-timbered framework on the gable, which is only partially visible, timber-frame plastered on the eaves sides, solidly stocky, signpost: way to Weistropp / Schönberg / Pinkowitz / Harte / I ?? 1832. |
09267691
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House and barn of a two-sided courtyard, with an enclosure wall | At the church 2 (map) |
re. 1808, older in essence | Small farm, half-timbered building, half-timbered construction with foot struts on the house, of architectural and economic importance, in the immediate vicinity of the churchyard.
Half-timbering on the eaves sides still preserved, solidly stocky. |
09267687
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Rectory (No. 3) and side building (No. 3a) of a rectory, with gate entrance | At the church 3; 3a (card) |
around 1740, older core (rectory) | Stately rectory with mansard roof, upper floor partly in half-timbered, side building with half-timbered upper storey, of architectural and local significance.
Rectory: partly half-timbered, solidly stocky, type mansard hipped roof, vault from the 15th century, side building small stable building with servants' room on the upper floor, with wine trellis, gate pillar and next door (passage to the churchyard = archway with passage to the church, belongs to the churchyard) . |
09267689
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm | At the church 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural significance.
Both buildings: half-timbered, solidly stocky, windows partly original, z. Currently renovated, small stable building. |
09267690
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St. Nicholas Church Constappel (including furnishings), churchyard with enclosure wall and some tombs | At the church 5 (map) |
1884–1885, Romanesque core (church) | Neo-Romanesque church with an older core (baroque and Romanesque), with a single nave, strongly protruding transept, polygonal choir and west tower, cemetery with tombs from the late 15th to 19th centuries, important in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape. |
09267688
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Residential stable house and side building (opposite residential stable house) of a three-sided courtyard, with fencing and gate entrance | Harthaer Berg 2 (map) |
around 1800 (stable house) | Residential stable house on the right with half-timbered upper floor, side building on the left plastered solid construction with twin windows in the gable, farmhouses typical of the time and landscape, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house on the right (around 1800): half-timbered, solidly stocky, steep pitched roof, almost all windows preserved in their original state, residential stable house on the left / side building (around 1870): solid, two storeys and knee-high with round ventilation hatches, in the gable round arched twin windows, enclosure: partly quarry stone wall with picket fence. |
09267684
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Residential stable house (with attached bakery), side building (with Kumthalle), further side building (residential stable building with deep cellar) and entrance to a four-sided courtyard | Harthaer Berg 5 (map) |
around 1800 (stable house) | old location Hartha , residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor, a massive side building with three-arched Kumthalle, gate pillars with sandstone cones, closed preserved homestead in old location Hartha, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house (around 1800): solid timber frame, bakery today laundry room, sandstone window frames, crooked hip roof, side building (Kumthalle on the ground floor, Swiss apartment on the upper floor, 1851), residential stable house with deep cellar (1921), address according to information from the municipality (2012): Harthaer Mountain 5 (and not Hartha 2) |
09267679
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Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Harthaer Berg 14 (map) |
re. 1873 (stable house) | old location Hartha , residential stable house plastered, stately solid building from the Wilhelminian era, side building with half-timbered upper floor and rare three-arched Kumthalle, closed preserved homestead in old location Hartha, of architectural and economic significance. Farm building (Kumthalle on the ground floor, storage room on the upper floor, 1876): Solid, stocky half-timbering, quarry stone back, sandstone window frames, stable house (1873) or 1893 (?), Address according to information from the municipality (2012): Harthaer Berg 14 (and not Hartha 1). |
09267678
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Waystone | Hollow Alley (map) |
19th century | of importance in terms of traffic history |
09304202
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Side building (No. 1) and stable house (No. 1a) of a four-sided courtyard, plus gate pillars on the side building | Hollow Lane 1; 1a (card) |
around 1870 (stable house) | Side building with half-timbered upper floor and two segment arch portals, residential stable house, plastered solid construction with two arched windows in the gable, farmhouses typical of the time and the landscape, of architectural significance.
Sandstone gate pillars on the side building, message board over the house entrance of the former stable house, saying over the front door: "In grace the faithful God helped us again / He who tried us hard through fire / He now bless all who come in and out / And finally bring us into heavenly house. / Ms. M. Merbitz ”. |
09267685
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Stable house of a farm | Pinkowitzer Berg 1 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | stately farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered, historically important.
Mostly original windows, massive timber frame, integrated storage, strong roof overhang, address is according to information municipality (2012): Pinkowitzer Berg 1 (and not Harthaer Berg 10). |
09267683 |
Garsebach
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Railway line Borsdorf - Coswig: Railway bridge over the Triebisch | (Map) | between 1898/1909 | Natural stone arch bridge, of architectural and railroad history of importance |
09304570
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Mittelmühle Garsebach: Residential mill building Mittelmühle Garsebach (with annex, inside still functional mill technology, turbine drive) and side building (inside oven) as well as retaining wall to the drive table and gate pillar of a mill property | Meißener Strasse 4 (map) |
re. 1863 | Significant in terms of location and technology.
The Mittelmühle Garsebach is one of the most important industrial grain mills in the district of Meißen. |
09268167
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Stable house and barn of a farm, with gate pillars for the courtyard access | Meißener Strasse 7 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic significance |
09268164
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Garsebach train station; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Wilsdruff – Meißen Triebischtal; Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch: station building (address: Polenzer Straße 1) and former stationer's house (address: Meißner Straße 8) | Meißener Strasse 8 (map) |
1909 (train station) | as a separation station of a narrow-gauge railway between two sections of the route with a larger reception building, waiting hall type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, railway keeper's house, small plastered solid construction, of importance in terms of railway history. Railway keeper's house: solid construction, plastered structure (economical grooving), sandstone window frames, waiting hall: half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infills and wood paneling, design typical of the narrow-gauge line. Garsebach railway station, line kilometers 13.362 and 17.546 - station division between the Wilsdruff – Meißen Triebischtal and Garsebach – Lommatzsch sections of the narrow-gauge railway line Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz (WG), facilities originally included toilet buildings (demolished), dry goods sheds (demolished), reception rooms broken off), loading ramp (broken off), residential building and car body, opened for freight and passenger traffic on October 1, 1909, passenger traffic ceased on May 22, 1966 and freight traffic on July 30, 1966. |
09268168
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm, as well as courtyard fountain with manual handle pump | Meißener Strasse 19 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, single-storey massive side building, of architectural significance |
09268165
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Residential stable house and retaining wall of a two-sided courtyard | Meißener Strasse 21 (map) |
re. 1803 | Upper floor partly half-timbered plastered, segment arch portal, of architectural significance, (forms two-sided courtyard with number 23) |
09268166
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House and attached outbuilding of the former forge | Meißener Strasse 27 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Main building plastered solid construction with historicizing facade, older part of the building from the early 19th century with a half-timbered upper floor, noteworthy in terms of architectural and local history. Gable older part of the building from the early 19th century, possibly older in the core, front part upper floor with half-timbering, otherwise solid and plastered building, newer eaves-side extension completely solid, built in the second half of the 19th century, probably around 1875, simple historicizing facade, in Ground floor of both buildings The old blacksmith's workshop, machines and tools no longer exist. |
09269820
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Station building (address: Polenzer Straße 1) and the former stationer's house (address: Meißner Straße 8) | Polenzer Strasse 1 (map) |
1909 (train station) | as a separation station on the narrow-gauge railway Wilsdruff-Gärtitz between two sections of the route with a larger reception building, waiting hall type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, railway keeper's house, small plastered solid construction, of importance in terms of railway history. Railway keeper's house: solid construction, plastered structure (economical grooving), sandstone window frames, waiting hall: half-timbered construction on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling, design typical of the narrow-gauge line at hand. Garsebach railway station, line kilometers 13.362 and 17.546 - station division between the Wilsdruff – Meißen Triebischtal and Garsebach – Lommatzsch narrow-gauge railway line Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz (WG), facilities originally included toilet buildings (demolished), dry goods sheds (demolished), reception rooms broken off), loading ramp (broken off), residential building and car body, opened for freight and passenger traffic on October 1, 1909, passenger traffic ceased on May 22, 1966 and freight traffic on July 30, 1966. |
09268168 |
Gauernitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Road bridge over the Gauernitzbach | Squirrel Ground 2 (opposite) (map) |
19th century | Quarry stone arch bridge, historically important, opposite Alt-Gauernitz number 94. |
09267672
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Schulze-Mühle: Model collection with a model water mill and two other model buildings | Squirrel Ground 21 (next to) (map) |
20th century (model water mill) | of cultural and historical importance.
Model of a mill approx. 2 meters high, 2.50 meters wide and 2.50 meters long, two further model buildings (half-timbered and massive construction). |
09267673
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Neu-Gauernitz Brewery (former brewery (No. 3) and former inn (No. 1) of a brewery, today residential buildings) | Long way 1; 3 (card) |
Mid 19th century (brewery) | Brewery possibly emerged from a mill, upper floor half-timbered, inn plastered building with brick window and door frames and corner embossing, of importance in terms of building history and local history. Inn: two-storey and knee-high, brick window and door frames, smooth plaster, horizontal division by the sandstone cornice between the ground floor and upper floor, corner embossing, gable roof, brewery possibly originated from a mill (see older part before 1800), two-storey solidly stocky , Fledermausgaupen, one-storey outbuilding at the brewery - demolished before 2011, brewery building (located behind the inn) also last third of the 19th century. |
09267682
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House Louisenberg (winegrower's house) | Luisenberg 1 (map) |
around 1650 | Simple, single-storey plastered building, remodeled in the Wilhelminian style, with medallion on the gable, of local significance.
Enlarged in the 19th century by a central projecting with triangular gable, at the top of the triangular gable a medallion (Louisenberg 1783), partly made of quarry stone, sandstone window frames, crooked hip roof with ventilation tiles. |
09267674
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Vineyard house | Luisenberg 2 (Map) |
around 1800 | Simple, single-storey plastered building facing the slope with a sloping roof, originally probably an annex to the Luisenberg 1 winegrower's house, of local historical importance.
Single storey, hipped roof, quarry stone. |
09267698
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Individual features of the ensemble of the castle, castle park and manor Gauernitz: farmyard with residential and farm buildings (no.2) including attached barn (no.1), granary with wine cellar (no.3), barn (no.4), residential building (no. 5, possibly estate manager's house), barn with apartments and extension (No. 6) as well as enclosure wall and archway (between No. 3 and No. 4) (see also material group 09302977, Castle 1/2) | Manor 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6 (card) |
re. 1677 | The oldest warehouse with a representative Renaissance gable, more recent brick buildings, one of the most architecturally remarkable farms belonging to a manor in the district of Meißen, with its closed appearance singular, part of an important feudal lordly complex, above all of architectural and local significance. Storage room with wine cellar as the oldest part of the estate with profiled window frames, southern gable probably half-timbered plastered (marked 1674), estate manager's house, number 5 (marked 1862), three barns, number 1 (E. 19th century), number 4 (also E. 19th century) and number 6 (18th century), farm building with stables, southern part of the enclosure marked 1677. |
09267671
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The ensemble of the palace, palace gardens and manor Gauernitz, with the following individual monuments: palace, former chapel and coach house, plus enclosure, gate pillars, aha and gate system (see individual monuments 09267669, lock 1, 2), farmyard (see individual monuments 09267671, manor 1–6), Memorial column on an Elbe island (see individual monument 09267670), enclosure walls around the park (old gardening shop), gardening shop and farm yard, also barn (Am Grundbach 2) and Elbe depositors (parts of the Elbe river) and Elbe island, park with a small pond including island and weeping willow and fountain (garden monument) | Lock 1; 2 (card) |
1677 and later (castle) | representative palace complex, new construction and reconstruction of the palace in the 17th century in the Renaissance style, significant reconstruction in 1873 in the neo-Renaissance style by the Dresden architects Bernhard Schreiber and Ernst Giese on behalf of the family v. Schönburg-Waldenburg , architecturally, garden and landscape design as well as historically significant complex. |
09302977
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Individual monuments of the ensemble of the castle, castle park and manor Gauernitz: Castle complex (No. 1) with a U-shaped floor plan with central building and two wing structures around the courtyard, farm wing attached to Meißner Allee, furthermore the remise building (side wing of the former gatehouse) and former chapel (No. 2 , today residential house, bell tower no longer available), plus enclosure, gate pillar (at Alte Gärtnerei 2), Aha (at Schloßpark 6) and gate system (see also 09302977) | Lock 1; 2 (card) |
2nd half of the 14th century - 16th Century (castle) | Gauernitz Castle - representative castle complex, new and reconstruction of the castle in the 17th century in the Renaissance style, formative reconstruction in 1873 in the neo-Renaissance style by the Dresden architects Bernhard Schreiber and Ernst Giese on behalf of the family v. Schönburg-Waldenburg, of architectural, artistic, local and urban significance. |
09267669
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Individual monument of the entity of the palace, palace gardens and Gauernitz manor: memorial column on an Elbe island (see also entity, palace 1/2 - object 09302977) | (Map) | around 1805 | Pillar formerly with a vase as a crown and inscription in memory of Countess Luise Sophie Johanne von Zinzendorf, artistically and historically significant. Column adorned with a snake and flower thread, inscription: “Friedrich August Graf von Zinzendorf and Pottendorf his wife Luise Sophie Johanne, daughter of Count Otto Rubmann Friedrich von Byland, née. October 9, 1754 “, Louise Johanne Sophie von Zinzendorf and Pottendorf, b. Countess von Byland-Polstercamp, d. 1804, set up in the middle of the island, starting from the middle in a radial layout of 8 avenues of linden trees, originally planted like a park with hardwood and gardens. |
09267670 |
Groitzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Lime kilns and lime quarries | Rothschönberger Strasse (map) |
19th century | Lime works Groitzsch - important in terms of local history and technology. |
09268531
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Gasthof Groitzsch (former inn with ballroom annex) | Rothschönberger Strasse 2 (map) |
re. 1860 | Simple plastered building with a classicist door frame, of local and structural significance, location at a street intersection that characterizes the townscape.
upstairs dance hall, sandstone portal. |
09268533
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Side building (No. 7a) and another side building (No. 7b, with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard | Rothschönberger Strasse 7a; 7b (card) |
re. 1846 | both buildings with half-timbered upper floor, rare four-arched Kumthalle, of architectural significance.
Stable farm building: solid timber frame, bat dormers, double floor, stable: solid timber frame (plastered), (forms four-sided courtyard with number 7). |
09268532 |
Huehndorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | Weistropper Strasse (map) |
re. 1832 | of importance in terms of traffic history. |
09304203 |
Kleinschönberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Road bridge over the Prinzbach | (Map) | 19th century | Arch bridge, of importance in terms of building history and traffic history. |
09268635
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Redrich mill: side building of a former mill | Schmiedeberg 1 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered structure, segment arch portal, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, a sloping roof, old windows. |
09268634
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Barn of a three-sided farm | Schmiedeberg 7 (Map) |
1st half of the 18th century | Half-timbered barn with crossed struts, of architectural and economic importance.
Massively stocky half-timbering (forms three-sided courtyard with number 7a). |
09268636
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Residential stable house (No. 9), side building (No. 11, with Kumthalle) and barn of a four-sided courtyard, with gate pillar of the courtyard access | Schmiedeberg 9; 11 (card) |
re. 1833 | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, side building with two-arched Kumthalle, massive barn, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house and side building: solid timber frame, side building (frame) demolished before 2011 and replaced by a second residential building. |
09268637
|
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Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard | Schmiedeberg 13 (map) |
re. 1801 | Upper floor half-timbered with head struts, of importance in terms of building history.
Massively stocky half-timbering, manual pump in the courtyard broken off. |
09268638
|
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Residential building | Sunrest 3 (card) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered building that defines the townscape, high-striving half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Solid, stocky half-timbering, boarded gable, twin arched windows. |
09268633
|
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Side building of a farm | Sonnenlehne 22 (card) |
re. 1837, older in essence | Upper floor half-timbered with ancient construction (head struts), historically important.
Solid timber frame, vine trellis, old windows. |
09268632 |
Clip houses
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Lehmannmühle Klipphausen: Residential mill house, side building and barn of a mill property, plus access bridge over the Wilde Sau (Saubach) and mill ditch with weir system, upper and lower reaches (with gates and fish ascent), plus mill technology, in particular wheel pit with renewed mill wheel | Am Mühlgraben 1 (map) |
re. 1704 | Lehmannmühle Klipphausen - the oldest surviving mill in East Saxony, remarkable mill property, especially from the early 18th century, picturesque half-timbered ensemble, the residential mill house with a very old half-timbered construction (head struts), property that is important in terms of building history, local history and technical history appears as a picturesque half-timbered ensemble. |
09268584
|
Schlossmühle Klipphausen; Steyermühle: Residential mill house, side building and barn of a mill property, plus access bridge over the Wilde Sau (Saubach) | Am Mühlgraben 2 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century, core older | Schlossmühle Klipphausen - side building with half-timbered upper floor, barn and residential house plastered buildings, significant in terms of building history, local history and technology history.
The access bridge over the Wilde Sau (Saubach) is a single arch bridge, Wagenbreth technology has not been preserved, former four-sided courtyard. |
09268888
|
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Waystone | At the quarry 2 (before) (map) |
19th century | of importance in terms of traffic history.
Not on the street “Am Mühlgraben”, not near the Lehmannmühle, but on the street “Am Steinbruch”, corner of a dirt road to Kleinschönberg (discovered in 2011). |
09268599
|
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Former brewery, now a residential building | Krauseminzgasse 2 (map) |
1st third of the 16th century | Upper floor half-timbered, ancient half-timbered construction with head struts, basement with Renaissance seating niche portal, originally belonging to the neighboring manor, of architectural and local significance.
Massively stocky half-timbered structure, seat niche portal, groin vault. |
09268582
|
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Side building (stable house) of the former inn | Meißner Strasse 12 (map) |
re. 1821 | Upper floor timber frame boarded up, of architectural and local significance. |
09268589
|
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Residential stable house with attached barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Meißner Strasse 16 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Residential stable house, upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, side building plastered solid construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268590
|
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Residential building | Neudeckmühlenweg 3 (map) |
re. 1837 | with basket arch portal and half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268587
|
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Residential building | Neudeckmühlenweg 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268588
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Neudeckmühle: former mill building, later an inn (two houses built next to each other in a corner location), plus access bridge over the Wilde Sau (Saubach) | Neudeckmühlenweg 13 (map) |
re. 1794 | Neudeckmühle - historic inn and old mill, upper floor half-timbered, several basket arch portals, single arch bridge to the mill, of architectural and local importance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, dovecote, door frames and window frames made of sandstone, a residential building with a passage. |
09268579
|
Residential stable house, side building (gatehouse), further side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard and cottage garden | Soraer Strasse 6 (map) |
re. 1854 | old local location bar, residential stable house, plastered building with classicist door frames, gatehouse with half-timbered upper floor, half-timbered barn, large farm that has been closed and preserved, buildings from the 19th century typical of the period and the landscape, of architectural and economic importance.
Solid timber frame, door frame and window frames made of sandstone, residential stable house (with shower and baking house - both removed before 2011). |
09268586
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Klipphausen Castle (No. 3/5, main building built in an angle) with the associated residential stable building (No. 2, former tenant house, with half-timbered transition and extension), three outbuildings (No. 4, No. 6 and No. 7 / 7a, residential and farm buildings), gate pillars, enclosure wall and castle park (garden monument) | Talstrasse 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 7a (card) |
re. 1528 (castle) | Klipphausen Castle - in a simple renaissance building with a valuable interior, an early example of the appearance of the renaissance in Saxony, of importance in terms of building history, art history and local history. Gurlitt, Volume 41, pp. 221ff. |
09268581
|
Schlossbrücke (road bridge over the Wilde Sau (Saubach)) | Talstrasse 7 (near) (map) |
19th century (bridge) | Two arch bridge, of architectural significance.
Bridge lies on Gem. Klipphausen, Flstk. 1c, 1/1 and 363f as well as Gem. Sachsdorf, Flstk. 279 and 309/6. |
09268591 |
Kobitzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Two bridges over the Kleine Triebisch | (Map) | 19th century | Arch bridges, historically important.
Bridge lies on two districts: Gem. Kobitzsch, Flstk. 6 and Flstk. 35, Gem. Kettewitz, Flstk. 80. |
09269979 |
Lampersdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Totality of the Royal Saxon Triangulation ("European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony"); Station 12 Baeyerhöhe: triangulation stone | (Map) | re. 1866 (triangulation column) | First-order station, significant in terms of surveying history and technology history. |
09304509
|
Waystone | Baeyerhöhe (map) |
19th century | of importance in terms of traffic history. |
09268608
|
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Residential stable house and side building of a former four-sided courtyard | Baeyerhöhe 1 (map) |
around 1800 (stable house) | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, half-timbered construction with K-struts on the residential stable house, of architectural significance. Massively stocky framework. |
09268609
|
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Stable house of a farm | Baeyerhöhe 3 (map) |
18th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Solid, sturdy half-timbering, partly solid barn. |
09268610
|
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Access bridge over the Kleine Triebisch | Baeyerhöhe 5 (before) (map) |
re. 1833 | Two-arch bridge in quarry stone, access bridge to Kirstenmühle, of architectural significance, quarry stone. |
09268607
|
Residential stable house, side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Baeyerhöhe 8 (map) |
2nd half of the 18th century (stable house) | Courtyard complex preserved largely closed in half-timbered construction in a design typical of the time, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, side building: solid timber frame, barn: planking, manure track behind the residential stable house to the garden and showers in the courtyard between the barn and side building. |
09268606
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Naumannmühle, Obermühle Lampersdorf: Mill property with residential mill stable building and two side buildings, plus an offset stone on the gable of the main house | Baeyerhöhe 11 (map) |
re. 1725 | all buildings of the Obermühle Lampersdorf with half-timbered upper floor, mill building with K-struts in the half-timbered construction and triple windows (Palladio motif) in the gable, beautiful basket arch portal, side building of the former horse stable and former pigsty with servants' room, baroque coat of arms stone, of architectural, local and economic significance .
Massively stocky half-timbering (all buildings), miller's slogan above the mill entrance ("Gellt Gott mit Whiz und Korn / Mahlgäst u. Flood the abundance / So there is a sea blessing / and the mill never stands still"), marked 1725 and miller's mark, offset coat of arms stone on the street-side gable of the main building, inscribed "Gottlieb Lommatzsch, Anno 1748". |
09268603
|
Barn of a three-sided farm | Baeyerhöhe 14 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered barn with cross struts, of architectural and economic importance. |
09268605
|
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Stable house of a farm | Baeyerhöhe 18 (map) |
re. 1842 (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268604
|
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Residential stable house and western side building as well as barn of a farm | Baeyerhöhe 22 (map) |
around 1800 (stable house) | Stable house upper floor half-timbered plastered, side building old-fashioned half-timbered construction with St. Andrew's cross, massive barn, largely closed preserved farm, of architectural and economic importance.
Stables and farm buildings: Andrew's cross, half-timbered, solidly stocky, residential stable house: half-timbered plastered, massive stocky, with a shower between the residential stable house and side building demolished before 2011, eastern side building (number 22a, Flstk. 9/2) replaced by a new building in 2004 (half-timbered parts of the old building integrated) - to be regarded as a demolition, also demolished the boundary wall. |
09268602
|
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Residential building | Baeyerhöhe 26 (map) |
re. 1842 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, boarded gable, with large garden plot. |
09268600 |
Lotzen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residential stable house and barn of a farm | At the Kleine Triebisch 12 (map) |
re. 1821 (stable house) | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, half-timbered barn, farm that has largely been preserved in its original condition, of architectural and economic significance.
Boarded-up extension to the residential stable house, keystone at the entrance marked 1821, solid timber frame, barn: timber frame. |
09268596
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | At the Kleine Triebisch 14 (map) |
17th century (stable house) | Remarkable ensemble of half-timbered buildings, half-timbered on the stable house partly also on the ground floor (rarity), residential stable house with very ancient half-timbered construction (K-struts and head struts, Thuringian ladder-half-timbered with docks in the parapet fields, profiled threshold), possibly a former timbered house, house history, of great importance in terms of building history and economic history.
Residential stable house: half-timbered solid stocky, original lugs, dovecote, barn and farm building: half-timbered, with a shower. |
09268597
|
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Stable house of a farm | At the Kleine Triebisch 16 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Solid timber frame, modern porch, with a small side building - garage from the 1930s, no monument. |
09268594
|
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Residential stable house (with side extension) of a farm | At the Kleine Triebisch 18 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, massive extension, of architectural and economic importance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268593
|
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm | At the Kleine Triebisch 20 (map) |
Mid 19th century (stable house) | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, side building single-storey solid construction with jamb, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, side building: glazed brick, solid. |
09268592 |
Miltitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Residential building | Am Dorfberg 7 (map) |
re. 1848 | Upper floor half-timbered, classicistic door portal, of architectural significance.
Solid, stocky half-timbering, original windows on the ground floor, single-pane windows on the upper floor. |
09267947
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The ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Miltitz, with the following individual monuments: group of buildings consisting of castle and manor house (see individual monuments 09267950, Am Rittergut 3), church with churchyard wall and monumental graves in the churchyard (see individual monuments 09267951, Kirchstrasse 2) and two farm buildings (No. 1 and no. 4/6), barn (also granary), mountain cellar (at no. 1) including two entrances, enclosure wall and gate system (see individual monuments 09267948, Am Rittergut 1, 4, 6) still as a whole: churchyard with death hall ( Kirchstraße 2) and farmyard with two further, structurally more heavily modified farm buildings (Am Rittergut 2 and Siedlerweg 5) as well as the castle park and chestnut grove with old trees, in particular chestnuts, plane trees, linden, ash and pedunculate oaks (garden monument) | At the manor 1; 2; 3; 4; 6 (card) |
around 1660 (manor) | one of the oldest and most important feudal rulers in the district of Meißen and also of architectural, regional, local and personal history as well as in parts of artistic importance. |
09269849
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Individual features of the ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Miltitz: two farm buildings (No. 1 and No. 4/6), barn (also granary), mountain cellar (at No. 1) with two entrances, enclosure wall and gate system (see entity 09269849, Am Manor 1–6) | At the manor 1; 4; 6 (card) |
re. 1864 | one of the oldest and most important feudal rulers in the district of Meißen and also of architectural, regional, local and personal history as well as in parts of artistic importance. Gate, farm building (number 1), granary, mountain cellar with two entrances on the courtyard side, residential and farm buildings with cowshed (number 6) and servants' apartments (number 4) and stone walls around the castle, manor house and farm yard. |
09267948
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Individual features of the ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Miltitz: Castle and mansion, built together in a T-shape (see also entity 09269849, Am Rittergut 1–6) | Am Rittergut 3 (map) |
re. 1663 (castle) | Miltitz Castle - part of one of the oldest and most important feudal rulers in the district of Meißen and beyond, of architectural, regional, local and personal history, and in parts of artistic importance. |
09267950
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Old school: Former church school, today the parish hall and side building | Am Teichdamm 2 (map) |
1748, later redesigned (school) | School upper floor half-timbered, side building in half-timbered construction, of architectural and local significance.
Parish hall (former church school with cantor's apartment): solid timber frame, vine trellis, side building: timber frame on one eaves side. |
09267960
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Old Miltitz lime mine - lime mine, with mouth hole of Adolf-von-Heynitz-Stolln | Bahngäßchen 3 (map) |
around 1400 (lime mine) | Testimony to the history of limestone mining and also of traditional ore mining (Adolf-von-Heynitz-Stolln), of local and mining significance. |
09267956
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Former brewery, now a residential building | Brauereistraße 4 (map) |
2nd half of the 18th century | stately, street-defining building, upper floor partly timber-framed, of local historical importance. Truss massive stocky, truss plastered. |
09267955
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Individual features of the ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Miltitz: Church on the manor (with equipment), plus churchyard wall and monumental graves in the churchyard (see also entity 09269849, Am Rittergut 1–6) | Kirchstrasse 2 (map) |
1738-1740 | House of God significant evidence of ecclesiastical architecture, especially of the 18th century, complex of castle, patronage church and manor, one of the oldest and most important feudal lordship complexes in the district of Meißen, of architectural, regional, local and personal history as well as in parts of artistic importance. |
09267951
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Memorial stone for the victims of fascism | Kirchstrasse 2 (next to) (map) |
1951 (monument) | Memorial for 17 murdered concentration camp prisoners from the Miltitz-Munzig labor camp, historically significant.
Granite stone in a chestnut grove OdF memorial, next to the cemetery. 17 prisoners from the Miltitz-Munzig labor camp, including two Soviet citizens, rest in a communal grave. Memorial stone with honorable inscription. Material: granite boulder, erected: 1951 / after being reburied in the communal grave. Condition: rather bad. |
09267959
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Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Lugaer Weg 3 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Residential stable house and barn in half-timbered construction, side building massive, here the three-arched Kumthalle, which lies in a triangular-crowned central projection (unique design), largely closed, stately courtyard complex, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, farm building: half-timbered jamb floor. |
09267953
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Bridge over the Triebisch | Talstrasse 12 (behind) (map) |
18th century | Arch bridge in quarry stone masonry, of architectural significance.
Rubble stone, flood damage. |
09267946
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Mill Miltitz; Furkert-Bartsch-Mühle: Main house (No. 12) with annex and side building of the old mill and technology in the new mill building (No. 14) | Talstrasse 12; 14 (card) |
re. 1792 | Furkertmühle Miltitz - striking ensemble, enlivened by half-hipped roofs and half-timbering, remarkable machinery in the new building from the late 19th century, grinding and grain mill with a long family tradition, of architectural, local and technological history. |
09267945 |
Munzig
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Bridge over the Triebisch | At the floodplain (map) |
19th century (bridge) | Arch bridge, historically important, natural stone. |
09268541
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Residential house with rear extension | Burkhardswalder Strasse 8 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268544
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Residential building | Burkhardswalder Strasse 10 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Solid, stocky framework, half-hip roof. |
09268543
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Buschhaus (residential building of a former three-sided courtyard) | Bush house 2 (map) |
re. 1730 | Upper floor half-timbered, first documented mention in 1551, of local and architectural importance.
Solid, stocky half-timbering, half-hip roof, first documented mention: "Moller von Kottewitz - 1551". |
09268542
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Residential building | Hauptstrasse 18 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Small farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
Solid and plastered half-timbering, towing roof, rear barn installation. |
09268548
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Residential building (without massive extension) | Hauptstrasse 20 (map) |
18th century | Small farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered with a wide stand spacing, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
Solid, stocky half-timbered structure, with half-timbered extension on the gable, door (Biedermeier style). |
09268547
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Former lime kiln | Obermunzig 2 (card) |
19th century | today residential building, of technical importance, today weekend house. |
09268545
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Rittergut Munzig: mansion of a manor | Obermunzig 5 (card) |
re. 1743 | Herrenhaus Obermunzig - for a long time a children's home, today a social therapeutic dormitory, a striking baroque building with a high mansard hipped roof, the family coat of arms above the entrance is also remarkable, behind it a cross vault on a mighty pillar inside, historically important in terms of architecture, local history and artistically (house number 5). |
09268546 |
Naustadt
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Monument protection area Dorf Naustadt | (Map) | 16. – 19. Century | a large, two-story renaissance half-timbered building has been preserved here.
In the 19th century - Naustadt was experiencing an economic boom as a medium-sized farming village - some farmsteads in the area of the Rundling were expanded towards the edge of the village or newly built above the old ones. The original distance between the courtyard and the church can still be read on the parish. The farmsteads are located at a reasonable distance in a ring around the church and cemetery, the slopes in between are kept free of buildings and are traditionally used as orchards and vegetable gardens or meadow areas. Viticulture also played a role in Naustadt. |
09301101
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Waystone | Gävernitze (card) |
19th century | Sandstone shaft with pyramid-shaped roof, recessed inscription fields renewed, significant in terms of traffic history.
The stone shows new (or renewed) inscriptions Scharfenberg, Pegenau, Röhrsdorf and Schloss as well as the corresponding direction indicators. There is also a depiction of a mill (if an ingredient was not available before the relatively free revision). |
09302724
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Stable house (angular) of a former four-sided courtyard | Gävernitze 1 (card) |
18th century | a half-timbered building (partly with very old Thuringian ladder framework on the courtyard side), of architectural significance. |
09267653
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Residential house, attached shed and barn of a farm | Small page 13 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered house, small massive barn, small farmstead, of social and architectural importance.
Farmhouse: half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267641
|
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House of a farm, with enclosure | Small page 17 (card) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Plastered solid building, a portrait medallion in the gable, of architectural significance. Box window on the upper floor, a sandstone medallion with portrait in the gable. |
09267630
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Part of a stable house and well with a manual pump | Pegenauer Strasse 2 (map) |
after 1800 | Residential house a half-timbered building, also half-timbered on the ground floor, historically important |
09267649
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Stable house of a farm | Pegenauer Strasse 3 (map) |
around 1850 | with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance. Half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267651
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Farm with stable house (no.5), side building (no.9) and younger house (no.7) | Pegenauer Strasse 5; 7; 9 (card) |
re. 1803 (No. 5, stable house) | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, younger house on the street with an elaborately designed gable, there two arched windows, of architectural significance. Stable house: half-timbered gable. |
09267652
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Two side buildings (one as a moving house) and barn of a four-sided courtyard, in the courtyard a fountain with a manual pump | Pegenauer Strasse 18a; 18b (card) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Plastered solid buildings, courtyard complexes from the 19th century that have been preserved largely closed, of architectural, social, and economic significance.
Left stable house (to 18b, part 25/3): front part of apartment, rear part of farm building, right stable house (18a, part 25/2): stable building with migrant apartment on the upper floor, barn: barrel vault. |
09267626
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Former stable house (No. 20a) and side building (No. 20b, with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard | Pegenauer Strasse 20a; 20b (card) |
re. 1844 | Large farm that defines the townscape, plastered solid buildings, side buildings with a rare three-arched Kumthalle on the ground floor, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house in the lintel marked "Built in the year MDCCCXLIV ACG Marx" (lintel marked 1844), inside groin vault (entrance area), farm building: type of central projection with triangular gable, crooked hipped roof with bat dormers, Kumthalle with two fluted columns. |
09267627
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Four-sided courtyard with stable house, barn and two side buildings (one with a dovecote) and an archway as a courtyard access | Pegenauer Strasse 22 (map) |
re. 1806 | Large farm that characterizes the locality (mostly in half-timbered construction), elaborate entrance portal on the residential building, of economic and architectural importance. Owner: the Köhler family. |
09267631
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Former stable house (no.24a) and side building (no.24b, with Kumthalle) of a former four-sided courtyard | Pegenauer Strasse 24a; 24b (card) |
re. 1840 | The large farm that characterizes the locality, half-timbered buildings, the farm building with a rare two-arched Kumthalle on the ground floor and exodus apartment on the upper floor, of architectural significance.
Both houses are half-timbered, solidly stocky, farm buildings with bat dormers, farm building 24c demolished. |
09267632
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Residential stable house and side building (with Kumthalle) of a former four-sided courtyard and gate pillars | Pegenauer Strasse 26 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Half-timbered buildings, side buildings with a rare three-arched Kumthalle on the ground floor and exodus apartment on the upper floor, of architectural significance.
Residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, farm building: bricked, massive, half-timbered upper floor. |
09267633
|
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Residential stable house (No. 28b), residential building (No. 28a), side building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a four-sided courtyard, plus gate pillars, fountain with manual pump, courtyard tree and cottage garden | Pegenauer Strasse 28a; 28b (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Large farm that characterizes the locality, half-timbered buildings, side buildings with an unusually designed Kumthalle on the ground floor and triplet windows (Palladio motif) on the upper floor, of economic and architectural importance.
Farm building and stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, barn: half-timbered, Göbelring, courtyard chestnut. |
09267634
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Rectory with residential house and stable house (built together at an angle) as well as a fountain with a manual pump | Pfarrweg 3a; 3b (card) |
according to Gurlitt formerly designated 1618 | Upper floor half-timbered with St. Andrew's crosses, one of the oldest half-timbered buildings in town, of local and architectural significance.
Both houses: half-timbered, solidly stocky, residential house with basket arch gate, residential stable house with St. Andrew's cross and boarded gable, entrance area sandstone stairs, rectory formerly three-sided courtyard. |
09267628
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Naustadt village church with church furnishings and cemetery with enclosure wall and some old tombs (including those of Miltitz ) | Pfarrweg 4 (map) |
1606 | A post-Gothic building characterized by a neo-Romanesque renovation from 1897, valuable interior fittings, churchyard with tombs from the 16th to 19th centuries, of importance in terms of local history, regional history, architectural history and the appearance of the town. |
09267629
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Residential stable of a former three-sided courtyard and gate pillar of the courtyard entrance | Scharfenberger Strasse 1 (map) |
re. 1799, older in essence | Upper floor half-timbered with long struts, of importance in terms of building history.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky, hipped roof, windows partially enlarged, vine trellis. |
09267646
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Two stable houses (including an older side building) and a barn of a three-sided courtyard and courtyard wall | Scharfenberger Strasse 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Residential stable houses Half-timbered buildings, the side building with ancient half-timbered construction (wide stand spacing, head braces), massive barn, of economic and structural importance.
Stable houses: half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267644 |
Residential building | Scharfenberger Strasse 7 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | with built-in shop, Wilhelminian style plastered construction with central projections, three small arched windows in the gable, of architectural significance.
Central axis highlighted by a roof bay window, segmented arched windows, three small arched windows in the gable. |
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Former inn with an annex | Scharfenberger Strasse 9 (map) |
re. 1847 | Upper floor half-timbered guest house partly plastered or boarded up, of local and architectural significance.
Boarded gable, rear eaves side with half-timbering, today the parish hall and gymnasium. |
09267639 |
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House of a farm | Scharfenberger Strasse 12 (map) |
re. 1576, later reshaped | Ground floor with arched windows, steep pitched roof, corner stone marked MDLXXVI (= 1576), of architectural significance. Ground floor with arches, corner stone marked MDLXXVI (= 1576). |
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Residential stable house (No. 13) of a farm, with a courtyard tree (on the property of No. 15) | Scharfenberger Strasse 13; 15 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered building defining the townscape, of architectural significance.
Hofbaum a chestnut, (forms farm with number 15). |
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Three-sided courtyard with stable house, side building and barn as well as gate pillars of the courtyard entrance | Scharfenberger Strasse 14 (map) |
2nd half of the 18th century | Half-timbered farmstead that has been preserved closed in a typical landscape design, of economic and architectural importance. |
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Three-sided courtyard with stable house, side building and barn | Scharfenberger Strasse 20 (map) |
re. 1861 | Closed preserved farm, partly in half-timbered construction, of economic and architectural importance.
Residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, knee stick above the upper floor, barn: half-timbered, massive stocky. |
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School building (with two house numbers) | Scharfenberger Strasse 24; 26 (card) |
re. 1835 | Characteristic and unique significance and scientific-documentary value as a building of this rarely preserved type of building, plastered half-timbered building with representative entrance portal, of local history.
Inscription in the representative portal, on the upper floor still half-timbered on the street side. |
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Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard | Scharfenberger Strasse 28a (map) |
re. 1842 | Stately farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor, half-timbered partly also on the ground floor, of architectural significance.
Half-timbered, massive squat, (forms four-sided courtyard with number 28b). |
09267642
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Side building (with Kumthalle) of a farm | Scharfenberger Strasse 32 (map) |
re. 1846 | Upper floor half-timbered, with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, of economic and architectural importance.
Farm building: half-timbered, solidly stocky, barn: half-timbered - demolished before 2007. |
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Residential stable house (No. 38b) and side building (No. 38a) of a four-sided courtyard and gate pillars | Scharfenberger Strasse 38a; 38b (card) |
re. 1843 | Large farm that characterizes the locality, plastered buildings, stable house with classicistic door frame, of architectural significance. |
09267638 |
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Residential stable house (No. 42) and side building (No. 42a, with Kumthalle) of a three-sided courtyard | Scharfenberger Strasse 42; 42a (card) |
re. 1859 | Large farm that characterizes the locality, residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and soffit, the farm building with two-arched Kumthalle on the ground floor and expatriate apartment on the upper floor, of economic and architectural importance.
Residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267637
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Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as gate pillars and fence | Scharfenberger Strasse 46 (map) |
re. 1848 | Large farm that characterizes the town, the house is a half-timbered building, massive barn, of economic and architectural importance.
Stable house: half-timbered, St. Andrew's cross in the gable (from a later renovation), solidly squat, barn: solid, (forms three-sided courtyard with number 44). |
09267636 |
Exactly
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Vorwerk Pegenau; Scharfenberg manor | Old manor 2; 4; 8 (card) |
1857–1858 (manor house) | Old manor Pegenau (Vorwerk of Scharfenberg Castle) with mansion (No. 4, later school, now residential building) and two farm buildings (residential stable houses, No. 2 and No. 8), with gate pillars (between No. 2 and No. 10); stately mansion accentuated by a central projection with gable, farm buildings plastered quarry stone buildings, of architectural and local importance.
Former Vorwerk of Scharfenberg Castle (number 1, formerly Reppnitz ). Large four-sided courtyard, main building with portal and window frames from the 16th century on the ground floor, upper floor in half-timbered construction, gable roof (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996). |
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villa | Old manor 6 (map) |
1878 | Representative Wilhelminian style building with a pillar-supported balcony, formerly part of the Scharfenberg / Vorwerk Pegenau manor, of architectural and local significance, for a time the teachers' house of the neighboring school (former manor of the Vorwerk). |
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Altes Rittergut 12 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Closed ensemble of half-timbered buildings, of architectural and economic significance.
Dovecote under the roof of the residential stable house, barn with deep cellar and vault, side building of the former stable building with migrant apartment on the upper floor. |
09267623
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Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard | Wiesengrund 5 (map) |
re. 1698, later reshaped | Upper floor half-timbered construction (Thuringian ladder framework, foot struts), historically important.
On the gable side arched windows under the roof, today's external appearance in the 2nd half of the 19th century, with a former bakery attached to the rear of the house. |
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Pegenau windmill | Windmühlenweg 1 (map) |
1876 | Pegenau windmill; Turmholländer - important in terms of technology history, expanded for residential purposes, interior fittings no longer available. |
09267620 |
Perne
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building of a farm | Perne 5 (card) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable side, historically significant, massive, stocky framework, boarded-up gable side. |
09268273 |
Pinkowitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential stable house (No. 1), two side buildings (No. 2a / b and No. 3a / b, the latter with Kumthalle) and barn (No. 4a – d) of a four-sided courtyard | Pinkowitz 1; 2a; 2 B; 3a; 3b; 4a; 4b; 4c; 4d (card) |
re. 1657 | Stable house (north side): most impressive building of the homestead with half-hipped roof and half-timbering on the upper floor, side building (west side): on the upper floor mostly half-timbered, with column embedded in the house wall, side building (south side): Kumthalle, upper floor half-timbered, here servants' rooms, barn (east side) : two or three large through gates, probably the last two buildings with deep, barrel-vaulted cellars, complex a remarkable example of a large farm, especially from the first quarter of the 19th century in the district of Meißen, significant building and economic history, southern side building (number 3a / 3b): on the upper floor boarded with wood, hipped mansard roof with clock (around 1850), residential stable house (number 1): solid timber frame, sandstone portal with double door, sandstone window frames, crooked hipped roof with bat dormers, reshaping in the 1920s undone by last renovation, western side building (Number 2a / 2b): on the upper floor Half-timbered structure, barn (numbers 4a – 4d) cautiously modernized during the last renovation. |
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Stable house (no. 8a – c), side building (no. 7a / b), barn (no. 9a – d) as well as gate pillars and walls of a former four-sided courtyard | Pinkowitz 7a; 7b; 8a; 8b; 8c; 9a; 9b; 9c; 9d (card) |
around 1800 | striking rural property, effect through half-timbered upper storeys and half-hipped roofs, plant a remarkable example of a large farm, especially from the time around 1800, significant in terms of building history and economic history.
Manor house / side building: Baroque stairwell, sandstone window frames, plastered half-timbering, half-hipped roof, residential stable: half-timbering solidly stocky, sandstone window walls, half-hipped roof with dormers. |
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Pinkowitzmühle | Regenbachtal 6 | around 1900 | Former mill and barn; Plastered building, Wilhelminian style building, of local significance (core around 1700).
Previous building burned down around 1900 |
09267676 |
Piskowitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Lack of laundry in the house | Miltitzer Strasse 12 (map) |
around 1900 | of significance in terms of technology history.
Plaque on the lack of laundry: “Richard Sparmann Laundry machines u. Mangeln, Meissen, Kurt-Hein-Strasse 3 « |
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Stable house of a farm | Miltitzer Strasse 14 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | stately farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered, historically important. |
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Residential stable house | To the old school 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Cottage house, upper floor half-timbered, socio-historical importance, cottage house. |
09268146 |
Polenz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Polenz stop; Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Wilsdruff – Meißen Triebischtal (waiting hall and toilet block) | (Map) | 1909 (train station) | Waiting hall of the narrow-gauge railway Wilsdruff – Gärtitz (route abbreviation WG, km 0.139), the beet railway that is important for the annual sugar beet campaign in the Lommatzscher Pflege, type construction of the Kgl. Saxon. State railways, now a consultation point for hunting and nature conservation, important in terms of railway history.
Half-timbered building on a brick base, with brick infill and wood paneling, design typical of the narrow-gauge line at hand. Route kilometer 10,970, built as a train station, stop from 1947, originally consisted of a waiting hall, car body (demolished) and toilet building (preserved?), Opened on October 1, 1909 for freight and passenger traffic, cessation of passenger traffic on May 22, 1966 and the Freight traffic on July 30, 1966. |
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Polenz Chapel | Main street (map) |
re. 1737 | Simple baroque sacred building with a turret, the manors of Oberpolenz (Hauptstraße 23) and Niederpolenz (Hauptstraße 31) had to jointly maintain the chapel, in which services were held at festive times, which was of architectural and local significance.
Roof turret over the east gable, two grave monuments 1572 and 1649 (Sachsen-Dehio, p. 353). Predecessor building around 1400, arched windows, bat dormers, the manors Oberpolenz (Hauptstrasse 23) and Niederpolenz (Hauptstrasse 31) have to jointly maintain the chapel in which services were held at festive times. |
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Manor house of the manor Oberpolenz | Hauptstrasse 23 (map) |
18th century (mansion) | typical baroque mansion, plastered solid building with mansard roof, central projecting with triangular gable facing the courtyard, of architectural and local significance. Former Manor Oberpolenz. The manor house called Polenz in 1198, divided into Upper and Lower Poland in 1588, the structural remains of the latter at the western end of the village. - Manor house on the north side of the manor. Plastered building, two-storey, 7: 4 window axes, on the south side gabled central projection with main entrance and staircase, mansard hipped roof, 18th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996). Hipped mansard roof, column placed in the entrance hall, municipal office after 1945 to 2006, today (2011) private property, address possibly also: Hofegasse 6. |
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Cottage with extension | Hauptstrasse 38 (map) |
17th century (Häuslerhaus) | Upper floor half-timbered, smallholder property, of architectural and socio-historical importance, cottage property. |
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Barn and stable building of a three-sided farm | Hauptstrasse 44 (map) |
around 1800 | on the dovecote stable building and upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic importance |
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Transformer house | Hauptstraße 46 (in front of) (map) |
1920s | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of importance in terms of technology history, technical equipment still available. |
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Helmmühle Polenz - mill property with residential house, two side buildings and barn | Helmmühlenweg 1 (map) |
re. 1816 (mill) | Helmmühle Polenz: residential building with segment arch portal and half-timbered upper floor, side building a plastered building, of architectural and local significance.
Mühle first mentioned in 1598, with a surrounding stone wall (?). |
09267860 |
Reichenbach
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Stable house of a farm | Reichenbach 6 (map) |
re. 1809 | Upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered construction with K-struts, of architectural significance.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky, roof overhang, plastic windows with plastic bars, with an angled annex - mostly demolished before 2011. |
09267661
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Stable house of a farm | Reichenbach 9b (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | stately farmhouse, upper floor half-timbered, historically important.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky, (forms farm with number 9a). |
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Residential stable house | Reichenbach 11 (map) |
Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance. |
09267660 |
Reppina
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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King David Erbstolln | At the Elbaue (map) |
re. 1818 | Mouth hole of a mountain tunnel; of local importance. |
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anvil | At the Elbaue (map) |
1888 (Pochstempelstein) | Stamp stone (set secondarily in a retaining wall) and retaining wall; Pochstein comes from the new Scharfenberg silver washing, mining evidence, of local history.
Pochstempelstein from 1888 from the new Scharfenberg silver washing, stone was built into the retaining wall in 1908, silver mining was stopped in Scharfenberg in 1897/98. |
09267598
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Old Reppina Mill | At the Elbaue 7 (map) |
in the core of the 16th century | Mill and former bakery; Simple plastered building with segment arch portal, of architectural and local significance, location near the Elbe that characterizes the townscape. |
09267597
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Enclosure walls along the road | Ferry route (map) |
19th century (enclosure wall) | Quarry stone walls, of importance in terms of building history and character of the townscape.
Quarry stone wall with a brick entrance and sandstone walls (to property number 1?). |
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Former miner's house with a side barn and an enclosure wall facing the street | Schachtberg 5 (map) |
1601 | Striking building with half-timbered upper floor, ancient half-timbered construction with St. Andrew's crosses and head braces, is picturesquely situated at the entrance to the Schachtberg, which leads as a valley cut from the former Reppina to Scharfenberg, structural evidence of silver mining in the area, of importance in terms of building history and local history as well as landscape design.
The two-storey building consists of a massive, stocky framework with St. Andrew's crosses. The window openings on the ground floor are made of sandstone walls. The roof is enlivened by bat dormers. The renewed apex above the house entrance shows the date 1691 and a mining symbol. The date was carved into the clay on the upper floor and was taken over for the top stone (M. Eisbein) at the instigation of the Lower Monument Protection Authority of the district of Meißen, Mr. Höfer. According to literature, the building is said to have been erected as early as 1601 (communications from the Saxon Heritage Protection Association). |
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Scharfenberg Castle (garden monument) | Schloßweg 1 (map) |
13th century / 14th Century, later reshaped (castle) | Palace complex (several building wings) with surrounding wall, bridge with bridge gate, palace garden with enclosure wall and avenue system; Former manor, access via a bridge, star-vaulted passage (middle of the 16th century), Romanesque passage portal on the courtyard side, building from the 14th century at its core, Renaissance shape-determining for the complex, significant in terms of building history and local history, artistically and landscape design. |
09267602 |
Basement house | Schloßweg 3a; 3b (card) |
1st half 17th century | Hunting lodge (with two house numbers) of Scharfenberg Castle; Ancient half-timbered building, upper floor half-timbered with St. Andrew's crosses, deep cellar of a former winery of those von Miltitz, of architectural, local and house history of importance, local history museum (formerly) |
09267603 |
Riemsdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building (stable house, with two house numbers) of a four-sided courtyard | Ullendorfer Strasse 7a; 7b (card) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered, structurally significant, massive, stocky half-timbered, escapee apartment on the upper floor, (forms four-sided courtyard with number 7c / d). |
09267615
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Former poor house, now a residential building | Zum Lindenhof 1 (map) |
around 1800 | Presumably formerly part of the neighboring farm, upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance, massive, stocky half-timbered structure, windows partially enlarged. |
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Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as gate pillars | Zum Lindenhof 3 (map) |
re. 1807 | large, closed preserved farm in typical landscape design, residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and basket arch portal, side building upper floor half-timbered and rare three-arched Kumthalle, massive barn, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, pulley, wine trellis, farm building: solid timber frame, Kumthalle on the ground floor, exodus apartment on the upper floor. |
09267617
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House and stable building of a cottage industry | Zum Lindenhof 6 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Small farmstead, house with half-timbered upper floor, small massive stable building, of architectural and socio-historical importance
Cottage property |
09267616
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Residential stable house, barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Zum Lindenhof 7 (map) |
around 1800 | Courtyard complex, largely closed, preserved upper floor half-timbered house, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic importance. Massively squat half-timbering, small triangular windows for ventilation on the gable floor, crooked hip roof, former bakery (today wash house). |
09267618 |
Robschütz
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Viaduct Garsebach; Robschützer Viaduct (so-called); Wilsdruff – Döbeln-Gärtitz railway line; Beet track (so-called); Section Garsebach – Lommatzsch: bridge piers of a railway viaduct | (Map) | 1907–1908 (railway viaduct) | the Garsebach viaduct, known as the Robschützer Viaduct, was the longest narrow-gauge railway bridge in Saxony with a length of over 208 meters, the multi-span solid-wall girder bridge (with eleven solid steel girders, not preserved) rested on 10 concrete pillars, and was of significance in terms of railway history and building history. |
09268226
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House and side building of a farm | Am Burgser 11 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered residential building, single-storey side building (barn) in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance |
09268162
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Bell tower and enclosure wall of the cemetery as well as some tombs | Hufweg 15 (next to) (map) |
19th century | Historically important, tombs from the 19th century. |
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Residential building | Neurobschützer Weg 1 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, typical rural house, historically important. |
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Memorial to the fallen of the First World War | Nossener Strasse (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Stele with an eagle figure and designed open space, significant in terms of local history.
Erected for the dead in Garsebach, Robschütz and Semmelsberg. This is also indicated by the triangular shape of the base, intermediate piece and pedestal. Inscription fields on the pedestal for each of the places mentioned. Above it sits an eagle as a crown characteristic of war memorials. The designed open space consists of a roundabout and a path leading to the monument, both paved. |
09268156
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Railway line Borsdorf - Coswig: Railway bridge over Nossener Straße and retaining wall on the road as well as another railway bridge over Triebisch | Nossener Strasse (map) |
between 1898/1909 | Natural stone arch bridges, of architectural and railroad history of importance. |
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Residential building | Nossener Strasse 14 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, historically important, two roof houses. |
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Robschütz manor: mansion of a manor | Rittergutshof 5 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | simple Gründerzeit plastered construction, of local importance.
Sandstone door frame and window frames. |
09268163 |
Röhrsdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Side building of a former four-sided courtyard | Am Katzenbusch 4 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | with half-timbered upper floor, part of a large courtyard typical of the time, of architectural significance.
Solid timber frame, vaults in the stable of the stable house, one of the two protected buildings demolished before 2011. |
09268576
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Residential stable house (No. 6) and side building (No. 5) of a four-sided courtyard | Am Katzenbusch 5; 6 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | stately buildings, both with half-timbered upper floors, of architectural significance, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268577
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Residential stable house, two side buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Am Kleine Weg 2b (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century (stable house) | Stately residential stable house in solid construction, some of the farm buildings on the upper floor timber-framed, closed preserved courtyard from the 19th century, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house as well as stable and farm buildings: solid, barn, stable building and storage: boarded up. |
09268570
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Bridge over the Regenbach | Am Regenbach (map) |
around 1800 | One-arch quarry stone bridge in the Bachtal, historically important, quarry stone. |
09268562
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Barn of a four-sided yard | Am Regenbach 3 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered barn, ambitious half-timbered structure, of architectural and economic significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268563
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Residential stable house (No. 5b) and side building (No. 5c, with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard | Am Regenbach 5b; 5c (card) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, side building with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, of architectural significance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, bat dormers, stable and farm buildings: triangular gable (released for demolition), (forms four-sided courtyard with number 5a). |
09268564
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Pigeon house of a four-sided yard | Am Regenbach 12 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (pigeon house) | massive small tower, of economic and architectural importance. |
09268565
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Residential stable house and barn in a four-sided courtyard, with an archway to the courtyard | Am Regenbach 18 (map) |
re. 1806 (stable house) | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, residential stable house with basket arch portal, buildings typical of the time and landscape, of architectural and economic significance. Residential stable house: half-timbered solid, stocky door frame and window frames made of sandstone, barn: half-timbered, partly solid, double-fired roof tiles, passage. |
09268566
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Residential stable house, side building, stable building (on an angular floor plan) and barn of a four-sided courtyard as well as gate pillars of the courtyard access, farm garden with garden shed | Am Regenbach 25 (map) |
re. 1841 (stable house) | all half-timbered buildings, residential stable house with plastered half-timbered upper floor, marked door frame and triple window (Palladio motif) in the gable, courtyard complex with great unity, rural buildings typical of the time and landscape, of economic and architectural significance, of architectural significance.
Barn: solid timber frame, bat dormers, both farm buildings: solid timber frame, one with two barn passageways and a half-hipped roof, one partly solid, with an apartment on the upper floor, solid stable house, upper floor probably timber frame (plastered). |
09268567
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Residential stable house (No. 32) as well as stable building (No. 32a, with Kumthalle) and side building (No. 32b, residential stable house) of a former four-sided courtyard | Am Regenbach 32; 32a; 32b (card) |
End of the 19th century | largely closed courtyard from the 19th century, side building with half-timbered upper floor, beautiful door portal and triple window in the gable, stable building with a rare three-arched hall and half-timbered upper floor, residential stable house plastered solid construction, of architectural and economic importance, of architectural significance. Residential stable house: solid timber frame, Kumthalle: fluted columns. |
09268568
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Gasthof Deutsches Haus and annexed side building (with ballroom) | Am Regenbach 35 (map) |
re. 1804 | with half-timbered upper floor and basket arch portal, of architectural and local significance, of structural historical importance, massive framework, sandstone door frame. |
09268569
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Former blacksmiths and laundry shortages in the house | Am Regenbach 46 (map) |
re. 1900 | Forge a plastered building with clinker brick structure, of importance in terms of building history and local history, clinker brick application. |
09268572
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House of a former three-sided courtyard | Am Regenbach 47 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | Upper floor half-timbered with crossed struts, old half-timbered construction, probably a former half-timbered house, historically important.
Massively stocky half-timbering, bat dormers, St. Andrew's crosses, boarded gables, possibly a former half-timbered house. |
09268571
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Residential building | Am Regenbach 60 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | typical rural house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Solid timber frame, door frame and window frames made of sandstone. |
09268553
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Residential building (with attached bakery) | Am Regenbach 64 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | typical rural house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, gable: quarry stone, old windows, probably old sheep farm. |
09268554
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Kutschemühle: Former residential mill building (with attached wheel chamber) and barn of a mill property, plus a bridge behind the barn over the Regenbach | Am Regenbach 66 (map) |
in the core of the 17th century | Former church mill Röhrsdorf: Residential mill building (ground floor quarry stone, upper floor half-timbered, segmental arch portal) with characteristic wheel chamber made of quarry stone, barn a solid construction, single-arch quarry stone bridge, significant in terms of building history and local history, of building history.
Residential mill building: sandstone walls, gable roof (beaver tails), building is being restored (1994/1995), left gable boarded up, no technology, mill ditch filled up to the inlet to the wheel chamber, segment arch portal to the street designated 1820, segment arch portal to the courtyard renewed (designated 1994), formerly Döbler -Mill. |
09268892
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Stable house of a farm | Am Regenbach 77 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, vine trellis. |
09268555
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barn | Am Regenbach 78 (next to) (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | small barn in half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of economic history and the townscape.
Termination (allegedly before 2003) did not take place. |
09268559
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Stable building, side building (with upper arbor) and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Am Regenbach 79 (map) |
re. 1802 (side building) | all half-timbered buildings, upper arbor, rare for the region, of architectural and economic significance.
Both buildings: solid timber frame, barn: with dovecote. |
09268556
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Residential stable house (with rear extension) of a former three-sided courtyard | Am Regenbach 83 (map) |
re. 1829 (stable house) | Building with half-timbered upper floor and beautiful segment arch portal, of importance in terms of building history, of importance in terms of building history.
Solid, stocky half-timbered structure, door from the end of the 19th century. Sandstone portal, support pillars (forms three-sided courtyard with number 85). |
09268557
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Residential building | Am Regenbach 91 (map) |
re. 1839 | typical rural house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance, of architectural significance.
Solid timber frame, door frame and window frames made of sandstone. |
09268560
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Four-sided courtyard with residential stable house (No. 2), side building (No. 2a, second residential stable house), stable building (with Kumthalle) and barn | Harthaer Street 2; 2a (card) |
Mid 19th century (stable house) | Closed preserved, large four-sided courtyard from the 19th century, residential stable house that characterizes the locality, plastered solid construction with triple windows in the gable, side building with central projection and crooked hip roof, solid stable building with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic importance. |
09268643
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Residential stable house (No. 3b), barn (next to No. 3) of a four-sided courtyard and gate between the residential stable house and side building | Harthaer Strasse 3; 3b (card) |
re. 1818 (stable house) | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, residential stable house with segment arch portal, of architectural and economic significance.
Massively stocky half-timbered structure, (forms four-sided courtyard together with residential building number 3 and number 3a). |
09268575
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House of a former four-sided courtyard | Harthaer Strasse 8 (map) |
1808 | Upper floor half-timbered, characteristic rural building, belongs to the core of Röhrsdorf, where some striking older buildings have been preserved in terms of architectural history
important, historically important. Building shows massive squat half-timbering. The date of 1808, which apparently comes from the side building, which has now been completely changed, probably also applies to the stable house. |
09268552
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Residential stable house (half-timbered house) and side building of a farm | Kirchberg 2 (map) |
1666 | Both buildings with half-timbered upper floor, residential stable house half-timbered construction with St. Andrew's crosses, half-timbered house rare for the region (half-timbered construction probably already massively replaced in the 18th century, recently reconstructed), of architectural, house-historical and economic-historical importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, saddle roof, cleats, St. Andrew's cross, boarded gable, barrel vault, barn: solid timber frame (quarry stone). |
09268551
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St. Bartholomew's Church in Röhrsdorf (including furnishings), plus a cemetery with some old tombs, a mortuary, three gates and an enclosure wall | Kirchberg 4 (map) |
re. 1737 | St. Bartholomäus-Kirche - hall church with a striking west tower, eastern sacristy annex, so-called princess parlor (patron s lodge), walk-in patron s crypt as well as galleries and other valuable furnishings inside, evidence of baroque church architecture, landmark visible from afar, significant in terms of building history, artistry and landscape design . |
09268578
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Stone cross | Kirchberg 4 (behind) (map) |
14./15. Century | A cross-shaped memorial erected on the occasion of the death of a person by manslaughter or an accident, so-called Murder and Atonement Cross, significant in terms of local history, special value also because of old age, significant in terms of architectural history. |
09302126
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Rectory | Kirchberg 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Characteristic rural plastered building with an axially structured facade, twin windows in the gable, high pitched roof, bat dormers and vine trellis, also forms a striking ensemble with church and churchyard, of architectural and local significance, of architectural significance.
The two-storey rectory has a strictly axial facade structure and the vine trellis on the land side and the high gable roof with bat dormers on both sides. It is also enlivened by the portal and muntin windows. At one point there is the name "Oratia vobis et pax 1694 1994". |
09302889
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House, barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Pinkowitzer Strasse 26 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century (residential building) | Solid residential building, half-timbered barn with ancient, striving construction, side building upper floor half-timbered, closed preserved farm, of architectural and economic importance, of structural history.
Residential house: solid, barn: half-timbered, side building: massive, stocky timber-frame, boarded gable. |
09268561 |
Roitzschen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | (Map) | 3rd quarter of the 19th century | Sandstone pillar with shaft, high, slightly wider head and four-sided, roof-like end, with inscriptions and directional signs, significant in terms of traffic history.
With the four-sided, roof-like termination, the column corresponds to a main type. Inscriptions and direction indicators point to Miltitz and Luga as well as to Roitzschen and Krögis train stations. Stone is on parcel 122 or 126. |
09302727
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Bridge over the Triebisch | Roitzschwiese 22 (near) (map) |
18th century | Arch bridge in quarry stone masonry, of architectural and transport historical importance, quarry stone. |
09267944
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Railway line Borsdorf - Coswig: Two railway bridges over the Triebisch | Talstrasse (map) |
between 1898/1909 | Natural stone arch bridges, of architectural and railroad history of importance. |
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Gate system of the four-sided courtyard | Talstrasse 44 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Curved archway with decorated keystone and two accompanying gates, unique in this form, a typical part of a farm landscape, of architectural significance.
The buildings changed. Owner according to honorary Mister Ulbrich can be traced back to 1648, the farm is probably older. |
09268087
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Neidmühle Roitzschen - Residential mill building, remains of mill technology in the basement and rear side building with an L-shaped floor plan | Talstrasse 46 (map) |
re. 1716 | Neidmühle Roitzschen: Residential mill building with half-timbering on the upper floor in a very old construction (K-struts, Thuringian ladder half-timbering, profiled threshold and filler wood), beautiful door frame is more recent, side building from the Wilhelminian era plastered construction, significant in terms of building history, local history and technology.
Residential mill building of the Neidmühle with half-timbering on the upper floor, solidly stocky, older half-timbered construction "Wilder Mann", profiled swell bolt, remnants of mill technology in the basement: two comb wheels with "standing stuff" and stumps of the waterwheel shafts, massive farm building. |
09267957 |
Rothschönberg
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Material entirety Rothschönberger Stolln , with light holes, functional buildings, ditches, Röschen, heaps and mouth holes in the communities Klipphausen (formerly Triebischtal) (OT Rothschönberg), Halsbrücke (OT Halsbrücke and OT Krummenhennersdorf) and Reinsberg (OT Neukirchen and OT Reinsberg), of which belong to the Section in the Rothschönberg district: the mouth hole of the Triebisch-Rösche below Rothschönberg and the main tunnel mouth hole in the Triebischtal above Rothschönberg (both parts of the whole) | (Map) | 1844–1864 (mouth hole and tunnel between mouth hole and 1st) | Mining facility of supraregional technical history (see also sub-documents in the monuments lists of the communities of Halsbrücke and Reinsberg as well as in the individual monuments lists of the communities mentioned). |
09268311
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Bridge over the Tännichtbach | (Map) | 17./18. Century | spans the brook in a comparatively high arch, made of quarry stone, very old, part of the historical connection Rothschönberg - Neukirchen, also known as the Bäckersteig Siebenlehn-Burkhardswalde / Dresden, significant in terms of building history, technology history and local history. |
09302128
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War memorial for those killed in the First World War (with access and stairs) | Hauptstrasse 42 (opposite) (map) |
1923 (war memorial) | idiosyncratic design with figural jewelry, historically and artistically significant, in this form with a rarity value with a plaque for the missing persons of the Second World War, on four heads rest a figure of Mary and a soldier and two shields with inscriptions. |
09268304
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Residential stable house, barn, side building (formerly forge) and stable building of a four-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 65 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | Residential stable house with plastered half-timbered upper floor and segmented arch portal, half-timbered barn, massive side building, small, closed, preserved courtyard, of architectural and economic significance.
Stable house: half-timbered faced, window niches 18th century, barrel vaults in the basement, windows with sandstone walls, crooked hip roof. |
09268299
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Schafbrücke (bridge over the Triebisch) | Heuweg (map) |
Mid 19th century | Arched bridge, largely preserved in its original state, made of quarry stone and sandstone, arch highlighted by ashlar, significant in terms of building history and traffic history, one of the few examples in Triebischtal that are still original. |
09304020
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Residential building (with extension) | Heuweg 61 (map) |
18th century | Upper floor half-timbered, saddle roof with bat dormers, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, gable roof with bat dormers, window niches, lattice windows, boarded gable, with barn in the corner and shower. |
09268300
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Rothschönberg village church (including furnishings), churchyard with enclosure wall and memorial stone for a fallen soldier in the First World War | Kirchweg (map) |
re. 1829, older in essence | simple hall church with south tower at the choir, located on the right high bank of the Triebisch valley, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the place and the townscape. |
09268298
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Side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Kottewitzer Berg 31 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, side building also on the ground floor half-timbered, of architectural and economic importance.
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09268310
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Residential stable house with extension | Schenkberg 7 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered house, small farmhouse or cottage estate, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
Eaves side half-timbered, massive squat, original windows, sloping roof, recorded under Kirchweg 7. |
09268297
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Rothschönberg Castle (with chapel) and castle park (garden monument) therein a pavilion with an avenue leading to it as well as the enclosure wall of the park, furthermore a solitary tree at the castle, kitchen garden or orchard meadow (garden monument) with gardener's house and enclosure wall of the manor | Schloßberg (map) |
15th century, later reshaped (castle) | Rothschönberg Castle - important late Gothic and Renaissance castle complex, mighty four-wing structure, ancestral seat of the noble von Schönberg family , of architectural, local and regional importance. |
09268294
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Residential building | Schloßberg 2 (map) |
18th century | Upper floor half-timbered with K-struts, arched portal, gable slated, located directly next to the Rothschönberg Castle, of architectural and local importance.
Massively stocky half-timbering (older core), arched portal, gable slated, possibly seen in connection with the castle (gardening?). |
09268295
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Residential house (formerly rectory), stable building, barn and side building of a former rectory | Schloßberg 53 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Residential house plastered solid construction from the 19th century, the outbuildings older, single-storey stable building, quarry stone building with arched portal, side building in half-timbered construction with crossed struts and wide post position, upper floor partly boarded up, half-timbered barn, of architectural and local significance.
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09268296
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Part of a residential building | Steinsgasse 40 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered upper floor, historically important.
Extension already heavily changed, massive framework, gable roof. |
09268303
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Wetzelmühle Rothschönberg: residential stable house (former mill building), side building, barn and further side building of a former mill property as well as courtyard paving | Talstrasse 20 (map) |
re. 1784 (mill building) | Wetzelmühle Rothschönberg - all half-timbered buildings, stately stable house with segmental arch portals, boarded up barn, closed courtyard complex, of architectural, local and economic significance.
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09268307
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Residential building | Talstrasse 35 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Cottage property, high-end timber-framed upper floor, socially and historically important, timber-framed massive. |
09268309 |
Sachsdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Sachsdorf Chapel | Hühndorfer Strasse (map) |
re. 1796 | simple baroque sacred building with roof turrets, interestingly designed windows, beautiful segment arch portal, of architectural and local significance.
Pulpit altar at the end of the 18th century, outside: tomb, was erroneously listed under “Hühndorfstraße” in the list of monuments until 2002. |
09268613
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Residential stable house (No. 3a), side building (No. 3f) and another side building (No. 3, residential stable house) of a former four-sided courtyard, plus courtyard wall with gate | Hühndorfer Strasse 3; 3a; 3f (card) |
re. 1781 (stable house) | all buildings are half-timbered upper floor, residential stable house with segment arch portal, largely original farm, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework
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09268612
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Side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Hühndorfer Strasse 6 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Side building upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, building that characterizes the townscape, of architectural and economic importance.
Solid, stocky half-timbering, old windows. |
09268620
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Residential stable house (No. 9b), stable building (No. 9) and side building (No. 9c) of a former four-sided courtyard as well as the retaining wall of the front garden | Huehndorfer Strasse 9; 9b; 9c (card) |
re. 1865 (stable house) | the two side buildings on the upper floor half-timbered, the residential stable house plastered solid construction with two arched windows in the gable, a farm that is typical of the landscape and characterizes the locality and is of architectural and economic importance.
Two residential stable houses: a solid half-timbered house (older), a solid residential stable house, door frame and window frames made of sandstone, was erroneously listed under “Hühndorfstraße” in the list of monuments until 2002. |
09268614
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Stable building and side building of a former four-sided courtyard | Hühndorfer Strasse 10 (map) |
re. 1841 (stable building) | both buildings with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
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09268618
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Residential stable house, barn and side building (with Kumthalle) of a former four-sided courtyard | Hühndorfer Strasse 16 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, half-timbered barn, younger side building with half-timbered gable in the local style, largely original courtyard complex, of architectural and economic importance, was erroneously listed under "Hühndorfstrasse" in the list of monuments until 2002.
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09268617
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Gasthof Zur Linde | Hühndorfer Strasse 18 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, door frame made of sandstone, characterizing the townscape, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
Massively stocky half-timbering, door frame and window frames made of sandstone, was erroneously listed under “Hühndorfstrasse” in the list of monuments until 2002. |
09268615
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Side building and barn of a former four-sided courtyard | Hühndorfer Strasse 28 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance, were erroneously listed under "Hühndorfstrasse" in the list of monuments until 2002.
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09268616
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Residential stable house and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Poststrasse 6 (map) |
re. 1842 | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
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09268621
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Residential mill building of the Regermühle Sachsdorf | Saubachtalweg 1 (map) |
1882, older in core (around 1800) (Mühle) | Regermühle Sachsdorf - upper floor partly timber-framed, residential part built in 1882 after fire, twin windows in the gable, exposed location, of architectural and local significance.
Two-storey, half-timbering with clay pegs, gable of the residential part with twin windows, segmental arch, technology removed, Mühlgraben can still be seen in profile. |
09268889 |
Scharfenberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Former miner's house | Alte Silberstrasse 4 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance. |
09267612
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Residential stable house | Alte Silberstrasse 22 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267666
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Stable house of a farm | Alte Silberstrasse 30 (map) |
re. 1800 (stable house) | Small farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor, of social and historical importance.
Massively stocky half-timbered structure forms a plot of land with Alte Silberstraße 32 (former side building) and Am Grubenteich 1 (new single-family house). |
09268642
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Residential stable house with stable building of a cottage industry | Am Grubenteich 5 (map) |
re. 1853 (stable house) | Residential house with half-timbered upper floor, small single-storey stable building, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267668
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Bridge house | Bergwerkstrasse 8 (map) |
re. 1677, later reshaped | Former miner's house; Upper floor half-timbered, construction with Thuringian ladder half-timbered, of local and architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09267609
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Former miner's house with wash house | Bergwerkstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1800 | One-storey or two-storey (hillside location!) solid construction, of architectural and local significance, location at a fork in the road. |
09267611
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Former miner's house | Bergwerkstrasse 13 (map) |
re. 1846 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance |
09267610
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Former miner's house with side building and fencing | Grubengasse 8 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance. |
09267613
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Former miner's house and wash house | Knappensteig 3 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | of importance in terms of building history and local history.
Half-timbering still preserved on the gable, originally the entire upper floor half-timbering. |
09267607
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Kurhaus Scharfenberg: Former spa and bathing house (No. 4a / b), with extension (No. 6) | Reichenbacher Strasse 4a; 4b; 6 (card) |
1883 | Wilhelminian style building, emphasized by three risalits with rafter gables, of architectural and local significance, later used as a municipal office. |
09267665
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Old Reppnitz manor (Vorwerk of Scharfenberg Castle) with a small stable house (No. 3), a large stable house (No. 5), farm building (No. 4), former stable building (No. 2) and barn (No. 1) | Reppnitzer manor 1; 2; 3; 4; 5 (card) |
Kern 16th century (manor) | small residential stable house upper floor half-timbered and bat dormers in the roof, large residential stable house, Renaissance window frames and half-timbered upper storey with St. Andrew's crosses, farm buildings plastered solid buildings, of architectural, economic and local significance.
Small residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, bat dormers, large residential stable house: half-timbered, massive stocky, Renaissance window frames, St. Andrew's cross, stable and barn buildings as well as stable buildings with bat dormers (replaced by dormers after renovation), archway is a gate passage in the rest of a barn wall next to number 3 , no access to the courtyard and therefore not a single monument. |
09267662
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Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard | Reppnitzer manor 6 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | Upper floor half-timbered construction (St. Andrew's cross), of architectural significance. |
09267663
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Former mine, today residential building (with two house numbers) | Schachtberg 12; 12a (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | of importance in terms of building history and local history. |
09267605
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Former miner's house with side building and fencing | Schachtberg 13 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Simple plastered construction with segment arch portal, of architectural and local significance.
Sandstone portal with double door, two-storey structure, half-hip roof. |
09267614
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Prayer house; Former miner's house, now a museum | Schachtberg 20 (map) |
re. 1848 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and local significance, planned: local history museum (reopened since May 28, 1998), massive timber-frame. |
09267604
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Residential building | Loyalty Help 4 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, historically important, half-timbered, solidly stocky. |
09267667
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Former wine-growing house and enclosure wall | To Hinterwinkel 12 (map) |
after 1850 | Upper floor partly half-timbered, of architectural and local significance, quarry stone wall as an enclosure. |
09268626 |
Blacksmith forest
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Inn (with hall) | Birkenhainer Strasse 3 (map) |
around 1830 | characteristic rural building with plastered half-timbered upper storey on the right-hand side and striking paneling, as a testimony to the rural folk architecture of the 19th century, important in terms of building history, as a historical site of Schmiedewalde of local importance.
The originally smaller building, which was probably built around 1830, was later raised, extended and equipped with a hall on the upper floor. It is very likely that this reconstruction took place in the second half of the 19th century. Before that, the house had a flatter roof. The small, 8 m × 8 m large hall with a small stage is located on the left side of the upper floor. The masonry is massive here. On the other hand, it consists of truss plastered or boarded up. A high hip roof rises above it (statement by the owner, 03/15/2011). |
09303867
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Alte Käserei (residential stable house (with two house numbers)) | Birkenhainer Strasse 4; 6 (card) |
re. 1827 | Stately two-storey plastered building with half-hip mansard roof, rear with a prominent portal, significant in terms of building history and local history, older core, on the rear sandstone portal with the inscription "Ranft 1827", triangular gable with plaster ornamentation, sandstone window garments. |
09268539
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Residential house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Birkenhainer Strasse 18 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | All buildings in half-timbered construction, closed courtyards, evidence of smallholder life and economy of bygone times, of architectural and economic importance.
In all buildings, timber frame is solidly set down. |
09268535
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Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard | Obere Strasse 4 (map) |
re. 1810 | with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, residential stable house typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268540
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Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard | Obere Strasse 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered structure in an ancient construction, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering (forms three-sided courtyard with number 7). |
09268536
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Residential stable house, barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard, with archway and courtyard wall | Obere Strasse 6 (map) |
re. 1842 | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, barn and side building massive, side building with two-arched Kumthalle, closed preserved farm, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, back: bakery, stable and farm building: solid, German band under the roof, barn: solid, original archway in the courtyard wall, high quarry stone wall. |
09268538
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Barn of a three-sided farm | Obere Strasse 13 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | very old half-timbered barn with cross brace construction, of architectural and economic importance, half-timbered. |
09268537 |
Seeligstadt
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | (Map) | 2nd half of the 19th century | Stele consisting of a shaft, two oval inscription fields and a distinctive cover with small triangular gables, significant in terms of traffic history.
Place names, including Burkhardswalde, Munzig and Nossen, kilometers and direction arrows can be found on the inscription fields. |
09304243
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Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle), two barns and an archway of a four-sided courtyard | Burkhardswalder Strasse 5 (map) |
19th century | Closed preserved 19th century farm in typical landscape design, elaborately designed archway with banner, of architectural and economic importance. |
09269832
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Barn (with porch) of a farm | Burkhardswalder Strasse 7 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Partly boarded up, economically important, wooden barn and stable part with porch. |
09268148
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Side building and barn of a farm | Burkhardswalder Strasse 13 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance. Side building (upper floor half-timbered), barn (half-timbered), house burned down. |
09268147
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard and cottage garden | Burkhardswalder Strasse 50 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Residential stable house, upper floor half-timbered, side building upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, closed preserved farm in a design typical of the time and landscape, cottage garden with box hedges, farmstead of architectural and economic importance. |
09268149 |
Semmelsberg
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Preiskermühle Semmelsberg - mill building, side building and barn of a mill property, plus mill pond, mill ditch | To Preiskermühle 12 (map) |
Threshold re. 1723 (main building) | Preiskermühle Semmelsberg - characteristic and at the same time picturesque mill property and architecturally striking half-timbered ensemble, residential mill building with basket arch portal and half-timbered construction with Wilder Mann figure, location since 15401548, a fragment of the wheel arch on the main building, a dovecote on the courtyard side of the side building, significant technical and local history.
Residential mill building with sandstone door frame, marked 1805, above the half-timbered threshold marked 1723, farm building with two bat dormers, dovecote as gable to the courtyard side, weather vane marked 1723 (or 1713), probably added later, barn with boarded gable side. |
09268170 |
Sonitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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House of a farm and gate entrance | Miltitzer Strasse 3 (map) |
re. 1884 | stately building from the Wilhelminian era with a historicizing facade and magnificent entrance portal, of architectural significance.
Entrance flanked by columns, staircase with wrought iron grille. |
09268144 |
Sora
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard | At Silberstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1800, much older (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered (with head struts, K-struts and Wilder-Mann figure), of importance in terms of architectural history, massive framework. |
09268629
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Sora village church (including furnishings and sundial), plus churchyard including tombs, mortuary, churchyard gate, avenue and enclosure | Dorfstrasse 10 (map) |
re. 1730 | Hall church with a striking west tower and sacristy in the east as well as galleries and valuable furnishings inside, evidence of baroque church architecture, landmark visible from afar, significant in terms of building history, artistry and landscape design. |
09268622
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school-building | Dorfstrasse 11 (map) |
subsequently re. 1755 (school) | Today a residential house, simple plastered building with a mansard roof, inscription plaque above the door, of architectural and local significance.
Solid, hipped mansard roof, renewed in 1873, the arched entrance in 1806 (see Gurlitt). |
09268623
|
Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle), further side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 19; 19a (card) |
re. 1828 | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and basket arch portal, massive side building with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, door frame and window frames made of sandstone, burned down in 1827, built in 1828 (according to the inscription panel), considerable parts of a stable vault with columns in the eastern older side building, barn from 1902, impressive, originally preserved building with two large rear exit gates, entire complex Example of a closed farm, especially from the 18th and 19th centuries. century |
09268624
|
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Side building of a farm | Dorfstrasse 21 (map) |
1845 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Solid, stocky half-timbering, Prussian caps, horse stable. |
09268625
|
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm | Dorfstrasse 27 (map) |
re. 1865 (stable house) | both buildings with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Residential stable house: solid timber frame, stable and farm buildings: solid timber frame, bat dormers, (forms farm with number 27a). |
09268628
|
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Residential stable house (with attached baking house) of a farm | Dorfstrasse 29 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, historically important,
Massively stocky half-timbered structure, so-called rainworm farm (forms farm with number 29a). |
09268627 |
Spittewitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residential stable house, barn, side building and stable building of a four-sided courtyard, with gate pillars for the courtyard access and farm garden | Spittewitz 6 (map) |
End of the 19th century (stable house) | Large four-sided courtyard, Wilhelminian style residential stable with a striking little gable facing the courtyard, side building with segment arch portal, massive barn, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential building: clock in the small stepped gable (brick), toothed frieze under the eaves, partially changed doors, windows, garage installation. |
09267918 |
Tanneberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Tanneberg manor with manor house (No. 1) plus two tenant houses (wing buildings) attached at an angle, furthermore farm buildings with distillery (No. 1a), two further farm buildings, barn and gate pillar | At the manor 1; 1a (card) |
re. 1744, at the entrance to the courtyard, difficult to read | Rittergut Tanneberg - stately baroque manor house with a mansard roof and a beautiful segmented arch portal, the two extensions in the round arch style of the 19th century, the northern extension with an older core from the Renaissance period, remarkable massive manor barn, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape. |
09268279
|
Side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Am Teich 5 (map) |
around 1850 | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Stable building with hayloft: half-timbered, solidly stocky, horse stable with workshop (barn): half-timbered, beam drive. |
09268274
|
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Residential stable house with an extension set in an angle, in front of it Heiste, as well as side buildings (with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard | Am Teich 11 (map) |
End of 18th century | all buildings with half-timbered upper floor, angled extension half-timbered construction with St. Andrew's crosses, of architectural significance.
Both buildings are massive, sturdy half-timbered houses, a stable house with a bay on the rear side of the eaves, St. Andrew's crosses, and a shower on the Heiste that has no monumental value. |
09268278
|
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Side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Bauernweg 7 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Farm building: massive, stocky half-timbered structure, barn with passage and beam drive: half-timbered structure. |
09268275
|
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Residential stable house, barn and an attached side building of a four-sided courtyard, as well as a cottage garden with an enclosure wall | Bauernweg 12 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Large courtyard complex, largely preserved in a closed manner, all buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
All the buildings are solid timber-framed, residential stable house with vaults and pillars in the stable. |
09268277
|
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Tanneberg Church (including furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure and war memorial for those who fell in the First World War | Pfarrweg (map) |
Early 16th century | simple hall construction with retracted choir and roof turret, of architectural and local significance.
Short nave with retracted choir, flat ceiling, high roof with elaborate roof turrets. Altar and pulpit around 1750, baptism 1770, several tombs. |
09268281
|
Rectory and two side buildings of a former rectory | Pfarrweg 2 (map) |
1664 Dendro | all buildings in half-timbered construction, northern side building single-storey with very old construction (cross braces), southern side building with head brace construction, former rectory with segmented arch portal, historically important.
Rectory (older core): solid, stocky half-timbered structure, side building: half-timbered structure, with access to the churchyard. |
09268280
|
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Tanneberger School: Former school | Pfarrweg 4 (map) |
re. 1891 | Simple plastered building with a pronounced entrance area, of architectural and local significance, location opposite the church that characterizes the townscape.
Lintel above the entrance portal with the inscription: "Let the little children come to me". Sandstone window frames, original entrance door. |
09268282
|
Residential stable house, barn and side building of a farm | Wilsdruffer Strasse 15 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | all buildings in half-timbered construction, partly boarded up, of economic and architectural importance.
Residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, barn: half-timbered, partly boarded up, side building: upper floor boarded up, gable under artificial cladding half-timbered. |
09268283
|
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Residential house with a rear extension | Wilsdruffer Strasse 21 (map) |
re. 1856 | Upper floor half-timbered structure, of architectural significance, window dimensions not changed, no more sprouts, massive framework. |
09268284
|
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Stable house of a farm | Wilsdruffer Strasse 29 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, historically significant, massive, stocky half-timbered structure, original windows. |
09268290
|
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Residential house, annexed side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as well with manual pump | Wilsdruffer Strasse 30 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | all buildings in half-timbered construction, partly boarded up, closed preserved, small farm, of architectural and economic importance. |
09268289
|
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Gasthof Tanneberg: Former inn with rear building (hall and relaxation area) | Wilsdruffer Strasse 31 (map) |
re. 1770 | Inn simple plastered building with segment arch portal, of local history.
Inn: half-timbered (?), Solidly stocky, segment arch portal on the rear side of the eaves, sandstone window frames, half-hip roof, on the front side of the eaves small two-flight stairs. |
09268292
|
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Stable house of a farm | Wilsdruffer Strasse 33 (map) |
around 1850 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268291
|
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm attached at an angle | Wilsdruffer Strasse 45 (map) |
around 1850 | both buildings
Upper floor half-timbered, small farm, historically important. Massively stocky framework. |
09268288
|
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Residential building | Wilsdruffer Strasse 62 (map) |
around 1850 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky framework |
09268287
|
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Side building of a farm | Wilsdruffer Strasse 66 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, small farm, historically important.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268286 |
Pigeon home
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Waystone | (Map) | 3rd quarter of the 19th century | Sandstone stele, flat pyramid-shaped end, recessed areas of inscription, directional signs still recognizable, significant in terms of local history and traffic history. |
09269980
|
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Residential building | At the Triebisch 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, rural house, of architectural significance. |
09268141
|
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Residential stable house | At the Triebisch 8 (map) |
18th century | Remarkable half-timbered building, upper floor half-timbered in ancient construction (St. Andrew's cross, ship throats, ornamental frieze), of importance in terms of building history and house history. |
09268142
|
Side building (residential stable) of a former four-sided courtyard | Green way 3 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, historically important (forms four-sided courtyard with number 4 and number 5). |
09268124
|
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Residential stable house (No. 10) and side building (No. 10c) of a four-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 10; 10c (card) |
re. 1802 | Both buildings, upper floor half-timbered, residential stable house with a beautiful basket arch portal and triple window in the gable, side building with a slanted gable, of architectural significance (forms four-sided courtyard with number 10b). |
09268122
|
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Residential stable house, side building (with Kumthalle), barn and further side building of a four-sided courtyard, with fencing of the garden, gate entrance and courtyard paving | Hauptstrasse 21 (map) |
around 1860 | stately and closed preserved farm in half-timbered construction, in a design typical of the time and landscape, a side building with a rare three-arched Kumthalle, of architectural and economic importance.
Wrought iron gate |
09268123
|
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Residential stable house (No. 25), barn (No. 27) and side building of a four-sided courtyard, plus gate entrance and enclosure wall of the garden | Hauptstrasse 25; 27 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Residential stable house and side building upper floor half-timbered, residential stable house saddle roof with bat dormers, massive barn in quarry stone masonry, largely closed courtyard complex, of architectural and economic significance.
Stable house: one half modernized, barn (number 27): quarry stone, farm building: old windows, gate system with gate pillars and wrought-iron swing gate. |
09268125
|
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House and deep cellar in front of the house | Hauptstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1850 | single-storey half-timbered building, of social and historical importance.
One storey, boarded gable, cellar: quarry stone entrance. |
09268126
|
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Residential stable house (with rear annex and outside staircase to the courtyard) and side building of a homestead attached at an angle | Hauptstrasse 38 (map) |
re. 1821 | Stable house unusual three-storey building, stable part in the basement, beautiful representative segmental arch portal on a Heiste with an outside staircase, upper storey of both buildings half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance.
Origin Half-timbered, only partially preserved groin vault in the rear part of the house, open staircase. |
09268128
|
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Part of a stable house and side building of a farm | Hauptstrasse 39 (map) |
re. 1868, older in essence | Both buildings, upper floor half-timbered, residential stable house with segment arch portal, of architectural significance. |
09268127
|
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Guest house with hall extension | Hauptstrasse 47 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered guest house, hall extension, massive plastered building in historicizing design, of architectural and local significance.
Arched windows in the hall |
09268129
|
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Residential building | Hauptstrasse 56 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered construction, historically important. |
09268136
|
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House of a farm | Hauptstrasse 60 (map) |
re. 1806 | Upper floor half-timbered, in the gable triple window (with Palladio motif), of architectural significance.
Origin 1806: Solid timber frame, half-hipped roof, sandstone door frame and triple window on the gable side, probably 1842, roof house E. 19th century |
09268137
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Individual features of the ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Taubenheim: Church (with furnishings), monumental graves in the churchyard, churchyard wall with gate as access to the neighboring castle and retaining wall (see also entity 09302607, Schulstraße 8-10) | Schulstrasse (map) |
in the core 13th century (church choir) | Church a hall building with choir, roof turret and various additions, significant testimony to church architecture, especially from the 16th century, noteworthy also the Romanesque components, outstanding the field ceiling with painting from 1650, architecturally and historically as well as artistically significant, church and cemetery together with the immediately adjacent complex of castle, castle park and manor due to the closed and visually closely linked character, a unique example of a noble estate, whose masters also held the patronage of the village church. |
09268131
|
Residential house with manual pump and courtyard wall | Schulstrasse 4 (map) |
18th century | Upper floor half-timbered, high hipped roof, ancient half-timbered construction (K-struts, Wilde-Mann figure), historically important. |
09268130
|
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The ensemble of palace, patronage church and manor Taubenheim, with the following individual monuments: palace (No. 9), patronage church, garden house in the park, gatehouse (at Schulstraße 8), retaining walls, park walls, churchyard wall with gate between the churchyard and the palace gardens, graves in the churchyard (see also individual monuments 09268131 and 09268132), furthermore with the following aggregate parts: farm building (No. 8/10), churchyard, gate pillars, remains of a fountain and stairs in the park as well as the park (garden monument) | Schulstrasse 8; 9; 10 (card) |
16th century (manor) | Architecturally, artistically and landscaping significant complex, park with old trees and classicist garden house. The striking castle building stands in the middle of the partly terraced park that slopes steeply into the valley.
The churchyard is a little higher up and is separated from the palace park by retaining and fencing walls. |
09302607
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Individual features of the ensemble of castle, patronage church and manor Taubenheim: Castle (No. 9), garden house in the park, gatehouse (at Schulstraße 8), park and retaining walls (see also entity 09302607, Schulstraße 8-10) | Schulstrasse 9 (map) |
16th century, later reshaped (castle) | Originally the seat of von Taubenheim , Taubenheim Castle - main building from the Renaissance, dominated by the west wing with hipped roof and tower structure, enlivened by historicizing stepped gables, bay windows and window frames, entrance highlighted by staircase and neo-Gothic pointed arch, other buildings more simple, in the park classical Garden house on a stair landing, gatehouse at the property entrance with cross vaults, an important testimony to the Saxon art of palace architecture from the 16th to the 19th century, the palace is visible from afar due to its elevated position, especially to the west and north, an impressive landmark, in terms of architectural and local history, artistic and urban planning landscaping of value.
The clearly structured four-sided complex with inner courtyard is located on a slope above the valley of the Kleine Triebisch. The lower parts of the gabled south-west tower, through which the entrance is made, seem to be the oldest. Of the buildings created around 1600, only the Wendelstein in the courtyard still indicates this time through its window designs. The main wing with a hipped roof faces west. Conversions took place around 1700, 1823 and finally before the First World War in Gothic style and in Art Nouveau style. In the east of the castle there was a manor and in the west there was a partially terraced park that sloped steeply into the valley. The classicist garden house and the park go back to Hofrat Tauchnitz, who was the first bourgeois owner of the palace from 1821–1832 (Hammer). (Sculptures) |
09268132
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Bridge over the Kleine Triebisch | Talstrasse (map) |
19th century | Arch bridge in quarry stone masonry, of architectural and transport historical importance.
Quarry stone |
09268143
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Residential building | Talstrasse 8 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Gable in half-timbered construction, historically important. |
09268135
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Residential building | Talstrasse 11 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered with K-struts, of architectural significance. |
09268134
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Residential building | Talstrasse 12 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance. |
09268133
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Sparmannmühle; Castle mill; Schneidemühle Taubenheim: side building of a mill property | To sports field 2 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Niedermühle Taubenheim - upper floor half-timbered, of local and architectural significance. |
09268138
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House of a three-sided courtyard | To sports field 3 (map) |
re. 1816 | Upper floor half-timbered, historically important, originally part of the manor (?). |
09268139 |
Ullendorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | Taubenheimer Strasse (map) |
3rd quarter of the 19th century | Sandstone shaft with protruding, pyramid-shaped roofing, recessed inscription fields, significant in terms of local history and traffic history.
The stone is either on the street parcel 27 or on the parcel 24, Taubenheimer Straße 2. Meißen and Wilsdruff and the corresponding directional signs appear on one text field, and three places with directional signs on the other. |
09302725
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Barn of a four-sided yard | Taubenheimer Strasse 3 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | A striving half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic importance, half-hip roof. |
09268152
|
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Side building of a former four-sided courtyard | Wilsdruffer Strasse 4 (map) |
re. 1844 | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Residential stable house, farm building: one gable side boarded up, the other half-timbered, half-hip roof. |
09268151
|
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Residential stable house and barn of a four-sided courtyard | Wilsdruffer Straße 24 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, of architectural and economic significance.
The courtyard was divided into several house numbers (forms a four-sided courtyard with number 26 and number 28). |
09268153
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Residential building | Wilsdruffer Strasse 30 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered construction (wide stand position, foot struts), of architectural significance. both gable sides boarded up, a sloping roof. |
09268154 |
Weistropp
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Waystone | (Map) | 19th century | of importance in terms of traffic history.
January 2012 Communication from the municipality of Klipphausen: z. Currently for restoration, there is a photo of the location, is on the field at the edge of the road. |
09268473
|
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Hydraulic ram in the park | (Map) | Early 20th century | of significance in terms of technology history. |
09268631
|
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Residential building, connecting wing (shed) and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Dorfgasse 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Main building in half-timbered construction, characteristic houses of its time, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential house: solid timber frame, barn: timber frame. |
09268462
|
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Barn and side building of a former three-sided farm | Dorfgasse 7 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Farm building: solid timber frame, barn: timber frame. |
09268461
|
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Stable house of a farm | Dorfgasse 8 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Upper floor half-timbered, stately, townscape-defining building, historically important.
Massively stocky half-timbering, with a cottage garden - this more or less removed in 2011. |
09268460
|
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House and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Dorfgasse 9 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered residential building (with foot and K-struts), important location in the center of the village, of architectural and economic importance. Truss massive stocky, truss in the gable. |
09268459
|
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Residential house with an angular extension, with enclosure wall and gate | Cave 2 (map) |
re. 1806 | Upper floor half-timbered, picturesquely grouped building, historically significant, massive half-timbered structure. |
09268457
|
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Rectory with rectory and side building (gatehouse) over an angular floor plan, plus enclosure wall and gate | Kirchstrasse 6 (map) |
re. 1782 | all buildings with half-timbering, gatehouse with ancient half-timbering construction (head and K-struts), ensemble that characterizes the townscape, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
Parsonage: (cf. Gurlitt / Dehio), old parish: massive, stocky half-timbered structure, new parish: massive courtyard side, half-timbered street side. |
09268456
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Church Weistropp with church furnishings, plus a cemetery with enclosure wall and churchyard gate as well as four tombs and war memorial for the fallen of World War I, as well as with a Luther oak and memorial stone | Kirchstrasse 7 (map) |
1601, later remodeled | The core is a late Gothic sacred building with a retracted choir and west tower, a hall church with a double gallery and a mansion, an elaborate memorial for the fallen in the churchyard, of importance in terms of building history, local history, artistically and characterizing the townscape. |
09268455
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The whole of the Weistropp Castle and Manor, with the following individual monuments: Weistropp Castle (No. 8, three-wing complex) and farm buildings (No. 9, residential stable, later municipal administration), memorial column and enclosure wall of a manor (see individual monuments 09268454) and manor park with rose garden (garden monument) and as an aggregate part: another farm building (next to No. 9) | Kirchstrasse 8; 9 (card) |
17./18. Century, reshaped in 1873 (lock) | Basically a baroque castle, heavily modified in the 19th century, castle park in the English style, of architectural and local significance. |
09304088
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Individual features of the Weistropp castle and manor: Castle (No. 8, three-wing complex) farm buildings (No. 9, residential stable, later municipal administration) as well as a memorial column of a manor with an enclosure wall (see group 09304088, same address) | Kirchstrasse 8; 9 (card) |
17./18. Century, reshaped in 1873 (lock) | Weistropp Castle - essentially a baroque castle, heavily modified in the 19th century, English-style castle park, of architectural and local significance.
Castle (cf. Gurlitt / Dehio): Castle with terraces on the park front, manor house: solid, inside groin vaults and pillars with striker plates (stable part), crooked hip roof, sandstone door frames and window frames, on the rear wall freight elevator. |
09268454
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Residential stable house and side building of a farm attached at an angle, with gate pillars and fencing wall | Kirchstrasse 10 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, important location in the center of the village, of architectural and economic significance.
Massively stocky framework. |
09268458
|
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Residential house (with attached baking house) of a farm | Niederwarthaer Strasse 5 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Massively stocky half-timbering, wine trellis, sandstone door frames and window frames, folding shutters, with garden plot. |
09268465
|
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House of a farm | Niederwarthaer Strasse 6 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered structure, characterizing the townscape, of architectural significance.
Solid, stocky framework, half-hip roof. |
09268466
|
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Residential house (with attached bakery), barn and side building of a four-sided courtyard | Niederwarthaer Strasse 7 (map) |
re. 1775 | Upper floor half-timbered residential building, half-timbered barn with V-struts, largely closed preserved farm, of architectural and economic importance. Half-timbered, courtyard was not accessible, with orchard. |
09268467
|
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Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard and enclosure wall | Niederwarthaer Strasse 9 (map) |
re. 1838 | Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential house: half-timbered solid stocky, side building / barn: half-timbered. |
09268468
|
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard, with enclosure wall | Niederwarthaer Strasse 11 (map) |
re. 1838 | Residential stable house and side building with half-timbered upper floor, partly clad, half-timbered barn, closed courtyard, the striking vault still preserved in the residential stable house, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable house and residential farm building: Half-timbered solid stocky (plastered), barn: half-timbered, sandstone door frames and window frames, in the courtyard stone trough, burned down in 1838 (panel), in the residential stable house of the three-sided courtyard, the former stable wing (today the kitchen) with pillars / pillars Vault with straps (probably busted). |
09268469
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Cemetery chapel, cemetery gate and enclosure wall of the cemetery, cemetery design (garden monument), and tomb of the Tittel millers family | Wilsdruffer Strasse (map) |
re. 1879 (chapel) | Cemetery chapel in the historicizing style, of architectural and local significance. In the cemetery there is a tomb with the miller's coat of arms of the Tittel family, gate pillars and wrought iron gate. |
09268470
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Residential stable house (with attached bakery) and side building of a former three-sided courtyard | Wilsdruffer Strasse 5 (map) |
1679 Dendro | all buildings in half-timbered construction with ancient construction (foot and K-struts, on the stable house Schiffchenkehlen on the threshold and filler wood), of architectural and house-historical importance (the remarkable, very old half-timbered barn with cross-strut half-timbered structure demolished in 2007), half-timbered (Wilder Mann ), old windows, empty. |
09268463 |
Weitzschen
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential stable house and archway of a four-sided courtyard | Piskowitzer Strasse 10 (map) |
re. 1819 | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and beautiful segment arch portal, stately farmhouse typical of the landscape, of architectural importance.
Sandstone door frame |
09268155 |
Wildberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Stable house of a former four-sided courtyard, with enclosure wall | Alte Dorfstrasse 4 (map) |
re. 1790 (stable house) | Stately building, upper floor half-timbered, beautiful segment arch portal, farmhouse typical of the times and the landscape, of architectural significance.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky, partly original windows, deep arched windows from the inside, half-hip roof. |
09267693
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Residential stable house (No. 1a / 1b), two side buildings (No. 3a / 3b and No. 5a-5c), water trough and gate pillar of a former four-sided courtyard | On the mountain 1a; 1b; 3a; 3b; 5a; 5b; 5c (card) |
re. 1813 (stable house) | Remarkable and stately rural property, especially from the first quarter of the 19th century, half-timbered ensemble, main building with beautiful segment arch portals and cross vaults inside, important in terms of building history and local history.
The stable house (Am Berg 1a / 1b) and the two side buildings (Am Berg 3a / 3b and Am Berg 5a / 5b / 5c) appear as massive, squat half-timbered buildings with large roof overhangs and half-hip roofs. The gate pillars of the driveway have distinctive attachments. Despite the now demolished barn (Am Berg 7), which bordered the farm to the southeast, the imposing courtyard still makes a closed impression. The stable house has several cross vaults on the ground floor. Its small segment arch portals are enlivened by vertex stones. The stable house and the northwest side building (Am Berg 5a / 5b / 5c) have now been renovated. The southwest side building (Am Berg 3a / 3b) still shows bat dormers. Possibly these will be replaced by a roof pike during the upcoming renovation (2009), similar to the other buildings. In the middle of the courtyard there is an old sandstone trough. Sandstone bank and dating from 1813 were not found (2009). (forms Vierseithof together with number 7). |
09267695
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Manor (No. 4) and stable house (No. 2) of the Wildberg manor | On mountain 2; 4 (card) |
re. 1747 (manor house) | simple baroque mansion with mansard roof and sandstone portal, balcony supported by four pillars in front of the entrance, residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and local significance.
Former Manor of the manor. Plastered building with mansard hipped roof, 12: 4 window axes, entrance portal with ear framing and coat of arms stone, marked 1747 (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996). Manor house: two-storey with porch (balcony, supported by four pillars), hipped mansard roof, sandstone portal with double door, windows still partially preserved in eight parts, sandstone bench, horse stable: with a large walled-up archway - demolished before 2011, residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, one Gate post still preserved (?) |
09267694
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Gasthof Wildberg (ballroom of an inn) | Cossebauder Strasse 2 (map) |
around 1890 | Large hall building, inside with ceiling and cove painting, landscape and architectural motifs from the Meissen district, significant building and local history as well as artistically. Ballroom supported by pillars and iron columns, the hall surrounded by large arched windows with apex stones, above a cornice surrounding the building, eaves, crooked hip roof with ridge turrets. |
09267697
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Altes Fährgut (stable house of a former ferry (the other buildings demolished)) | Cossebauder Strasse 7 (map) |
1790 | in the corner of Alte Dorfstrasse, stately building with half-timbered upper floor and classicist door frame, of architectural and local significance.
Half-timbered, solidly stocky, half-hipped roof, ferry goods burned down in 1790 and, according to the owner, rebuilt in 1790, well. |
09267696
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Residential building | Green 1 (card) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance. |
09269825
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Residential house with extension | Gutsweg 1 (map) |
1620-1622 Dendro | Remarkable half-timbered building, very old construction with St. Andrew's cross and head struts, significant in terms of building history. |
09300366
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Residential stable house and stable building of a four-sided courtyard, Gut Wildberg | Gutsweg 8 (map) |
re. 1872 (stable house) | Residential stable house plastered solid construction with triple windows in the gable (older core?), Side building upper floor half-timbered with K-struts, of architectural significance.
Stable building: solid, stocky half-timbered residential stable house: two-storey and knee-high, sandstone window frames, (forms four-sided courtyard with number 8a / 8b). |
09267681
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Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Gutsweg 10 (map) |
re. 1801 (stable house) | Stately residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segment arch portal, side building with half-timbered upper floor, barn plastered quarry stone building (presumably older core), closed, preserved, typical landscape courtyard, of architectural and economic importance.
Residential stable houses: solid, stocky half-timbered structure (quarry stone), sandstone window frames on the ground floor, half-hipped roofs, right residential stable house: two sandstone portals, one with a double door. |
09267680 |
Remarks
- This list is not suitable for deriving binding statements on the monument status of an object. As far as a legally binding determination of the listed property of an object is desired, the owner can apply to the responsible lower monument protection authority for a notice.
- The official list of cultural monuments is never closed. It is permanently changed through clarifications, new additions or deletions. A transfer of such changes to this list is not guaranteed at the moment.
- The monument quality of an object does not depend on its entry in this or the official list. Objects that are not listed can also be monuments.
- Basically, the property of a monument extends to the substance and appearance as a whole, including the interior. Deviating applies if only parts are expressly protected (e.g. the facade).
Detailed memorial texts
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↑ Monument text: Siebeneichen Castle and Park are a cultural monument in the sense of a factual entity, the park is also a garden monument. Siebeneichen Castle was built from 1550 on top of medieval predecessor buildings with a forecourt. After partial destruction in the first half of the 18th century, rebuilt by 1748, another rococo-style castle was added. The castle complex includes a manor with farm buildings, some of which date from the 16th to 17th centuries, and a castle park, which, as is usual in Germany, has been redesigned over the centuries. A terraced complex already existed in the 16th century. Since 1805 a romantic mountain park with native and exotic plants was created, which was transformed into an English landscape garden from 1816.
The castle park, including the romantic mountain park, is still considered to be one of the first English landscape gardens in Saxony, especially with its original over 100 exotic plants (cf. for example the swan pond in Leipzig). Apart from that, the entire complex of palace and park documents the life of the Saxon landed nobility from the 16th to the 19th century in an excellent way.
Siebeneichen Castle and Castle Park are of particular historical importance as the former residence of one of the most important Saxon noble families, here those of Miltitz. The buildings of the Old and New Palace form a spacious ensemble in an architecturally cohesive manner, in which the structural structure and harmony come into their own. Siebeneichen is a complex that has grown over four hundred years and is of exemplary importance for castle architecture in Saxony since the Renaissance. The property of the castle park as a monument results primarily from its importance as one of the first landscape gardens in Saxony. It is therefore of outstanding importance as a work of garden and landscape design and is also of unique importance. In addition, it forms an essential part of the unmistakable landscape of the Elbe in Meissen, here between the Spaar Mountains on the right bank of the Elbe and the Siebeneichen district opposite.
The palace complex includes a palace park, which, as is common in Germany, has been redesigned over the centuries. A terraced complex already existed in the 16th century. Since 1805 a romantic mountain park with native and exotic plants was created, which was transformed into an English landscape garden from 1816. The castle park, including the romantic mountain park, is today considered to be the first English landscape garden in Saxony, especially with its over 100 exotic plants. Apart from that, the entire complex of palace and park documents the life of the Saxon landed nobility from the 16th to the 19th century in an excellent way. The property of the castle park as a monument results primarily from its importance as the first landscape garden in Saxony. It is therefore of outstanding importance as a work of garden and landscape design and is also of unique importance. In addition, it forms an essential part of the unmistakable landscape of the Elbe in Meissen, here between the Spaar Mountains on the right bank of the Elbe and the Siebeneichen district opposite. - ↑ West tower from 1799, probably originally a pilgrimage church with a miraculous image of Mary, perhaps from the 12th century (built by the Meißner Dombauschule?), Altar 1619 with relief by Melchior Kuntze, altar from 1652, pulpit from 1626, with tombs from the 16th to the 16th century 18th century, sacrament house at the end of the 15th century, third organ of the church reworked in 1800 by Johann Christian Keyser from Dresden.
- ↑ The size of the medium mill corresponds to the type of a small mill. The mill equipment is still functional and has been almost completely preserved. The mill building shows the usual structure of a grain mill with a floor for the main transmission, roller and tube floor (combined due to the small size of the building), classifier floor and attic. On the floor for the main transmission or on the ground floor there is next to the main transmission a roller mill from Grosse in Lohmen (before 1945, from another mill). The turbine room with a standing Francis turbine (around 1911) is also on the ground floor. The combined roller and tube base houses two roller mills (company H. Hipkow & Co. Mühlenbauanstalt Gassen N./L., From 1901 or 1905 and A. Wetzig, Wittenberg, around 1915), a shot gallery with a stone crane (mid-19th century) , a sack bench, a standing mixer with auger (extends to the bottom of the sifter) and the aspiration filter. On the sifter floor there is a plansifter (Gebrüder Jehmlich, Nossen, 1959), a semolina cleaning machine (Arno E. Hofmann, Nossen / Sa.) And cleaning with an aspirator and peeling machine (around 1900). Important parts of the pneumatic conveyance are housed in the attic. Pneumatic conveying, brake lift and elevators are distributed over all floors of the mill building. The filter for the pneumatics is located on the second and third floors. In the side building of the mill, added at right angles, the oven of the bakery, which was operated until 1947, has been preserved on the ground floor. According to the owner, it was installed in 1936. On the street facade of the residential mill building there is a plaque with the inscription: "Here lived 1844/45 Otto Ludwig " (German writer and poet of the 19th century).
- ↑ The complex consists of the castle with outbuildings, the farmyard, the castle park, the largely preserved enclosure wall around the park, the gardening shop and the farmyard and the Zinzendorf monument on the Elbe island. The area of the former nursery with orangery has meanwhile been changed significantly, especially with new buildings. As a result, it is not part of the entity. A mighty gate pillar has been preserved at the eastern entrance to the manor. The former aha on the east side of the park, adjacent to Straße Schlosspark, is also remarkable. The western main entrance to the palace area is also lavishly designed. Large parts of the enclosure are also on this side. A considerable, particularly noteworthy part of the enclosure wall, designated 1677, is located south of the Alte Gärtnerei 10, 12, 14 property, another west of the Alte Gärtnerei 2 and 10 property. The scope of the complex is clearly understandable on a plan by Gauernitz from the Year 1877 (SLUB).
- ↑ In the 18th century changes by the family v. Zinzendorf, 1862–1870 fundamental renovation work by the Dresden architects Bernhard Schreiber and Ernst Giese on behalf of the last owners, the v. Family. Schönburg-Waldenburg, new furnishings in the study and library room between 1862 and 1866, complete renovation of the Elbe facade in 1866, expansion of the middle section (formerly stables) as work and reception rooms, conversions based on the German Renaissance, main hall (meanwhile gym) on the upper floor of the middle section, decoration: frieze of German poets and thinkers under the ceiling as well as times of day and seasons in relief painting by Moritz Ritzscher, interrupted by allegorical figures by Gustav Brossmann and Otto Mentzel, landscape with ruins of Paestum by A. Vertunni / Rome, marble busts, to GDR times and shortly after the fall of the Wall, municipal administration, elementary school and apartments.
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↑ In the residential mill house, only the actual right mill wing is massively squat, in the side building behind it the entire ground floor. The barn also consists of half-timbering, with a solid base. The second smaller barn (shed) has meanwhile been demolished. The mill property was bought by Lehmann in 1786, hence the current name. The bridge consists of an arch made of quarry stone masonry.
The Lehmannmühle still shows a large part of the former technology. The water wheel in the wheel pit and the "standing stuff" or lower drive (transferring the rotary motion from the water wheel shaft to the standing mill iron) in the basement of the mill wing have been reconstructed. On the ground floor above (roller floor) there is further technology: grinding gear with vibrating box, roller frame, transmission and stone crane, Mühlgraben partly lined with rubble stone masonry, Federal Prize for Handicraft in Monument Preservation 2006 in Saxony (with ill.), Special price, according to ALK address Am Steinbruch 1 . - ↑ In the courtyard template, spiral staircase, rebuilt several times. Rich reticulated vault in the eastern part of the northern templates. On the east outside sandstone slab with the coat of arms of the Ziegler von Klipphausen and von Klitzscher, inscribed 1528. It is an early example of the appearance of the Renaissance in Saxony. Pointed and arched doors on the ground floor. Renovations during the Thirty Years War and around 1700. Sandstone chimney and stucco moldings on the ceiling on the upper floor. In the east wing utility rooms, stables and upstairs living room. Number 2 - Flstk. 1/9, 1/5, number 3 - Flstk. 1/3, number 4 - Flstk. 1/10, number 5 - Flstk. 1/12, number 6 - Flstke. 1e and 1/11, number 7 / 7a - Flstke. 1/7 and 1/8, Park Flstke. 452/8 and 452/9, street strips Flstk. 1/6.
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↑ Monument text: In the period from 1862 to 1890, a state 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 columns of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance.
The Baeyerhöhe is an unwooded height of the Nossen-Wilsdruffer Schiefergebirge and in the district of Meißen with 320 m the highest elevation. It was named after the founder of the Central European degree measurement, Johann Jacob Baeyer. The dates of his life are carved on the back of the column as a memorial. The column itself is no longer in its original location. In the meantime it was stored in the Technical University of Dresden and was set up again in June 1999 at the new location - approx. 4 m moved. The column consists of a block of Laussnitzer granite with a narrow base and cover plate. It bears the inscription: "Kön.Sächs. / Station / BAEYERHÖHE / the / Central European / Degree measurement / 1866/322 m above sea level". Surveying column, cube with offset narrow base and offset cover plate made of Laussnitzer granite, inscription: "Kön.Sächs. / Station / BAEYERHÖHE / der / Mitteleuropean / Degree measurement / 1866/322 m above sea level", on the back life data of Baeyer 1999 offset by 4 m again set up. -
↑ Description of the area and the history of the settlement: The whole of the matter extends in the upper village of Miltitz. It is the site of the former manor with a castle, manor house, farm buildings and barn as well as a castle park with a chestnut grove. Immediately behind the north-western boundary wall is the part with the church and churchyard (see map). Miltitz rises with some older houses and those built in the thirties of this century in a short side valley of the Triebisch to the upper village, in which the former manor and the church, including the churchyard, form the center. The road overcomes a height difference of around 50 m over a length of 800 m from the embankment to the estate. The area around the former castle and manor formed the ancestral seat of the clan, first mentioned in 1168 with Dietrich von Miltitz, which is mentioned in connection with a manor house, in 1334 the place was called Miltics. A knight's farm had existed since 1457 and later exercised the rights of a manor. From the 17th century to 1710 the manor was owned by the von Lukowin family, through the marriage of a daughter of Nikolaus Ernst von Lukowin with Friedrich Christian von Heynitz until 1945 that of the von Heynitz family. - At first, cottagers settled near the manor and performed labor services, later agriculture developed more and more. Around 1819 Miltitz formed a community with Zwuschwitz. At that time, two farmers lived in Miltitz and five in Zwuschwitz. The electoral Saxon chamberlain and mining captain von Heynitz, who died in 1801 and had been in sole possession of the manor since 1784, had done a great deal to the place. He expanded agriculture as well as cattle and sheep breeding. In 1784 he founded a cotton mill on the estate and in 1795 set up a formal working school for teaching children to knitting. In 1792 Miltitz received one of the first improved village schools in Saxony and an integrated library. Around 1900 the manor owned 156 hectares of land, including 18 hectares of forest and 1 hectare of vineyards near Winkwitz on the Elbe. Already before 1945 some changes were made to the state of construction of the castle and manor, until parts of the building were demolished or extensions and extensions were made in the course of the land reform and the use of the local LPG. Nevertheless, a large part of the original complex has been preserved.
Description of the entity: Manor: The manor complex is divided into two areas: the castle courtyard and the farmyard, which was only built in the 19th century. Through a gate, the right pillar of which is marked with the year 1879, you first enter the area of the farmyard from the southwest. To the west of the entrance area, after a terrace-like ledge made of quarry stone, on which the two entrances to the mountain cellar can be seen from the courtyard side, there is a house built around 1880 (number 1). An archway-like opening forms the connection between the house and the granary standing at right angles to it. Two gate end stones indicate the construction years 1864 and 1913. To the east of the entrance to the manor is the farm building that was built around 1880 and is now heavily built over with an integrated horse stable (number 2). At right angles to it is an also overformed farm building with a crooked hip roof, which was also used as a residential building and which housed the pigsty (number 5). A broad, two-storey building on a hook-shaped floor plan with 7:14 axes and a hipped roof closes the service yard to the northeast. The former farm building, which was combined with servants' apartments on the upper floor and a cowshed on the ground floor (number 4), formed the oldest part of the development. A keystone above the front door indicates the year of construction 1836. From 1912 to 1945 it served as a mansion and is still partially inhabited today. All buildings of the farm yard were built from quarry stone and partially plastered.
Castle and mansion: The building corner bordering the farm yard to the north and open to the east results from the western mansion and the northern castle (number 3). The multi-part mansion, which has a uniform design on its front, is divided into three building parts at the rear. The middle three-storey building with a gable roof and the two-storey extension with a sloping roof form the oldest part of the plastered building from the 13th / 14th centuries. Century. From this period there is a hall vaulted with cross ridges on the ground floor and an exit to extensive medieval cellars. On the mezzanine floor there is a vestibule with a baroque wooden ceiling and on the second floor a corridor with murals from late historicism. At the back of the manor house there used to be a terrace and a large castle garden, which is still cultivated as such today. Outside, a square arched portal and window frames in sandstone, which are dated around 1660, have been preserved on the courtyard side. The window frames on the south gable of the building date from the late 16th century. Up until the 1940s, a high wooden portico ran alongside the manor house. It reached across two floors and underlined the effect of the main roof with its beaver tail covering and had the function of separating the sidewalk across from the lane on the estate. The castle, the plastered north wing, also has a square arched portal on its courtyard side, which is marked with the year 1663.
There is an alliance coat of arms above the portal. The right side of the shield shows the coat of arms of AC von der Pforten, the left that of NE von Lukowin. In the western part of the building there is a cell vaulted room on the ground floor, which is dated to the beginning of the 16th century. There are half-timbered walls on the upper floor. Both buildings are now used as residential buildings. A tower bordered the castle courtyard on the south side. This was canceled in the 1940s.
Palace park: The east, north and west adjoining palace park consists largely of tall pedunculate oaks, plane trees, lime trees and ash trees. The most important structure within this park is undoubtedly a chestnut grove that was laid out in the 16th century. According to legend, Bishop Bruno von Meißen is said to have planted the first cherry and chestnut trees in the 11th century. Another source states that the papal state secretary Carl von Miltitz , who brought the Golden Rose to Elector Friedrich the Wise on behalf of his sovereign, planted the sweet chestnut on his family's ancestral estate during his visit to Germany.
The grounds of the manor and churchyard are partially enclosed by an enclosure wall. Also within the system there are parts of quarry stone walls, e.g. B. between the north and south building angles (between number 3 and number 4).
Parish church or patronage church with churchyard: To the north-west, directly adjacent to the manor grounds, the Protestant parish church was built in the walled cemetery from 1738 to 1740. In earlier times, a previous building probably stood in the "Kappelgarten" adjacent to the churchyard. This building was rebuilt and expanded in 1586, but then had to give way to the new building. Two old copper beeches flank the cemetery gate, from which a path leads across the cemetery to the church. A nearly square tower with a pressed hood was added to the plastered building with a steep hip roof on the south side in 1816 after the older tower had to be demolished due to the risk of collapse. A simple baroque sandstone portal leads into the interior of the church on the west side. The portal is emphasized by symmetrically arranged classical grave monuments of members of the von Heynitz family, marked 1846 and 1862. The hall church with a double gallery has windows in two rows, the upper ones with basket arches, the lower ones rectangular.
Monument quality and worth preserving: The entirety of the manor and the churchyard, including the church and enclosure, represents an ensemble of significant value for the town of Miltitz, the district of Meißen and beyond, as the historical development of the complex is very easy to understand. As a symbol of the traditional form of society and rule of rule, the manor with its historical building stock, whose oldest parts date back to the 13th / 14th Go back to the 19th century, a great architectural and social historical relevance. The complex, which has been shaped by many generations, is a testimony to historical development and provides information about ways of living and working in the past and must therefore be preserved in its originality. The building design reflects the demands of the lordly owners and the building culture performance of the village population and their craftsmen. Maintaining the estate shape is only guaranteed if the associated buildings are used. Fortunately, a large part of the buildings, including the castle and manor house, are inhabited, which initially ensures the maintenance and preservation of the complex. The landscape integration of the area and the unity of the castle park and chestnut grove must be preserved. The flowing transition from Kastanienallee to the open landscape is significant in terms of design. The uniqueness of this planting and the old age of the trees give Miltitz a specialty that should not be underestimated, as this genus is very rare in our latitudes. In this context, the visual relationship should be mentioned, which is given from the northeast boundary of the chestnut grove to the open landscape (towards Roitzschen). Structural measures would mean an interference with the existing attractive landscape and should therefore be avoided. Due to the weight of the mentioned relevant reasons for protection (monument status), there is a public interest (monument worthiness) for the preservation of the factual entirety of the castle, patronage church and manor Miltitz. -
↑ Former Castle and manor. Headquarters of the clan first mentioned with Dietrich von Miltitz in 1186, owned by the von Luckowin family in the 17th century and until 1710, then by the von Heynitz family until 1945. In the west a very large estate with farm and residential buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries, to the south the tenant's house, marked 1836. To the east the small castle courtyard, open to the north and limited by a terrace. Its western building, the former manor house, consists of three plastered saddle and hipped roof buildings, two and three storeys, the main building on the structural basis of the 13th / 14th. Century, on the courtyard side arched portal and window frames in sandstone, around 1660, on the south gable window frames from the late 16th century. On the ground floor hall with groined vaults and access to extensive medieval cellars, on the mezzanine floor anteroom with baroque plank / skirting ceiling, on the 2nd floor Corridor with wall paintings from late historicism. On the plastered north wing on the courtyard side portal with ashlar, inscribed 1663, above it coat of arms, in the west part room on the ground floor with cell vault, from the 16th century, on the upper floor half-timbered walls. Tower construction canceled in the south (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996).
Castle: wing with upper floor half-timbered, square arched portal, above alliance coat of arms, on the ground floor room with cell vault. Manor house: massive wing, middle three-storey part medieval, on the ground floor hall with cross ridges, extensive medieval cellars, castle (1663) dates back to the 13th century, recently heavily reshaped from the outside, T-shaped floor plan, inside: partly. very old vaults, cell vaults, side. Arched entrance with cartouche and double coat of arms Castle park with plane trees, linden, ash and pedunculate oaks. -
^ Evangelical parish church. Hall church, 1738–40, the tower built in 1816, located in the walled cemetery, northwest of the former castle. Restoration 1968 f. Plastered building with a steep hipped roof, the west side emphasized by a simple baroque sandstone portal and symmetrically arranged classical grave monuments as the entrance front. Windows in two rows, the upper ones with basket arches, the lower ones rectangular. Heavy tower on the south side, over a square floor plan, with the hood pressed down. Hall with a flat ceiling, two-storey wooden galleries on three sides, on the east side just a lower gallery, which runs along behind the altar and pulpit. The organ gallery above with bulging board baluster parapets carried by Tuscan wooden pilasters over pedestals, which frame the altar structure and the pulpit. Glazed manor's box built into the lower south pore. At the west entrance anteroom and prayer rooms with glass windows, in the corners galleries. Sacristy and side entrances behind the altar.
Equipment: The sandstone altarpiece, partially colored, taken over from the previous building, by Melchior Kuntze in 1622, as well as the cafeteria, predella-like substructure with two pedestals with painted Bible verses and side panels, in the middle an oval field with a relief representation of the Last Supper. The mighty structure with pilasters over pedestals, above cranked entablature pieces that support the extension, a triumphal arch supported by strong lateral volutes, in the middle field a large, figure-rich relief extending into the extension with a crucifixion scene, above the resurrection and ascension of Christ the consoles of the substructure figures of Moses and Johannes d. T., the evangelists Markus and Johannes sitting on pedestals at the side of the extension, eight coats of arms each hanging from the pilasters, kneeling in front of them, hands raised in prayer, the figures of Heinrich Abraham von Luckowin, in full armor, with ruff, and Sybilla von Miltitz with a black dress, white frill and bonnet, which were only displayed in the altar after Heinrich's death in 1639.
The simple pulpit is inserted between the altar extension and the gallery behind it, the organ prospect from the former Jahn organ, 1841, the work renewed in 1946 by Eule. - On the south wall grave monuments made of sandstone of Georg von Miltitz († 1566) in armor, Margareta von Miltitz († 1556) with veil, Johannes von Miltitz († 1595) with ruff, a woman from Miltitz († 1591) far away Mantel, a boy from Miltitz († 1593). - On the southern outer wall of the tower, a large grave monument made of sandstone: in the lower part three life-size reliefs of young kneeling sisters of the von Luckowin family who died in the same year 1690, in the same posture and period costume, the figures separated from one another by pilasters with flower hangings, in the upper part Large inscription plaque above a cornice with rich baroque framing, which reminds of a fourth sister, Johanna Sibylla von Heynitz († 1751), female personifications of love and hope seated on both sides of the table. - On the western side of the entrance, similar grave monuments for female and male members of the von Heynitz family, classicist, marked 1846 and 1862, next to them smaller monuments with inscribed shields over plinths, marked 1857 and 1855 (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996). Hall church with double circumferential gallery, south tower from 1816, grave monuments from the 16th to 18th centuries, cemetery with enclosure wall, entrance flanked by a copper beech, older predecessor of the church. - ↑ Main house of the old Furkertmühle (Talstrasse 12, Flst. 12/4): solid timber frame, entrance portal with segmental arch, here probably also dating 1792, side building (Talstrasse 12, Flst. 12/5): partly solid timber frame, partly whole Half-timbered, partly massive, separated from the old mill in 1971. From a monument preservation point of view, technology worth preserving in the new mill building (Talstrasse 14, flst. 12/12) directly on the street (as of October 2007): water turbine, five roller mills (one roller mill from MIAG from the 1920s, three roller mills from SECK from 1925 and a roller mill from MIAG from 1935), Quetzsche (crushes grain) from MIAG from 1925, grinding machine FANAL and grist from the 1920s in the ground floor area or on the roller mill floor, semolina cleaning machine from SECK around 1925, GEGROLO filter cabinet ( will be replaced soon), mill brake elevator from A. WETZIG from 1938 in the last or attic as well as aspiration and elevators. Plan sifter from 1990 (1960s model) on the plan sifter floor is not of importance in terms of monument preservation, but is important for the clarity of the grinding process. The machine section of the new mill building shows the usual division of a grain or grinding mill with several floors: ground floor and roller mill floor, tube floor, plansifter floor and attic.
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↑ Main building of the former Obermunzig manor, structural core after 1571, at that time owned by Hans and Ernst von Miltitz, extension to the manor house in the existing external form in 1748 by the gentlemen from Ende. Renovations in 1822, children's home since 1950. 1950/60 facades and roofs renewed and conversions inside. Stately two-storey plastered building, 11: four axes, main front to the east to the former large four-sided mansion, steep mansard hipped roof with renewed standing and bat dormers, sandstone east portal in 1822, above it the coat of arms of those from Ende , the Kölbel von Geising, those von Miltitz . - Large hallway on the ground floor with groin vaults over a Tuscan central column, after 1571, partly changed by partition walls around 1950 (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996).
Sandstone portal with coat of arms, above the entrance dating 1743, standing dormer windows, mansard hipped roof, entrance hall with groin vault and set column, stairwell preserved, owner 1901: R. Zumpe. -
↑ The traditional appearance of most of the residential and farm buildings on the farmsteads can be attributed to their age after the 19th century, with individual buildings coming from the Renaissance and Baroque periods according to their structural forms. However, it is possible to have preserved and included remains of older predecessor buildings. The size and arrangement of the buildings are different in the Rundling and in the later expansion and are to be preserved in this individuality.
- Protected goods and necessity of the statute: The interaction between the rural form of settlement and the local geo-ecology resulted in a site that has been preserved here as a special feature in its traditional form. Of great importance is the structure of the round structure, which has been largely free of buildings in the edge area and in the ring area around the church. Preserved homesteads, the surrounding open spaces, property enclosures, gates and wells are to be considered as a whole. This structure would not be preserved without the protection of a corresponding statute, as already newly built examples prove as individual cases. Without protection, a lasting change in the historical village structure is to be feared due to the change in the way of life and work. A densification of the buildings that would change the character of the townscape could not be prevented by § 34 BauGB. An assessment under monument protection law and approval of the construction activity on the basis of these statutes is therefore the only effective instrument for maintaining and complying with the protection goals. Swell:
- Gurlitt, Cornelius: Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments in Saxony , booklet 41, Amtshauptmannschaft Meißen-Land, Dresden 1923
- Hofmann, Karl Julius: The Meissen Netherlands in its natural beauties and peculiarities or Saxon Italy , Leipzig, Dresden 1844
- Machatschek, Eduard: The history of the bishops of the Meissen Monastery , Dresden 1884
- New Saxon Church Gallery - The Parish Naustadt
- Neef, E .: The natural spatial structure of Saxony , in Sächsische Heimatblätter 6/1960
- Kühne, A. and Ranft, A .: Stories and history in and around Wilsdruff, Wilsdruff 1930/1931
- Schumann, Rudolf: On the old Silberstraße from Scharfenberg and Munzig to Freiberg , in: Communications of the Landesverein Sächsischer Heimatschutz , issue 5/8, 1939
- Landscape protection area Left Elbe valleys between Dresden and Meißen , Meißen 1989
- References to literature and local history by residents of the community Scharfenberg
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↑ Monument text: Hall church with gallery, pulpit (Renaissance, parallels to the pulpit in Lommatzsch), classical altar with Holy Communion (sandstone), Renaissance tombs, a Baroque tomb, ribbed vault in the choir, ceilings suspended in the nave ?, some Art Nouveau windows, baroque south portal .
Evangelical parish church. 1346 called a church, 1591–98 new building of the hall church, patronage church with burial place of those of Miltitz on Scharfenberg and Batzdorf . 1717 New construction of the west tower, portal and bell storey with pointed helmet after a fire of 1847. Exterior restoration in 1897 with romanizing plaster structure that determines the character of the building. Interior restoration in 1902, renewed interior restoration in 1981/82. Plastered building, the drawn-in choir with 5/8 end and buttresses, high pitched roof, the windows with two round arches each over a central post, in sandstone, narrowly profiled, covered by a brick arched arch, their reveals inclined to the outside and inside. On the south-west corner inscription stone with construction date 1595. On the south side vestibule with crooked roof from 1895, the portal probably composed of no longer used ornate sandstone pilasters, among other architectural parts of the church altar erected in 1606, rebuilt in 1817, the inner portal of the vestibule in Renaissance forms, from the Construction time. The roof of the choir is lower than the main roof and towed over the northern choir annex. On the north and south sides, two-storey extensions of different sizes as sacristies and manorial galleries, with separate staircases, the southern one, a polygonal stepping stone, with a gable roof and an outer portal, the flanking sandstone pilasters, each with eight coats of arms, also parts of the above. 1817 altered altars are. West tower with a strong base profile, round-arched west portal, high bell storey and pointed helmet. Spacious hall, with a frieze with wooden profiled rectangular frames on its flat plastered ceiling, the ceiling design, the three-sided wooden gallery with painted parapets, the uniform Baroque stalls and the colored stenciled glazing of the windows are the results of the restoration by Woldemar Kandler, 1902. The two-bay choir with a rich post-Gothic reticulated vault opens into a large basket arch with painted cuboids, in its three east windows colored glass paintings. The choir vault to the northern master gallery is open in two round arches over a marbled Tuscan column, behind it a two-bay room with groin vault and east window, bordered at the front by a baluster parapet, in the room below the old sacristy, vaulted, with a cafeteria probably of the previous building, the gallery staircase to the side. The choir is open to the south pore with only one arch, the room also vaulted with groin, its wooden parapet from the early 17th century with tendril carvings and Bible verses painted on the panels. Under the south pore the new sacristy with groined vaults.
Equipment: Altar made of sandstone, 1606 by Hans Köhler the Elder. J., originally an epitaph altar, donated by Magdalene von Pflugk for her husband Ernst Wilhelm von Miltitz, who died in 1600, modified and simplified in 1817, its base with two pedestals, above the structure with two Corinthian columns with fittings, between the columns a large relief with expressive Representation of the Last Supper in front of an arcade architecture, the head of Christ appears in front of a drapery, the front figures of the relief are almost fully sculpted, the scene overrides the lower parts of the frame, the words of establishment on an inscription plaque under the relief. On the entablature of the reredos, the statuettes of Ernst Wilhelm von Miltitz and Magdalene von Pflugk kneeling and adoring in front of a crowning gilded cross, forged altar grille, around 1730. - Pulpit, left of the choir arch, made of sandstone, partially colored and gold framed, 1596 by Hans Koehler the Elder Ä., The basket above a Tuscan column with a pedestal, adorned with a lion's head and diamond cuboid, the parapet divided into three parts, in the middle field a Pentecost depiction with the disciples, the Holy Spirit and a seated woman with an open book, probably as a personification of the church Side fields the coats of arms of those of von Miltitz, von Schleinitz and von Pflugk , donor inscriptions and those with Bible verses, above the cornice the sculptor's coat of arms in a cartouche, on the parapet of the stone pulpit stairs biblical sayings and inscriptions that Dietrich von Miltitz the Elder. Ä. and Ernst Wilhelm von Miltitz, father and son, named as donors, dated 1596. - Sandstone baptismal font, also partially set, by Hans Köhler the Elder. Ä., 1597, hexagonal, at the foot of the shaft children with the instruments of Christ's passion, at the basin recessed rectangular fillings with reliefs: the flight of the children of Israel, first with Moses with a staff, sinking of the Egyptian riders in the Red Sea, baptism of Christ in the Jordan, Christ blesses them Children, in between the coats of arms of the von Miltitz family and their wives. Large organ front made of three cylindrical towers and two backsides, around 1800, the work of Jahn around 1900. - In the new sacristy, a small crucifix, sandstone, probably 15th century. In the choir, numerous grave monuments, the large pompous memorial for the Oberhofmarschall Alexander von Miltitz auf Scharfenberg (1657–1738), made of sandstone, partly gilded, according to the inscription on the lower edge of the towel by Johann Joachim Kändler. The aristocrat, lying upright with his torso and wearing a wig, on his deathbed, spread out on a sarcophagus, his gaze directed upwards, his coat of arms erected behind him on a pedestal, mourned by two female personifications of faith and strength A floating angel hands the laurel wreath and thus promises fame, with his right hand he refers to the symbol of the triune God, thus to redemption, the scene is set behind by an elaborate drapery, developed from a canopy. - Further sandstone grave monuments of pastor Christoph Freitag († 1595) and his little son in a shroud, Hans Caspar von Miltitz († 1591), a young man with a coat and ruff, the three-year-old Hans Heinrich Eberhardt († 1606), a woman from Hopfgarten († 1570), veiled and kneeling, of Carl Werner Ernst von Miltitz († 1764) with sarcophagus and mourning wife, of Alexander von Miltitz († 1629) with a large multi-part structure with numerous reliefs, including a depiction of the deceased with folded hands a desk with books lying on it, a young Miltitz († 1609) in a death shirt, the Sargen von Miltitz († 1581), in a frontal position, with a cross in front of his chest, Barbara von Miltitz († 16 ..) in a death shirt, of armed Dietrich von Miltitz († 1600), Margareta von Miltitz († 1588), frontal with folded hands. - In the tower ground floor hall the grave monument of the mountain jury Martin Richter († 1626), with a long goatee, made of sandstone, on the outer walls of the church there are numerous other grave monuments from the 16th to 19th centuries (Dehio Sachsen, 1965, p. 366).
Tombs- Number 1: War memorial for the fallen of the First World War, broken stone base, on top of it a block-like stele made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, pyramid-shaped top with oak leaves and an iron cross [new inscription panels from the peace movement of the late 20th century],
- Number 2: Oehmichen hereditary burial, end of the 19th century, Johann Hermann Oehmichen (1811–1880), manorial estate owner, Franz Max von Oehmichen (1851–1938), Fideikommissherr on Scharfenberg
- Number 3: Grave of the Franke family, last third of the 19th century, Carl Christian Franke (1808–1867), landowner in Riemsdorf,
- Number 4: Tomb Fam. Grosche, around 1900 (Art Nouveau inscription), Ida Grosche, b. Bärisch (1878–1925), Hugo Grosche (1876–1963),
- Number 5: Tomb Fam. Naumann, around 1920, Hermann Naumann (1856–1917), landowner, (tomb currently dismantled),
- Number 6: Grave of the Bärisch family, around 1920, Clara Bärisch, b. Handel (1856–1917) (tomb currently dismantled),
- Number 7: Grave slab of an unknown person (presumably the von Miltitz family), 16th century, with a woman's figure, weathered, at the church,
- Number 8: Renaissance tombstone of those von Miltitz, 16th century, with four coats of arms, weathered, on the church,
- Number 9: Renaissance tombstone (presumably the von Miltitz family), 16th century, originally with several coats of arms, heavily weathered, on the church,
- Number 10: Grave slab Diterich von Miltitz, d. 1600, "Herr uff Batzdorff und Scharffenbergk", originally with several coats of arms, weathered, on the church,
- Number 11: Baroque grave slab of those von Miltitz, 18th century, with spherical reliefs (sun?), Weathered, on the church,
- Number 12: Baroque grave slab of those von Miltitz, 17th century / 18th. Century, with several coats of arms, slightly weathered, on the church,
- Number 13: Renaissance grave slab of those von Miltitz, 1st half 17th century, with several coats of arms, weathered, on the church,
- Number 14: Grave slab Alexander von Miltitz, d. 1629, weathered, at the church,
- Number 15: Grave slab Sara Anna von Miltitz, b. Constable, b. 1775 in London, d. 1824 in Görlitz, at the church,
- Number 16: Henriette Marianne Friedericke von Miltitz (1801–1817) grave slab by the church,
- Number 17: Grave slab Augustine Ernestine von Maltzahn, b. von Miltitz (1805–1837), at the church,
- Number 18: Baroque grave slab of those von Miltitz, 18th century, with several coats of arms, on the church,
- Number 19: Baroque tomb for pastor Johann Christian Broschans (?), 18th century, b. 1717, d. 1787 (?), At the church,
- Number 20: Baroque tomb at the church, 18th century, inscription illegible,
- Number 21: Baroque tomb of Christoph Fischer (1652–1675), late 17th century, at the church,
- Number 22: Baroque tomb Christian Gottlieb Gerlach (1685–17 .., illegible), mid-18th century, at the church,
- Number 23: Classical tomb of an unknown person, 1st half of the 19th century, weathered, on the church,
- ↑ The former castle probably served as a fortified starting point for the colonization of Slavic settlement areas. A presumed foundation around 930 under King Heinrich the Vogler cannot be proven in writing. From this time only the (subsequently bricked up - ME) foundation of the mighty keep in the middle of the courtyard is preserved. Above all, the castle should protect the trade route and the rich silver deposits in the area. Mentioned in a document as Castellum in 1227, designated as Castrum in 1288, from 1338 to 1941 it was owned by one of the leading Saxon noble families, the von Miltitz families. After the castle was conquered and partially destroyed by the Swedes in the Thirty Years War, Haubold von Miltitz carried out a comprehensive renovation and expansion in the Renaissance style in 1654. This has been preserved in its form to this day. Only the imposing hall on the Elbe side burned down after a lightning strike in August 1783. In the first quarter of the 19th century, Scharfenberg became a flourishing center of Romanticism for a short time. Dietrich von Miltitz and later Karl Borromäus von Miltitz (1781–1845) gathered the leading figures of German Romanticism (1812–1824) around them. Novalis, Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué, Johann August Apel, ETA Hoffmann, Theodor Körner and other contemporaries came together in the castles of Scharfenberg, Siebeneichen and Batzdorf to form the so-called “Scharfenberger Kreis”. Because of its wildly romantic location, Scharfenberg Castle was a magnet especially for painters of the time. Ferdinand Oehme (Scharfenberg Palace by Night, 1827, National Gallery Berlin), the Norwegian Thomas Fearnley, Christian Clausen Dahl and Caspar David Friedrich were among the welcome guests of the von Miltitz family, who loved art and culture. A large number of pictures, historical drawings and graphic sheets testify to the popularity of the castle and its surroundings during this period. After 1945 resettlers and resettlers lived in the castle. It then served as a local museum "(from Scharfenberg Castle's website).
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↑ Monument text: The Robschützer Viadukt (official name: Viadukt Garsebach) was with a length of 208.97 meters and a maximum height of 11.60 meters the longest narrow-gauge railway bridge in Saxony, eleven solid wall girders made of parallel-chorded steel plates rested on the 10 still preserved today Concrete pillars, the civil engineering part of the line of the so-called Lommatzscher "Rübenbahn", an important narrow-gauge railway between Wilsdruff via Meißen / Triebischtal and Lommatzsch to Gärtitz bei Döbeln, the viaduct spanned the Triebisch, the Nossener-Coswig as well as the regular-gauge railway line Borsdorf at distance kilometers 18,082 , Viaduct dangerous and accident-prone section of the route due to the longitudinal incline and the route in the curve (crash of two freight trains in 1949 and 1962, cause in each case excessive speed due to icing up of the lift brake), for this reason early closure of this section of the route in 1966, other routes Parts were operated until 1972, until 1973 partial demolition of the solid wall girders.
Model constructions from the Royal Saxon State Railways were not only used in the wood-clad waiting halls along the “Rübenbahn”, but standard solutions were also used in the construction of the railway bridges on this narrow-gauge line. While larger terrain cuts in Saxon narrow-gauge routes were often bridged with scaffolding pillar viaducts in trestle construction, smaller bridges were mostly built from sheet steel girders on masonry, and from the turn of the century also on concrete pillars. At over 200 m, the longest bridge of this type of construction in Saxony, of which only the eleven concrete pillars have survived today, spanned the Triebisch valley near Robschütz, characterizing the landscape. The pillars are therefore not only evidence of the original route for freight traffic, including the annual "sugar beet campaigns", important Saxon secondary railways and thus significant in terms of railway history, but also of technical and structural historical value as components of the bridge construction described. Data: Length: 208.97 m, max. Height: 11.60 m, construction period 1907–1908, partial demolition 1970–1973 (solid wall girder). Construction: multi-span girder bridge, 11 parallel-belt solid wall girders made of sheet steel over 10 concrete pillars, execution: Johann Odorico, Dresden. -
↑ Raised above the large village from the walled churchyard, uniform, stately hall church, built 1737–1739 by Johann Christian Simon. Plastered building in baroque ocher tones, the floor plan completely symmetrical, hipped roof to the east, studded with bat dormers, two-zone window arrangement, the sandstone walls with arches, entrance portal on the south side. The sacristy on the east side was raised in 1750 to set up an archive and library. On the long sides there are stately prayer rooms. To the west, a high tower with a basket arched portal, marked 1738 (marked in the keystone above the sound hatches). The portal forms the main entrance to the church. Inside there are two-storey wooden galleries on three sides. On the left and right spacious prayer rooms, a vase in a room with initials and coat of arms of the patron saint Friedrich August von Ponickau, inscribed 1739. Pulpit altar 1738 and baptismal angel 1738, both works from Benjamin Thomae's workshop. Organ built by Jehmlich from Dresden in 1888, probably one of the first pipe-pneumatic organs (Dehio shortened and changed).
Monumental graves in the churchyard:- Schmidt, Theodor Wilhelm, pastor of Röhrsdorf (died October 18th at the age of 75), baroque tomb, richly decorated sandstone stele with inscription on coat of arms, two figures, coffin-shaped base and top, 18th century,
- Stoeckhardt, Carl Friedrich Gottlieb (1807–1834), pastor, representative of the Saxon revival movement, grave cross with inscription,
- Pietzsch, Johann Georg (1745–1814), Johanna Christiane (died 1815) and other family members, sandstone stele with oval inscription panels, roofing and vase attachment,
- Pietzsch, family grave, tomb with two inscription panels and triangular gable, 1895,
- Pietzsch, family grave, expressionist tomb, stone with unusual ornamentation, star-like top and medallion, around 1920,
- Pietzsch, Franz Horst (1885–1922), landowner and Minna Anna (1887–1971), reform gravestone with oval inscriptions and volutes,
- Princess graves, three gravestones with inscriptions, 1916, 1917 and 1946.
- ↑ The tunnel served to drain the Freiberg pits, published in 1838 by SAW v. Herder started a project of a “Deep Meißen Erbstollns”, four variants were developed for this purpose. After Herder's death, government councilor KGA v. Weißenbach opened the tunnel project, variant 1 of Herders was essentially retained, but the tunnel was placed approx. 90 m higher than originally intended, whereby the tunnel emerged at Rothschönberg. The construction of the Rothschönberger Stolln began in 1844 with the sinking of the light holes, the construction of the conveying and water retention systems at the light holes as well as the mining forges , crew rooms and powder houses as well as the administration buildings. The last breakthrough occurred on March 21, 1877 between the 8th light hole and the Oberes Neues Geschrei shaft. On April 12, 1877, water from the Freiberg district flowed down the tunnel for the first time. Operating times: 1877–1913 (until mining was discontinued), 1914 to 1968 it served the Dreibrüderschacht cavern power plant as a drainage tunnel for the used power water, 1935–1969 again for the discharge of Freiberg mine water, the tunnel continues to enable the Freiberg University of Technology to operate the teaching pit up to about 230 m depth, technical information: 28.9 km length of the main wing, depth 94 - 152 m, eight light holes (Wagenbreth, Ottfried). From 1844 to 1877, the Rothschönberger Stolln was driven from Rothschönberg to Halsbrücke for about 14 km at state expense, in the mountain area with branches to all important pits - a total of 51 km long - at the expense of the individual pits. It is about 100 m deeper than the then deepest Freiberg Stolln and was necessary for the continued existence of Freiberg mining at that time, as it offered the groundwater a drainage 100 m lower and at the same time made it possible to install further hydropower machines with which to do this wanted to lift water flowing into even greater depths. In terms of technology history, the Rothschönberger Stolln was of supraregional significance as the longest tunnel in the world at the time. "(Ottfried Wagenbreth: Substance and structural protection, singular and area monument. P. 74 f.)
- ↑ Monument text: Castle and church, both of medieval origin, rise, separated by a ditch, on the right high bank of the Triebisch valley. Evangelical parish church. Simple hall church with south tower from 1829 including parts of the late Gothic predecessor building. Redesign of the exterior and interior in 1883 by Woldemar Kandler, exterior restoration in 1991. Plastered building with three-sided east end, flat sloping gable roof and arched windows, entrance portal in the west. Wide tower, its classical portal with the initials of the patron saint, marked 1829, the tower structure with a spire from 1883. Simple, flat-roofed hall, organ gallery in the west, master gallery in the south, which encompasses the first floor of the tower. Equipment: On the late Gothic cafeteria, which was taken over from the previous building, there is a rich, early Baroque epitaph altar from the Freiberg School, also from the older church, made of wood, the architectural structure painted in black and gold, the reliefs and figures polychrome, for Hans Dietrich von Schönberg († 1622) and Maria Agnes von Ponickau († 1613), probably by Bernhard Ditterich, around 1622: triumphal arch architecture, in the arched area between the columns expressive relief depicting the Last Supper in an architectural room, the front figures almost fully sculpted. On the entablature, a relief depicting the crucifixion, the frame in cartilage style, flanked by two trumpet angels, as a final figure of the blessing Salvator mundi, on each side of the triumphal arch a wing with smaller columns, in between inscription panels referring to Hans Dietrich and Maria Agnes, which appear in front of it as kneeling statuettes in prayer position on flat volutes. Between the volutes a cartouche with a frame in cartilage, the Latin inscription of which names Rachael von Einsiedel, the second wife of Hans Dietrich von Schönberg, as the donor of the altar, the latter is also shown as a statuette next to Maria Agnes, as well as two daughters. Numerous noble coats of arms on columns, pedestals and beams. In front of the altar iron grating, inscribed 1793. - Behind the altar two grave monuments in a symmetrical arrangement from 1883 for Kaspar Dietrich von Schönberg († 1673) and Hans Heinrich von Schönberg († 1718), powerful baroque counterparts made of sandstone, painted in color, the deceased in High relief, standing in full armor, with pathetic expression, surrounded by column positions with segmented gable tops, further monuments in sandstone for Elisabeth von Schönberg († 1580) in bas-relief, with a long coat, for Magdalene Isabella von Schönberg († 1698), for Hans Heinrich above and Kaspar Dietrich, who also own second monuments, for Maria Elisabeth († 1690) and Karl Rudolph von Schönberg († 1677), for Charlotte Wilhelmine von Schönberg († 1790) and for Nikolaus von Schönberg († 1592) with a long full beard two bronze tablets, marked 1611 and 1622. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996). Hall church (older core) with old and new cemetery.
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↑ The oldest preserved part of the 15th century: south-east building with round bastion, stair tower in the courtyard, south wing with entrance gate from 1651–1659. West wing from 1738, chapel in the north-west corner, around 1500, originally probably free-standing.
Castle: The origin of the fortified complex, the ancestral seat of the von Schönberg family from the oldest Meissen nobility, can be found in the time of eastern colonization in the 11th and 12th centuries. Century, first mentioned in 1254. It rises above the northern slope of the Triebisch valley and the eastern slope of a side ditch and is isolated from the southern and western hinterland by artificial ditches. Buildings from the 15th to 18th centuries of a different but subordinate type enclose an irregular rectangular courtyard sloping to the northeast. The lower parts of the north wing, the former brewery, including their cellars, belong to the oldest, in the 14th / 15th centuries. Century to be dated. The most important part is the angular building in the south-east corner, the actual castle, with a structural core from the 15th century, expanded and expanded into a simple castle since the 16th century, with a heavy round bastion on the southern outer front. The south wing with the gateway to the courtyard was built by Caspar Dietrich von Schönberg in 1651–59, the west wing over older buildings in 1738 by Hans Dietrich von Schönberg. In the north-west corner of the courtyard the chapel, around 1500, formerly in an isolated position, then the north building with stables and the former library on the upper floor, now municipal office, built around 1744 under Hans Dietrich von Schönberg. Renewals especially of the plaster facades and the roofs, around 1960/70. The three-storey angular building with a gable roof, on the south side of the round bastion a large Gothic coat of arms stone from the 15th century with Schönberg's coat of arms, in the inner corner of the complex an octagonal stair tower from the early 16th century, its height reduced in 1871, accessible from the courtyard through a square arched portal above colored clay relief of a Florentine Madonna and Child in the manner of Luca della Robbia, probably a copy made by Egon von Schönberg after 1870, the windows of the tower e.g. Sometimes inclined, its inside circular, with Wendelstein, in the bastion cross vault, which opens up to the dining room on the 1st floor, the hall to the south in the 19th century was presented with a terrace that built over the moat. Two-storey south wing, also with a gable roof, in the west part of the gate hall (courtyard entrance) with irregular groin vault, on the side above the outer gate a large sandstone relief with the coat of arms of those von Stange, von Schönberg, von Ende, above an inscription stone, inscribed 1659, in the southern outer front of the wing, to the castle moat, bastion-like rectangular bay window with a simple gable. The two-and-a-half storey west building with a hipped gable roof and simply plastered facades, seven on the courtyard side and nine window axes on the park side. The chapel largely built in, with two arched windows, in the vestibule open to the courtyard, two late Gothic sandstone portals from the old manor house in Tanneberg (Kr.Meißen-Radebeul), offset under Egon von Schönberg, who converted in 1870, who restored the chapel around 1880 and the cath. Service to resume. High, late-Gothic room with three-bay ribbed vaults with keystones, access from the south, in the west a ground floor room part with groined vaults, above an organ gallery with a simple ceiling piece. Small neo-Gothic altar, its stone antependium with Schönberg's coat of arms around 1880. From the palace gardens, above all the artificially created rampart can be recognized, on which the linden avenue, formerly with a pavilion in the north, stretches as Point de vue. From the former manor only the long lines of the stone enclosure walls have been preserved, from Dehio Sachsen I. - ↑ Following an instruction from the municipalities in 1820, the signpost columns were first made of wood and later of stone. Until 1840, distance information was used in league hours (1 hour = 4.531 km) and from 1875 kilometer information to the neighboring places - on the main roads at that time and in the spelling of the places at that time - or sometimes the place name of the location, e.g. B. with the designation "Commun" (for municipality), and the year of construction / manufacture indicated. The material is usually local sandstone in a typical regional design. Furthermore, land stones and place-name signs fall under this category. These small stones marked the local boundaries or boundaries to manors and the state forest areas on the main paths of that time around 1900 with the local, manor and state forest district information on the respective pages or, in some cases, the year. In contrast to boundary stones, they do not have a border cross (Kaiser, André, Forschungsgruppe Kursächsische Postmeile columns).
- ↑ Water technical systems from east to west: Weir at the Kleine Triebisch deletion 2017, Mühlobergraben, Mühlteich and Mühluntergraben. The Mühlobergraben runs from the weir on the Kleine Triebisch (between Flst. 47 and 168, municipality of Klipphausen, municipality of Oberpolenz) to the mill, mostly (except for river 39, municipality of Semmelsberg) over the municipality of Klipphausen, municipality of Upper Poland , the Mühluntergraben from the mill to the property "Zur Preiskermühle 10", Gem. Semmelsberg, Flst. 36f. The mill pond is to the east and in the immediate vicinity of the building (Flst. 39, Gem. Semmelsberg). Mühlteich with water (1993 without water), Mühlgraben has no water in 2017. In 1548 the mill was mentioned for the first time as “New built mulen” in the feudal letter of Magnus von Bernstein from the Polenz manor by Elector Moritz. In 1551 the place Semmelsberg, in which the mill is located, is mentioned for the first time with “Dye people yhm Semelsgrund”. A direct reference to flour mills can be made, since "semel" meant fine wheat flour at that time. It is therefore very likely that the place Semmelsberg got its name from the local mills (formerly Niedermühle), today's Grundmühle and Preiskermühle (formerly Obermühle, or Thomas v. Bernsteinsmühle). In 1588 the manor Polenz was divided into Lower and Upper Poland. Thomas v. Bernstein inherited today's Preiskermühle with the Niederpolenzer manor. In the first map of the area by Matthias Oeder from 1589 (so-called Ur-Oeder) she is named Thomas v. Amber garbage registered. After many different owners of the Niederpolenz manor, the mill was sold to Hans Freymann for 350 guilders in 1723. This date is also immortalized in the sill beam of the main building. The Frey (mann) family owned the mill until 1789. In that year Johann Gottlob Preusker (Preisker) from Sachsdorf bought the mill for 2000 guilders. Johanne Rosine Preisker buys in 1843 bought the row tavern from the municipality of Semmelsberg and thus acquired the right to run a tavern. In 1889, milling was given up and the main business expanded into a tourist restaurant. In 1922 the Oberschlächtige wheel was installed on a Francis turbine (type LNO III from the Meissner company Schindler & Grünewald) with a usable gradient of 6 m and a passage of max. 120 l / s converted. 1985 cessation of the restaurant business, from 1998 to 2003 vacancy and neglect. From 2003 new owner Fam. Flade, stop of decay, inhabited again since 2004, conversion of the collapsed hall extension into a workshop for furniture restoration. 2006 Beginning of the renovation of the side building in line with listed buildings (from the Internet, the mill's homepage).
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↑ Located on a hill in a walled churchyard. Stately hall building from 1769 including the outer walls of the (late medieval) previous building. Tower substructure as early as 1730 according to the inscription on the west portal, the second floor 1769 together with the church, the third in 1793. Plastered building with a straight east end, arched windows on each axis in two rows, one above the other, with sandstone walls. The west tower has a uniform baroque style despite different construction times, the helmet neo-baroque, 1886. On the east side sacristy according to the inscription 1877 (Dehio 1874). In the northeast, a former mansion's box with an entrance. Gate system with gate pillars and vases as well as wrought iron grating (Dehio shortened and changed). Historical sundial dated 1686 on the facade, restored in 2002. The church organ is a mechanical organ from 1874 by Nikolaus Jahn and his son Julius, restored in 2007. Monumental graves in the churchyard:
- Schönhals, resting place, classicistic aedicule tomb with columns and triangular gable, relief with hands, base with ornamentation and inscription, mid-19th century,
- Unknown, classical grave stele with columns, roofing and foliage, relief of angel figure on tumba, mid 19th century,
- Borsdorf, Carl Gottlieb (died 1845), classic stone with gable roofing on pedestal, roofing decorated with acroteria,
- Unknown, neo-Gothic grave stele, tracery form from column, keel arch, finial and crabs, relief with hands, 2nd half of the 19th century,
- Wätzel, family grave, high and distinctive neo-Gothic stone, columns, tracery, inscriptions and essay, base with various representations, mid-19th century (readable dates 1818, 1842 and 1852),
- Unknown, neo-Gothic stone with pointed arch, base including frame and lowered torch on the side, 2nd half of the 19th century,
- Unknown, neo-Gothic stone with columns, tracery and two inscription tablets, 2nd half of the 19th century,
- Tamme, Johann Gottlieb (died 1813), Pietzsch, Johann Gottfried and others, classical grave stele, 3rd quarter of the 19th century (legible dates 1824, 1835),
- Börner, classical stone, mid-19th century (legible dates 1851, 1889)
- Unknown, classical stone, vase and figurative representation in relief, 3rd quarter of the 19th century.
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↑ Former Manor. In the late Middle Ages owned by the Altzella (e Nossen-Zella) monastery, in the 16th and 17th centuries by the Freiberg mountain lords of Alnpeck, in the 18th century by those of Schönberg, who rebuilt the manor house in 1744. Manor house, a three-storey plastered building with a mansard hipped roof, the main facade to the east of the manor with 12 window axes, the windows rectangular, the smaller windows on the lower second floor with arched arches, the sandstone portal also with arched arches, on the keystone the coat of arms of those of Schönberg. Two almost identical two-storey plastered wing buildings with flat hipped roofs and arched windows, the southern one from the 19th century, the northern one in the core from the 16th and 17th centuries, rebuilt in 1879, with two pointed arched portals from the early 16th century and the coat of arms of those from Alnpeck, inscribed 1615 on the courtyard front. In the southeast long stable wing, marked 1854, in the northeast of the manor there are two farm buildings from the 18th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996).
Two-storey wings on both sides of the main building. The manor house dates from 1744. The left wing probably from the beginning of the 19th century. The right wing from the beginning of the 17th century. According to the inscription, it was rebuilt in 1879 by CW von Schönberg-Pötting. The old coat of arms of the Alnpeck and von Sommerlatt (?), Marked 1615, is built into the wall facing the courtyard. Also marked 1770. The 17th century bevels can be seen on the back corner. Originally with two Gothic gates that were built into the vestibule of the Rothschönberg castle chapel in 1879. “The first mention of the manor goes back to 1438. The owners changed a few times. After the von Heynitz family, the von Staupitz family took over the estate in 1501. Moritz Heinrich von Miltitz bought it in 1660. Around 1675 it fell to the von Schönberg family, who owned it until 1945 ”, from Sächsische Zeitung of November 28, 2007, source: Triebischtal. -
↑ Description:
- Church:
- Furnishing:
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↑ Monument text: Church and castle until around 1950 structurally connected by a covered corridor and located on a tongue of land that protrudes to the east and north. Together with the rectory in the southwest, they form the historic core of the village. Oaks that were planted in memory of Martin Luther or are said to be directly related to the work of the reformer are called Luther oaks. Often these are trees of the pedunculate oak species. Best known is the Luther oak in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, where Luther burned his copy of the papal bull threatening exsurge domine in 1520. In 1883, on the occasion of Martin Luther's 400th birthday, Lutheran oaks were planted in many of the mostly Protestant-Lutheran towns. Today these trees represent the largest group of the Lutheran oaks, they are often found in squares in front of churches or other centrally located locations. They can be compared with the Bismarck oaks, which are reminiscent of Imperial Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, and the imperial empires. There were isolated planting of further Lutheran oaks in 1917 on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the Reformation and during the time of National Socialism. The small complex in Klipphausen, OT Weistropp, made of oak and inscription stone, is a reminder of Luther himself, of a widespread ecclesiastical / religiously significant commemoration in 1883 as well as an important event for the town of Weistropp. It is therefore significant in terms of personal history, cultural history and local history.
Church and churchyard:- Hall church, rebuilt in 1601, structural changes in 1725, 1876 and 1877. Tower in 1499, its structure in 1701. Interior restorations in 1887 and 1939. Plastered building with arched windows, the choir slightly retracted, with a 3/8 end, buttresses and almost round-arched windows on its North side of the sacristy with transferred late Gothic portal, on the upper floor the former prayer room of the castle rulers. Three-storey west tower, with a late Gothic west portal, octagonal tower structure with dome, lantern and pointed helmet, vestibule E. 19th century. Hall with flat plastered ceiling, pointed arched choir arch from 1876, flat covered western choir bay, the east end with ribbed vault, prayer room renewed in 1939. Choir window with three glass paintings, 1887. Altar 1939 by Walter Jähnig and Willi Ritsche, altar painting, oil on wood, depicting the Last Supper, around 1725. Pulpit, sandstone, inscribed 1607, on the basket a relief by the founders Gottschalk von Günderode and Barbara von Geusau, in the side panels 16 coat of arms of the nobility, baptism (1602), sandstone, inscribed 1602, with rich late Renaissance decoration, both by Balthasar the Elder. Ä. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996).
- Cemetery with tombs from the 19th century, wrought-iron fence and gate pillars with bars, war memorial as a small building.
- ↑ Barn: The barn forms the southern end of the three-sided courtyard, which is open to the lower street. With the exception of a few smaller extensions, the courtyard has been able to retain its appearance since the house was built around 1700. Even the oven on the opposite side of the stable house is still there. The appearance of the farm alone, with the large orchard behind it and the connection to the field that has been preserved, represents a special value in the history of building and settlement. This can be equated with the high testimony value of the farm for the rural economy over the past 300 years. With its exposed location at the southern entrance to Weistropp, the courtyard occupies a defining place in terms of village architecture. The barn was expanded with several additions in the course of its existence, but the construction-time floor plan in the core building from 1618 (d) was retained. With the installation of a cellar, the extension buildings herald the entry of potatoes and turnips into the farm's economy, the extension of the storage area shows the increasing yield of the fields after the introduction of new methods of farming. The dendrochronological dating of the framework of the barn revealed the year 1618 in four samples, three winter and one summer forest edge (Heussner, Petershagen), the timber used for the samples is fir and spruce. The barn was built at the beginning of the Thirty Years War and has now stood the test of time for almost 400 years. The barn has two zones across the ridge. The eastern zone parallel to the road was the threshing floor, due to the natural conditions the entrance was not possible from the courtyard, but only directly from the field under the eaves. The round holes for the pivot of the gate are preserved in the eaves facing away. A door under the eaves leads to the courtyard, which can be reached via a few steps from the courtyard below. To the west of the threshing floor there was a banse, both of which were separated by a board wall that was about halfway up. With the slight rectangle of the ground plan of approx. 7.30 x 6.80 m and a height of approx. 3.40 m, the core building was a smaller barn. The state of construction of the barn is good to very good in places, very bad in other places. The structure of the paved cross-strut structure from the construction period is still fully legible in the destroyed areas. The structure of the framework as well as the roof structure has been carefully crafted from strong cross-sections. With the cross brace, the barn is an extremely valuable testimony to the rural architecture at the beginning of the 17th century in the region. By comparing it with the barns from the Mittweida district from the 16th and early 17th centuries, the building has a supraregional significance. In addition to the barn of the vicarage in Tanneberg, which was also built in cross-braced framework, but not until 1659 (d), the Weistropper barn is a completely preserved rural building from the beginning of the 17th century and is therefore of particular importance in terms of age in addition to the structural findings. Due to the high monument value of the barn and its position in the yard as well as in the townscape, in addition to the residential house and the side building, the preservation of the barn should also be sought. An attempt should be made to combine the planned new construction of a residential house with the preservation of the half-timbered structure of the barn. The roof structure has at least been changed by the presumed expansion of a central longitudinal structure, but the roof pitch and good rafters should be used again. Damaged wood can be repaired, and replacement is possible if the damage is severe. A previous measurement and the numbering of the timbers ensure that the building will be restored in accordance with the listed buildings after the barn has been dismantled. A new building can be added to the barn as long as the existing substance is not changed. It is thus possible to place the half-timbered structure around the new building as an insulating outer shell; the floor plan should take into account the two-zone structure. The usable area can be expanded using the gate on the opposite side, but the younger gate in the west gable can also be used. Window openings should not separate the structure. In this way, an interesting new building can be created, which at the same time allows the appearance of the barn from 1618 (dated) to remain recognizable. It is possible to get the oldest known barn in the area around Dresden. On behalf of Thomas Noky, specializing in folk architecture. - Despite the efforts of Mr. Noky, the barn was unfortunately demolished in the same year, signed Müller Feb. 1, 2008.
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↑ The sides of the half-timbered upper floor facing the courtyard (eaves) and the street (gable) have St. Andrew's crosses, which are extended to cross braces at the corners of the house. The struts that rise to the corner posts cover the transom and are connected to them by a sheet with a fluted back. The sides facing away are simply braced. The close sequence of studs under the roof beams on the facing side of the eaves is offset by wide stud spacings on the side facing away from the eaves. The principle behind the stand construction can still be seen here. The roof structure is remarkable. The truss-free collar beam roof has no central longitudinal bracing and no chair, the wind bracing is achieved on the courtyard side (facing side) by two wind panes that are inserted into the rafters from the outside and that intersect in the middle space between the eight pairs of rafters below. On the side facing the courtyard, the rafters are pegged into the slightly protruding roof beams; on the opposite side, roof beams and rafters are padded with a curved overhang. The rafters butt against one another at the ridge. The bars in the rafter triangle facing the street are leafed into the rafters. The threshold of the upper floor framework shows a profile with a valley and a bar above it, the filler wood with bevel and bar running through in front of the beam heads. Both profiles end with shuttles. The original room on the ground floor and the ceiling have been lost and replaced by stone walls and simply bevelled ceiling beams. The house, which only had two zones, had a room next to the living room facing away from the gable, which served as a hallway and kitchen. The ceiling beams from the construction period have been preserved here. In the gable beam facing away from the ceiling to the upper floor and in the closest cantilevered ceiling beam, the recesses for the change of stairs have been preserved. Leaf seats in today's masonry suggest a lost ground floor framework that has been replaced by masonry; the masonry is the former frame.
The constructive shape of the upper floor framework with profiles and the roof structure allow a date to the time around 1650 or earlier (dendrochronological report: wood felling 1619, house construction around the period from 1620 to 1622). The rafters on the opposite side are of particular architectural historical value and, to my knowledge, are the only find so far in the Elbe Valley. Slatted rafters are known from the area around Mittweida to East Thuringia from the 16th to 18th centuries (previously 1526/1725) and from Upper Lusatia from the 17th and 18th centuries. Century (most recent dating 1740). The almost completely preserved half-timbering of the upper floor and the roof structure show important findings for the supraregional building history of the farmhouse.
swell
- ↑ Louisenberg in Gauernitz (accessed December 10, 2017)