List of cultural monuments in Lampertswalde
The list of cultural monuments in Lampertswalde contains the cultural monuments in Lampertswalde .
This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .
Legend
- Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
- Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
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Location: If available, street name and house number of the cultural monument; The list is basically sorted according to this address. The map link leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
- Map view to set coordinates. In this map view, cultural monuments are shown without coordinates with a red marker and can be placed on the map. Cultural monuments without a picture are marked with a blue marker, cultural monuments with a picture are marked with a green marker.
- Dating: indicates the year of completion or the date of the first mention or the period of construction
- Description: structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the monument properties
- ID: is awarded by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony. It clearly identifies the cultural monument. The link leads to a PDF document from the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony, which summarizes the information on the monument, contains a map sketch and often a detailed description. For former cultural monuments sometimes no ID is given, if one is given, this is the former ID. The corresponding link leads to an empty document at the state office. The following icon can also be found in the ID column ; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .
Lampertswalde
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Memorial stone for the victims of fascism | (Map) | Probably 1985 (memorial stone); probably 1968 (Ehrenhain) | local historical significance.
Memorial stone made of roughly hewn red granite on a flat base, inscription: original “The liberators of our homeland from fascism and war in honorable memory”, honor grove consisting of square granite slabs, location: in continuation of Weißiger Straße. Some granite slabs and the inscriptions "The Liberators" and "From Fascism and War" removed at an unknown date. |
08958828
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Lampertswalde station (station building, goods shed and toilet block of the station facility) | Bahnhofstrasse 44 (map) |
around 1870 | The station ensemble of the Wilhelminian era has been preserved without impairment, brick buildings document the original state of construction, which is of importance in terms of building and railway history.
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08958648
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Waystone | Blochwitzer Strasse (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. two meter high sandstone cube with the inscription: "Village Lampertswalde, Brockwitz, Blochwitz, Weißig" |
08958647
|
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Martinskirche: Church (with equipment), with churchyard, enclosure, tomb and war memorial for the fallen of World War I | Grossenhainer Strasse (map) |
1694 (church tower) | Local historical and urban significance, value for the cultural landscape, simple hall church with baroque south tower, picturesque ensemble with old school and rectory.
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08958638
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Old school: portal arch of a former school | Grossenhainer Strasse 5 | re. 1838 | Remains of the sandstone portal of a simple school building, as a church school and old school of local historical importance.
Two-storey plastered building with original cellar vaults, with a gable roof, beaver tail covering, remnants of the sandstone portal with keystone above the door, there inscribed "KL 1838" and inscription: "Where good child breeding thrives, the whole fatherland is happy", plastered enclosure wall - despite the reconstruction, a monument Monument value 2011 not confirmed, monument limited to the rest of the portal. |
08958637
|
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Parsonage with parsonage, side building and enclosure | Grossenhainer Strasse 7 (map) |
18th century | Rectory with boarded timber-framed upper floor, side buildings in timber-framed construction, courtyard ensemble that has largely been preserved in its original form and is of architectural and local historical importance.
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08958636
|
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Residential house (No. 11, with attached stable building), side building (No. 11a, Ausgedingehaus with annex) and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Grossenhainer Strasse 11; 11a (card) |
around 1870 | Courtyard complex typical of the period and landscape, preserved largely in its original state, residential building from the Wilhelminian era, twin windows in the gable, side building on the upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and economic importance
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08958639
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Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard | Großenhainer Strasse 19b (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) | Half-timbered building largely preserved in its original form, rarely seen in the townscape, half-timbered upper floor plastered, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, upper floor half-timbered plastered, original windows, some with sliding windows, gable roof, beaver tail crown covering. |
08958640 |
Adelsdorf
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Memorial for the reconstruction of the village after 1950, with honor grove | Dorfstrasse - (map) |
after 1945 | local historical significance.
Brick wall with three polished red granite slabs in a row, golden inscription, above it a concrete protrusion with writing: "New life blooms out of rubble", honor grove with two linden trees and a box hedge. |
08958644
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VVN monument (memorial stone for the victims of fascism) | Eichenstrasse (map) |
after 1945 (monument) | local historical significance.
Granite stone base, on top of it a polished red granite cube with a golden inscription: "7 anti-fascists rest here, murdered by the SS in May 1945". |
08958646
|
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Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 | Eichenstrasse (map) |
re. 1922 (war memorial) | local historical significance.
Sandstone cube, designed as an iron cross in the upper third, on the front a plastic model of a helmet, inscription with the names of the dead, encircled by flower beds, the dead from the Second World War added later. |
08958645
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More pictures |
Windmill Adelsdorf (Turmholländer (rest)) | Eichenstrasse 2 (map) |
1856 | significance in terms of local history and technology history.
Location: bypass road in the direction of Folbern, three-storey stump of a tower windmill, plastered quarry stone masonry, original plaster, remains of the wooden mill. |
08958642
|
Transformer house | Eichenstrasse 7 (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.
Single-storey plastered building on a square floor plan, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, tower-like structure above, slated, tent roof, beaver tail covering, location: corner of Wilhelm-Pieck-Straße. |
08958643
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Educational farm (formerly) (residential building with barn extension and barn of a three-sided farm) | Eichenstrasse 23 (map) |
around 1920, older in essence | of architectural relevance and local historical significance for the reconstruction of the place, in the homeland style.
|
08958660 |
Blochwitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 159 as well as 41 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
Monument text: After the end of Napoleon's reign, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Truncated pyramid made of sandstone directly on the border line, number and country abbreviation chiseled on the opposite side (not colored), between 41 running stones at irregular intervals. |
08958832
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 160 and 19 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815:
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Approx. 1.50 m high, slender sandstone stele with inscription fields carved on all sides for number 160 and the country code KS / KP directly on the border line, associated with 19 running stones at irregular intervals on the border line. Remnants of a white paint finish have been preserved. |
08958711
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More pictures |
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 158 as well as 31 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Chiselled sandstone cube with chiseled inscription fields on the opposite side for number 158 and the country code KS / KP directly on the border line, associated with 31 running stones at irregular intervals on the border line. Remnants of a white paint finish have been preserved |
09305490
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Courtyard wall of a farm with two courtyard trees in front of it with a gate system | Brößnitzer Strasse 7; 7a (card) |
18th century | Relic of rural architecture in the 18th century, characterizing the streetscape and of importance in terms of building history.
Arched gate system with two side gate pillars, plastered quarry stone wall, gate pillar with multi-profiled cover plates, arched gate with weathered keystone (sandstone), gate for people at an angle, gate system flanked by two linden trees. |
08958805
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Brößnitzer Strasse 9 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered residential stable, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, two loading hatches, gable half-timbered, boarded up, back half-timbered, half-hip roof. |
08958804
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Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 | Hauptstrasse 4 (behind) (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | of local importance.
Approx. 2.70 m high sandstone cube with a large iron cross made of sandstone as a crown, in the cross relief of a naked kneeling soldier with helmet and sword, above the inscription: "Think about it", below the names of the fallen and a chiseled sword motif, monument enclosed . |
08958803
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More pictures |
Blochwitz village church (church (including furnishings), churchyard with enclosure and two tombs of the Crome family) | Hauptstrasse 6 (map) |
1576 Dendro | Outwardly simple hall church, on the south side a compact tower with a mighty dome, inside of the highest picturesque charm, of architectural, art-historical and local-historical importance.
(15.9.1845 - 10.1.1890) |
08958802
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Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 16a (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, with sandstone window and door walls, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, solid gable, partly historical windows, back half-timbered, boarded up, roof overhang, gable roof, half-hip roof facing the street, plain tile covering (forms three-sided courtyard with number 16). |
08958800
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Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 18a (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered residential stable house, bat dormers in the roof, originally preserved building typical of the time and landscape as a testimony to rural economic activity, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, with sandstone door and window walls, roof apron, upper floor half-timbered with clay infill, original casement windows, gable half-timbered, partly boarded, partly plastered, roof overhang, crooked hipped roof on the street side, saddle roof, dovecote, beaver tail covering, three bat tail rests, probably on the back made of quarry stone, (forms Dreiseithof with number 18). |
08958801
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Transformer house | Settlement 3 (near) (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.
Single-storey plastered building on a square floor plan, with a crooked hip roof as an intermediate roof, on top of a tower-like structure, tent roof. |
08958826 |
Brockwitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Memorial to the fallen of World War 2 | (Map) | after 1945 (war memorial) | local historical significance.
Large natural stone with a cross carved out on the side, granite slab with names of the fallen soldiers on the front, fencing with box hedge and bedding. |
08958657
|
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House of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfanger 17 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Half-timbered house, massive gable with lavishly designed twin windows in the gable, construction typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, solid and plastered gable, profiled stone walls, twin rectangular windows in the gable with profiled sill and straight roofing, plaster ornamentation, saddle roof. |
08958655
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Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard | Dorfanger 21 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Half-timbered upper floor plastered, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, original windows, gable half-timbered, partly plastered, partly boarded-up, gable roof. |
08958656
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Barn of a three-sided farm | Dorfanger 25 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Part of the old local structure in good original condition, wooden construction boarded up, of architectural and economic importance.
Wooden construction boarded up, eaves in the manner of bat dormers over the gate entrance, gable roof with horizontal tow hatch, beaver tail crown covering. |
08958659 |
Broessnitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 163 as well as 8 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Truncated pyramid with sandstone plinth, directly on the border line, number 163 chiseled on the opposite side and the country code KP-KS, with 8 runner stones in between at irregular intervals. |
08958820
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 162 and 12 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is of importance as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Approx. 1 m high sandstone cube with chiseled fields for number 162 and country abbreviation KS / KP directly on the border line, between 12 runner stones at irregular intervals. Country codes subsequently processed and made unrecognizable. |
08958827
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Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 161 as well as 15 runner stones (see also material document - Obj. 09305644) | (Map) | after 1828 | In terms of surveying and regional history, it is of importance as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones number 1 - 212, left Elbe number 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between number 1 and number 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From number 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, more extensive documentation is available and signs have even been put up on at least one section of the former border. (LfD / 2014). Approx. 1.50 m high, slender sandstone stele with chiseled fields for number 161 and the country code KS / KP (heavily weathered, difficult to read) directly on the border line, with 15 running stones in between at irregular intervals. |
08958831
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Road bridge over the Tränkebach | Dorfstrasse (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Stone arch bridge (quarry stone), significance in terms of architectural history.
with elongated retaining walls and parapets on both sides, one side of the bridge later widened, concrete reinforcement introduced in the base area (no serious impairment). |
08958824
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Pigeon house | Dorfstrasse 1 (map) |
19th century | largely original evidence of rural economy, of cultural and historical importance.
Rectangular floor plan, of a rare design in terms of its function as a pigeon house, boarded up wooden construction, hipped roof. |
08959143
|
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Side building (with attached bakery) of a farm | Dorfstrasse 7a (map) |
around 1800 | Evidence of rural economic activity as part of the old local structure, upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar half-timbered, gable half-timbered, boarded up, original casement windows, saddle roof, oven made of quarry stone at the rear, saddle roof. |
08958825
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Farm building (ladder house) | Dorfstrasse 9b (next to) (map) |
19th century (ladder house) | rare, still preserved example of a public building to accommodate ladders, of local historical importance.
Plastered wall parallel to the course of the street, pent roof resting on wooden posts with head struts, beaver tail covering, renovated. |
08958829
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Stangemühle (former) (side building (residential stable house), barn and stable building of the former water mill and courtyard paving) | Dorfstrasse 15; 15a (card) |
re. 1905, older in essence | Mill ensemble of local historical importance, largely preserved in its original state.
|
08958822
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Brößnitz cemetery: Tenner tomb and war memorial for those who fell in World War I in the cemetery | Dorfstrasse 20 (map) |
1924 | Sandstone tomb with inscription plaque for Friedrich Ernst and Anna Pauline Tenner (donors of the cemetery grounds to the community), significance for local history.
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09300224
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Transformer house | Dorfstrasse 24 (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.
Square plastered building with corners emphasized by wide pilaster strips, as an intermediate roof, crooked hip roof, tower-like structure, clad, tent roof. |
08958823 |
Mühlbach
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Waystone | At the brook - (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
1.80 m high sandstone cube, designed as a triangle in the upper third, inscription: "Mühlbach, Lampertswalde, Hain", heavily weathered. |
08958641 |
Niegeroda
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | (Map) | 19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. two meter high granite stele, designed as a triangle in the upper area, the inscription heavily weathered. |
08959023
|
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Waystone | Dorfstrasse (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. 1.80 m high sandstone cube with triangular recess in the upper area, inscription: "Weißig, Ortrand, Nigeroda, Brockwitz, Radeburg". |
08958811
|
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Waystone | Dorfstrasse 1 (before) (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. 1.10 m high sandstone path stone, inscription: "Oelsnitz, Brösnitz, Strauch, Feldweg / 18 ..", weathered date |
08958810
|
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Transformer house | Dorfstrasse 13 (next to) (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history
Square plastered building, as an intermediate roof, crooked hip roof, tower-like structure, clad, tent roof |
08958813
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Residential house (No. 35) and side building (residential stable house, No. 36) of a farm | Dorfstrasse 35; 36 (card) |
around 1870 (residential building) | Residential building from the Wilhelminian era, solid construction, side building with old portal, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
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08958812 |
Oelsnitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Cottage | Am Bach 14 (map) |
around 1800 | Solid construction with rare wooden window frames, a simple example of rural living, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
Single-storey quarry stone building, plastered, gable half-timbered with clay infill, boarded up, wooden window frames, gable roof, kitchen with vault in the central axis, wooden beam board ceilings, special feature in the standing roof structure: wind bracing in the central axis, large rafter spacing. |
08958818
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Manor Oelsnitz: Manor (No. 1), servants' house (No. 2), dovecote (to No. 4) and park (garden monument) of a manor | At Park 1; 2; 4 (card) |
in the core around 1770 (manor house) | Manor house in the classical style, of architectural and local historical importance
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08958815
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Waystone | At the sports field (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. 0.40 m high sandstone cube, inscription: "G.hain, Skässchen (?)" "in the lower area triangular recess. |
08958814
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Dorfkirche Oelsnitz (church (with equipment), churchyard with enclosure, war memorial for those who fell in World War I and bell chair) | Hauptstrasse 21 (map) |
1866 | of ecclesiastical and local historical importance.
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08958819 |
Quersa
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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More pictures |
Totality of the Royal Saxon Triangulation: Station 32 Basisende Quersa: State surveying system, consisting of two triangular networks, the network for measuring the degree in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points, which are marked by measurement columns (triangulation columns) as well as three base points (according to the triangulation house Quersa) (all material components) | (Map) | 1869–1870 (base endpoint) | As one of the most modern location networks in Germany, this land surveying system is an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany as well as in Saxony, the system of surveying columns of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance in terms of traffic history.
In the period from 1862 to 1890, a land survey was carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony, in which two triangular networks were formed. On the one hand, there is the network for grade measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points. This national survey was led by Prof. Christian August Nagel, according to which the triangulation columns are also called "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 three base points at Großenhain were built in order to be able to determine a scale for the degree measurement network. From the approx. 9 km long base or baseline between Quersa and Raschütz, determined with high accuracy using measuring rods, the length of the triangle side 18-Collm after 10-Keulenberg was calculated using a triangular network, the base enlargement network. As early as 1865, the decision was made to use the Großenhain area as the base area. The construction work to mark the ground points had already begun when the war of 1866 broke out. Later in the spring of 1868 the Grossenhain – Cottbus railway was too close to the survey profile. Another relocation by 300 m to the north was necessary before the current location on Communicationsweg from Folbern to Brockwitz and east of Espigweg was found and a corresponding plot of land for the base house could be purchased. The base points are built very stably, in the ground with pillars for the connection and completion of the measurement with the base rods, exactly vertically above the observation pillar for the angle measurements. Quersa is a fully preserved base point. In 2005 it was restored. (LfD / 2014). One-storey brick building with an almost square floor plan, belt strap made of quarry stone, remains of plaster, segment-arched blind niches, on one side a door made of iron, tooth cut under a profiled cornice, tent roof, decorative structure on the roof in the form of a railing-like pillars in brickwork and cross-linked stone struts, inscription of Base station not preserved, square pillar is made of Laußnitz granite, 0.3 m high. |
08958658
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Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 | Main street (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | local historical significance.
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08958650
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Transformer house | Hauptstraße 11b (near) (map) |
1st half of the 20th century | Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.
Plastered building over a square floor plan, half-hip roof as an intermediate roof, tower-like structure, slated, tent roof. |
08958651
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Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 58 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Part of the old local structure, largely originally preserved plastered building with twin windows in the gable, of architectural significance.
Two-storey quarry stone building, partly original plaster with plaster structure, sandstone window frames, arched twin windows in the gable, original windows, saddle roof. |
08958652
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Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 66 (map) |
re. 1869 | Originally preserved building as part of the old local structure, plastered quarry stone building with twin windows in the gable, of architectural significance.
Two-storey quarry stone building, plastered, original plaster with plaster grooves at the corners, ornamented belts, sandstone window frames, original windows and winter windows, saddle roof, inscribed over the door. 1869 |
08958654 |
Schönborn
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Waystone | Dorfstrasse (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. two meter high sandstone cube with the inscription: "Blochwitz, Lampertswalde, Großenhain, Ortrand, Linz, Schönborn in the district of Hain" |
08958634
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Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 | Dorfstrasse (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | local historical significance.
Two-tier pedestal, red granite base with pillars crowned with spheres on the sides, cubic structure that tapers towards the top, inscription with the names of the fallen on a polished surface, monument made of red granite. |
08958628
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Waystone | Dorfstrasse (map) |
19th century | traffic-historical importance.
Approx. two meter high sandstone cube with the inscription: "Schönfeld, Liega", at Liegaer Straße 1 |
08958630
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Side building (without extension) of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 1 (map) |
Early 19th century | Relic of rural half-timbered construction, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, solid gable, sandstone door walls with keystone. |
08958633
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Residential house, enclosure and gate entrance of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1870 | A building typical of the time and landscape that has largely been preserved in its original state, simple, Wilhelminian-style plastered facade, of architectural significance.
Two-story plastered building with profiled stone walls on both floors, 9: 4 axes, original windows, original door leaf, triple windows in the gable, remains of plastered structure on the courtyard side, hipped roof, slate covering, enclosure: wrought iron fence and gate system with three pillars. |
08958649
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Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 13 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Relic of rural architecture from the middle of the 19th century, upper floor half-timbered, massive gable, of architectural significance.
Ground floor quarry stone, courtyard side upper floor plastered, back half-timbered, original windows, sandstone window frames, massive gable, extension made of quarry stone, saddle roof. |
08958629
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Residential house (with attached stable building) and barn of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 23; 23a (card) |
re. 1899 | largely preserved in its original form, buildings typical of the time and landscape, an elaborately designed Wilhelminian style residential building, of architectural and economic importance.
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08958631
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Inn | Dorfstrasse 26 (map) |
re. 1869 | richly structured plastered facade, still with a classicistic effect, architectural and local historical significance.
Polygon base, above it a two-storey plastered building with 4: 9 axes, simple plaster structure, corner rustication, profiled stone walls on both floors, on the upper floor with straight roofing and plaster ornamentation, profiled belt and cornice, hip roof, above the lintel inscription: "Built in 1869 BC. Friedr. Karl Lion " |
08958632
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More pictures |
Schönborn Windmill (Tower Dutchman) | Dorfstrasse 31 (map) |
around 1880 | Windmill without technical equipment, evidence of rural, village supply, importance in the history of supply and technology.
Two-story tower with simple plaster structure, mezzanine floor, conical roof, operated with electricity around 1912. |
08958635
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Remains of a ring kiln from the former Schönborn brickworks | Ziegeleistraße 3 (map) |
last quarter of the 19th century | Kiln probably built according to the Hofmann system, meaning for the history of technology and production and of interest for local history as well as a massive stone building made of quarry stone with brick pillars and brick frames of the individual round-arched openings. Wall crown brick roll layer .. |
08957876 |
Whitish a. Raschütz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Forest house, garden, gates with fencing | Am Forsthaus 4 (map) |
1804 | simple three-storey plastered building, historical significance.
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08958830
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Windmill Weißig a. Raschütz (Tower Dutchman) | At the mill 4 (near) (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | local historical and mill-technical significance.
with wind turbine (mill wing), tower-like structure made of quarry stone masonry, presumably three-story, sandstone window frames, folded conical roof. |
08958807
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Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 11 (map) |
re. 1893 | Wilhelminian style solid building with twin windows in the gable, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
two-storey quarry stone building, plastered, stone walls, in the rear area two gate entrances with round arches, original windows, profiled stone door walls, marked 1893 above the door, profiled stone walls on the gable and simple plaster structure, twin rectangular windows in the gable triangle, straight roofing of the windows, saddle roof, (forms Dreiseithof with number 12). |
08958809
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Side building of a three-sided courtyard | Hauptstrasse 17 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Half-timbered residential stable house, part of the old local structure, structurally significant, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, massive gable, sandstone door walls, some winter windows, gable roof, (forms three-sided courtyard with number 16). |
08958808
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Waystone | Niegerodaer Strasse (map) |
19th century | Traffic-historical importance approx. 1.50 m high granite stele with remains of an inscription, otherwise heavily weathered. |
08958833 |
Remarks
- ↑ The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .