List of cultural monuments in Mockrehna

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Coat of arms of Mockrehna

The list of cultural monuments in Mockrehna includes the cultural monuments of the Saxon community of Mockrehna that were recorded by the State Office for Monument Preservation of Saxony until May 2020 (excluding archaeological cultural monuments). The notes are to be observed.

This list is a subset of the list of cultural monuments in the district of North Saxony .

Mockrehna

image designation location Dating description ID
Station with reception building, toilet building, shed, goods shed, pavement, chestnut avenue and platform as well as two signal boxes (one on Schildauer Straße)
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Station with reception building, toilet building, shed, goods shed, pavement, chestnut avenue and platform as well as two signal boxes (one on Schildauer Straße) Bahnhofstrasse 2, 3 (Schildauer Strasse 5)
(map)
1872 (opening of the railway line) Located on the Halle – Cottbus railway line (route number 6345); Entrance building designed in the arched style of architectural importance, corner location to Schildauer Strasse (pavement), as an ensemble well-preserved technical monument of the history of transport 08966511
 
Railway house and shed Molkereiweg 3
(map)
Around 1880 Clinker brick construction typical of the time, of importance in terms of railway and local history.
  • Railway house (beyond the railroad tracks): two-story, solid ground floor (porphyry quarry stone on the gable side), upper floor red clinker brick, eight window axes on the eaves side, segmented arched windows, old windows, brick sills, cornice tooth frieze (Zigelstein), gable roof, plain tile covering, one gable side plastered , eaves side entrance (originally also street side), purlin roof, profiled purlin heads
  • Shed in the courtyard: one storey with jamb, brick, five segment arch entrances, segment arch windows, loading hatches and wooden shutters in the jamb, pent roof, low extension (toilet) on the gable side, old windows
08966512
 
Pigeon house of a three-sided farm
Pigeon house of a three-sided farm Reichsstrasse 12
(map)
Early 20th century Evidence of rural economy. Box-like pigeon house erected on a stump stand, boarded up, concrete base, small arched windows / entry holes in the dovecote, saddle roof (roofing felt), gable. 08966514
 
Inn (Alter Reichshof) and enclosure wall with gate system of a former four-sided courtyard
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Inn (Alter Reichshof) and enclosure wall with gate system of a former four-sided courtyard Reichsstrasse 21
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In the core 1636/1638 The town's largest and street-defining courtyard, of great architectural historical interest, as an imperial court on the military and trade route from Leipzig to Breslau, of local historical importance. The inn originally belonged to the Erbrichtergut (Hauptstraße 25) until 1872 (under the Erbrichter and innkeeper Nölle) 08966507
 
Manor house of the former Erbrichtgut
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Manor house of the former Erbrichtgut Reichsstrasse 25
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2nd half of the 18th century Today the registry office and library, formerly an agricultural museum, a baroque building that characterizes the town and is of great importance in terms of architectural, regional and local history. Two-storey, solid, plastered, rectangular window with bezels (gray), cross-frame windows (renewed), grated ground floor, corner pilasters, cornice strips (plastered) with accompanying lines (grooves), middle window on the gable side on the upper floor and blind windows painted on the eaves on the upper floor ( trompe-l'œil Painting), partly sandstone walls, one-storey later extension on the eaves side (in the middle) with wide segmented arched window and purlin roof with profiled rafter heads. Other side of the eaves in the middle of the staircase tower (from 1821): two-storey with a mansard roof and ornamental framework on the upper floor and gable, profiled lugs, heavily profiled wooden eaves, boarded gable in the upper part, on the ground floor a rectangular entrance with sandstone walls, door renewed, overall mansard hipped roof, beaver tail covering (new), three towers, two-storey roof, eaves cornice plastered on the gable side, the eaves side solid, profiled and plastered. Inside the original entrance portal (segment arch), groin vaults in the former kitchen, lintel arches (baroque), well hole, wooden beam ceiling, double doors (three-panel doors) on the upper floor, drawn forge, old roof structure. Last owner: Heinrich Nölle (since 1857), previously the Wirsich family and later Lichtenberger. 08966508
 
Tower Dutchman of the "Windmill Richter"
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Tower Dutchman of the "Windmill Richter" Schildauer Strasse 17
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1883 start of construction, labeled “W. Richter 1883 "(weather vane) Of importance in terms of technology, history and the image of the town. Tower windmill made of quarry stone (porphyry) on a circular floor plan, plastered (1967), 15.50 m high, diameter at the base 12 m, 16 m rod net (was turned into the wind by the compass rose, power: approx. 30 hp), Wall thickness 1.20 m, tapered towards the top, segmented arched windows on four sides, brick eaves (tooth cut), roof hood originally sheet metal covering, now roofing felt labeled 1982, weather vane labeled 1883, inside old mill technology (wooden elevator, still functional), mixing machines from approx. 1930, roller mill from the middle of the 20th century, original roof structure with beams, but no longer rotatable, further fixtures from the 1970s, diesel engine removed.

Mill was built by master miller Wilhelm Richter, in 1887 the house was built, in 1922 son Willi Richter rebuilds the mill, 1928 storage building, 1937 installation of aspirator, trieur, peeling machine and pre-squeezer and a two-part plansifter with central aspiration, in 1962 Martin Richter takes over the operation, 1991 his son Volker Richter, who leads him to this day after reprivatisation (compound feed production).

08966515
 
Barn and stable building of a three-sided courtyard as well as gate pillars of the gate entrance Unterdorf 3
(map)
Mid 19th century As a clay barn of architectural significance, it forms an ensemble with the church opposite in the center of the village.
  • Barn: two-storey, courtyard side and gable quarry stone, partly plastered, street side clay corrugated wall, partly plastered, stepped eaves (brick), total quarry stone plinth, gable triangle brick, street side walled gate with wooden beam lintel as well as segment arch gate (single-storey add-on gate, walls), wooden arched door no memorial), gable roof (concrete tile, brickwork tile), on the courtyard side two large segment arch gates (brick walls) and in the middle a small segment arch entrance, on the upper floor former loading hatches, laterally walled segment arch gate
  • Stable: two-storey, solid, quarry stone, plastered, rectangular windows on the ground floor, brick walls on the upper floor, loading hatches with wooden shutters, window sashes, jagged eaves cornice (brick tooth frieze), gable roof, beaver tail covering, three bat dormers
  • Enclosure: three rectangular gate pillars, quarry stone and brick, plastered several times, artificial stone cover plate with ball attachment (artificial stone), gate with car protectors, people's gate
08966510
 
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Unterdorf 11 (before)
(map)
After 1918 Significant in local history. Sandstone memorial stone, square beveled plinth, stepped, high rectangular sandstone cuboid, painted over white, fluted 3/4 columns in the middle, inscription on black granite plaque on two sides “To commemorate the dead of two world wars” “To remind the living” 1914 –1918, 1939–1945, pyramidal top (oak leaf relief and iron cross), erected as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War, memorial plaques attached after 1990. 08966516
 
Church with furnishings, church yard, a tomb and enclosure wall
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Church with furnishings, church yard, a tomb and enclosure wall Unterdorf 40
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Around 1208 (church); End of the 18th century (tomb) Romanesque choir tower church, of architectural, art-historical and local significance, of high artistic value 08966509
 

Audenhain

image designation location Dating description ID
St. Petri Church with fittings, a churchyard with a fence and a memorial for those who fell in World War I, as well as a tomb in the adjacent cemetery
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St. Petri Church with fittings, a churchyard with a fence and a memorial for those who fell in World War I, as well as a tomb in the adjacent cemetery Am Kirchhof
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Late Romanesque core (church); Mid-19th century (tomb); after 1918 (war memorial) Late Romanesque hall church, plastered building with retracted choir and apse as well as west tower, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: single-nave late Romanesque hall church, solid (field and quarry stones), plastered, recessed choir and apse, west tower with a transverse rectangular floor plan, on the upper floor an octagonal top, above it a hood and lantern, arched windows, Romanesque portal on the north side and arched windows in the east walled up, later Portal porch on the west side with hipped roof on square supports and raised choir, saddle roof (beaver tail covering) and conical roof (apse), north side round arched portal with triangular roofing, inside flat covered, three-sided galleries, groin vault in the choir, furnishings 2nd half of the 19th century, late Gothic figures (life-size Crucifix, Maria, Johannes ?, around 1500, female saints, Mother of God enthroned, around 1400), romantic organ by Gottlieb Schönberg (1840–43)
  • War memorial: Natural stone stele (sandstone) on a cross-shaped floor plan on a base, oak leaf relief, cross attachment (all view) as an iron cross, sword relief in the side panel, labeled 1914, below the inscription panel removed, at the side oval relief with sun motif, on two sides inscription panel made of black glass, only partially available, death symbolism torch relief (directed downwards) and laurel relief (garland)
  • Enclosure: partly quarry stone wall, partly clinker wall, square entrance gate pillars made of clinker with sandstone top
  • In the cemetery to the south of the churchyard, which was built later, a single grave monument of the Mitdank family: square sandstone stele on a base, floral reliefs, a cross
08966390
 
School building (older school)
School building (older school) Am Kirchhof 1
(map)
1837 Local and cultural-historical significance, forms typical ensemble with church. One-storey, solid, plastered, hipped roof (renewed), courtyard-side central entrance (rectangular) with keystone, renewed, bezels, profiled eaves, another central entrance with keystone on the street side. 08966387
 
Waystone
Waystone Am Kirchhof 2 (in front of)
(map)
19th century Sandstone stele with inscription, of importance in terms of traffic history. Sandstone stele on a square floor plan with inscriptions "Gräfendorf, Klitzschen, Torgau, Schöna, Probsthain, Schildau" (carved writing, white framed) and carved direction arrows, approx. 90 cm high, 30 cm × 30 cm (the original stone was reworked according to the old model and set up again at the old location). 08966388
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 5
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18./19. century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966383
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 11
(map)
18th century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966382
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 16
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Originally 18th century, renewed Formative component of the bridge system typical for the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966428
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 17
(map)
18th century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966429
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 20
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18th century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966430
 
Mill building with mill technology and ditch, side building, barn (without extension), stable and coach house Am Schwarzen Graben 23
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Around 1800 The last watermill in the village still preserved with equipment, of importance in terms of building history, local history and technology history. In operation until the 1970s, partially operational until today, water inlet ditch filled in, but preserved under the house, all in all saddle roofs
  • Mill building: two-storey, solid, plastered, upper floor probably half-timbered, entrance house on the courtyard side, steep pitched roof, brickwork, inside mill technology and overbuilt mill ditch, paddle wheel with beam, shaft, mill wheel, gear wheels, funnel, millstone, transmission shaft
  • Outbuildings: single-storey, solid, plastered, old door and windows, door jambs with skylight, window frames, winter windows, gable roof (crown roof, beaver tail covering), wooden eaves, wooden windows in the gable
  • Barn: one-storey, solid, plastered, wooden gate with people's gate, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Remise: one-storey, solid, plastered, very low construction, gable roof, beaver tail covering, wooden gates
  • Stable: two-storey, solid, plastered, two entrances with skylights, wooden gates, gable roof, beaver tail covering (barn extension no monument)
08966389
 
Cottage
Cottage Am Schwarzen Graben 69 (next to)
(map)
Around 1800 One-storey plastered building preserved in its original appearance, of structural and social significance. Solid (quarry stone), plastered, slightly bent gable roof (brickwork tile) with attachments on both sides, storage hatch in the form of an elongated cantilever, original entrance door on the eaves with skylight, rectangular window, winter window in the gable, second entrance (to the stable part) with skylight. 08966378
 
House and side building of a Hakenhof
House and side building of a Hakenhof Am Schwarzen Graben 74
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Mid 18th century (farmhouse); Late 19th century (side building) Half-timbered building that characterizes the townscape, the only building in the village with visible half-timbering, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential building: two-storey, solid ground floor, plastered, upper storey and gable half-timbered (beautifully structured half-timbered gable), plastered compartments, partly original wooden windows (e.g. on the upper storey swing-sash or sliding window in the middle of the 18th century), saddle roof / tailcoat roof, new interlocking tiles , horizontal roof structure, too large gable roof dormers (new)
  • Stable barn: at an angle to the house, two-storey, solid (brick and quarry stone), plastered, clinker structure, segmented arched window and segmented arched door with clinker lintel arches, on the upper floor round windows with brick walls (plastered) and small rectangular windows, gable roof (plain tile roofing and rebated tiles)
08966379
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 93
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18th century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966432
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 106
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18th century, renewed Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966433
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 111
(map)
18th century, renewed Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966434
 
Residential stable house with front garden, side building (former horse stable), garden pavilion, pigeon house, courtyard pavement and enclosure of a four-sided courtyard
Residential stable house with front garden, side building (former horse stable), garden pavilion, pigeon house, courtyard pavement and enclosure of a four-sided courtyard Am Schwarzen Graben 117
(map)
Around 1800 (farmhouse); around 1900 (horse stable); marked 1943 (pigeon house and garden pavilion) Testimony to the rural way of life and economy of bygone times, largely original building fabric, folkloric importance.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, solid, plastered, gable roof, carved entrance portal on the courtyard side (1943) with the inscription “The old mill last memory” (reuse of parts of the demolished windmill), rectangular windows (older windows, 2nd half of the 19th century), profiled eaves, old ones Doors, inside presumably a wooden beam ceiling
  • Horse stable: two-storey, solid, plastered, courtyard side dwelling with gable turret in the form of carved horse heads as well as semicircular windows with radial bars
  • Pigeon house in the courtyard: wooden square base, above a column and octagonal dovecote with entry holes as well as a tent roof and spherical attachment
  • wooden square garden gazebo
  • Cottage garden, quarry stone wall (dry stone wall) with two square gate pillars
08966380
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Am Schwarzen Graben 117
(map)
18th century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966431
 
School building, so-called small school Am Schwarzen Graben 127
(map)
1861 Local and cultural-historical significance, forms typical ensemble with church. Small school parallel to the school from 1837. Single-storey, solid, plastered, gable roof (curled tiles), rectangular courtyard-side entrance with keystone marked 1861, twin windows in the gable, rectangular windows, probably sandstone walls, entrance door with skylight, both buildings facing the village street. 08966387
 
Entrance door of the former "Zur Linde" inn Am Schwarzen Graben 136
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Late 19th century In Niederaudenhain, high quality craftsmanship, of art historical importance. Wooden door with round-arched skylight, skylight rungs in radial form, partly corrugated, the building itself has been greatly changed. 08966386
 
Paltrock windmill
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Paltrock windmill Heath 47
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1751 The only functioning windmill type in the region around Torgau, a landmark of the place that can be seen from afar, a rare example of a Paltrock mill with a winged cross and compass rose, of importance in terms of building history, technology history and landscape design.
  • History of the mill: built in 1751 as a post mill, 1938 conversion to Paltrockmühle, 1942 installation of the Merz flat sifter, 1950 installation of the roller mills, 1956 extension of the silo (2 cells), 1972 installation of the hammer mill system, 1991–1993 reconstruction. In 1938 the post mill from the Schenke company from Falkenberg / E. converted to a Paltrock windmill with a protruding roof. Commercial use of the mill for contract milling, from 1946 to 1969 as a commercial milling, today used for the production of forage shredded if required. Mill was used as a lookout tower during the Seven Years' War in 1760.
  • Mill technology: aspirator (grinder), trieur, peeling machine, two roller mills 300 × 600, net screw, two automatic hopper, pre-squeezer, blue meal cylinder, Merz flat sifter, three standing round mixers, standing container, two millstones (diameter 1 m), pinwheel made of four rods on an iron one Corrugated head, comb wheel equipped with 96 horns beech combs, the Paltrockmühle is rotated automatically by the compass rose (with a basement, placed in the middle on a brick foundation with slide bearings, diameter 600 mm), the mill is supported on the outside of the basement wall on iron rollers with iron rails rotatably mounted, six-winged compass rose on the mill roof, which transmits the rotary movement in the direction of the wind (through a chain drive on the worm shaft, which engages in the ring gear in the cellar wall).
08966384
 
Moving out house, side building attached to the north and northern barn of a former four-sided courtyard Huxel 26
(map)
Early 19th century (moving house); 2nd half of the 19th century (barn) Upper floor half-timbered pull-out house, testimony to the way of living and economy of bygone times, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Pull-out house: two-storey, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, gable massively renewed, gable roof, partly beaver tail covering, old entrance door with skylight
  • Drive-through barn: two-storey, solid, plastered, two segment arch gates with keystone, saddle roof, hand-painted plain tiles, segment arch windows, square windows on the upper floor, entrance door with skylight, inside Prussian caps, street-side segment arch gate with keystone, massive eaves, rubble stone, unplastered
  • Stable: two-story, solid, plastered, entrance door with skylight, segmental arch entrance, loading hatches on the upper floor, gable roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, overall very poor state of construction
08966501
 
St. Mary's Church with furnishings, churchyard and enclosure as well as a memorial for the fallen of the First World War
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St. Mary's Church with furnishings, churchyard and enclosure as well as a memorial for the fallen of the First World War Mockrehnaer Strasse
(map)
Core 1st half of the 13th century (church); around 1920 (war memorial) Late Romanesque hall church, plastered building with retracted, just closing choir and baroque small west tower, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: in the core late Romanesque hall church, changed several times, solid (field and quarry stone), plastered, recessed choir with a straight end, baroque set west tower, square with concave curved mansard tent roof, beaver tail covering, on the bell storey oval window and arched window, spherical attachment, weather vane and cross , overall saddle roof (beaver tail covering), bat dormers, arched windows and basket-arched windows, on the north side sacristy extension with arched entrance, enlarged arched window above, flat-roofed inside, pointed arched triumphal arch to the choir, galleries on the west and north side (2nd half of the 19th century), late Gothic carved figures (Saint Anna and Maria, end of the 15th century), small wooden crucifix, organ by Wilhelm Böttcher from Weimar (1903), rebuilt by A. Voigt in 1912
  • War memorial: generous architectural complex with flanking pillars, crowned by a helmet on laurel wreaths, parapet fields in the form of iron crosses, two-winged lattice gate, inscription plaque in a wide pillar, crowned by an eagle, light artificial stone
08966392
 
Gate system and entrance door of the back building Strellner Strasse 1
(map)
Late 19th century (entrance door); around 1930 (gate entrance) Highly designed courtyard gate of artistic quality, singular meaning, as well as high-quality Wilhelminian style door.
  • Gate system: three square gate pillars made of dark red burnt brick, gate and gate for people, stylized capital with raised German ribbon (brick), gate wing, original sheet iron, screwed, wrought iron crown, geometric structure
  • Entrance door: wood, richly decorated and designed, leaf-shaped wrought iron grille, original door lock, is located on the back of the extension of the stable house
08966374
 
Manor house with extensions and side buildings of a former estate and estate park (Gut und Gutspark Feuerstein) Strellner Strasse 10, 11
(map)
In the first half of the 18th century (manor house); 19th century (farm buildings) Basically a baroque mansion with later renovations, of local and settlement historical importance.
  • Manor house: two-storey, plastered, possibly half-timbered, hipped roof with bat dormers, beaver tail covering, windows partially changed
  • Extension (2nd half of the 19th century): also two-storey, solid, plastered, half-hipped roof, rectangular windows, semicircular windows in the gable, vestibule on the eaves with entrance and bay annex with tent roof, folded tiles, some original windows
  • Another extension on the back (around 1910): two-storey, solid, plastered, mansard roof (interlocking tiles) with loft extensions and massive vertical box dormers, tower-like corner projection with arcade opening on the ground floor (segment arched passage), some original windows, some window sizes changed
  • Stable building: two-story, solid, plastered, segmented arched windows, old windows, wooden gates and loading hatches, gable roof (beaver tail covering), linden trees in the park and kidney-shaped fountains
08966373
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Strellner Strasse 13
(map)
18./19. century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch, mixed masonry (brick and quarry stone). 08966391
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Strellner Strasse 17
(map)
18./19. century A characteristic feature of the townscape is the bridge system typical of the structure of the town, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms 08966370
 
Arch bridge over the Schwarzen Graben Strellner Strasse 20
(map)
18./19. century Formative part of the bridge system typical of the structure of the place, which originally consisted of 70 bridges that led to the individual farms. Single arch quarry stone bridge, led in a flat arch over the Black Trench, mixed masonry, quarry stone. 08966369
 

Graefendorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone (Corridor 7, parcel 28/2)
(map)
Around 1900 Granite stele with inscription, of traffic history, carved inscription with directional arrows "Torgau", "Mockrehne" and "Gräfendorf" 08966468
 
Stone cross
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Stone cross (Corridor 4, parcel 45)
(map)
1723 Significant in local history. Sandstone cross, a cross arm and cross tip broken off (shot at in 1945), erected in 1723 in memory of a forester who was shot by a poacher. 08966525
 
Barn of a forester's yard (Forsthaus II, Försterei Gräfendorf II) Forsthaus 1
(map)
1857 Together with the forester's house I (Wildenhainer Straße 2), evidence of forestry in typical local clinker construction. On the gable side facing the street, single-storey, clinker base, red brick, half-timbered with clinker infill, St. Andrew's cross in the jamb, large barn door on the eaves side with iron fittings (no drive-through barn) in the central axis, on the gable side a boarded-up extension, stable window (segmented arched and rectangular window) made of iron, gable roof, plain tile roofing , Crown cover, a gable half-timbered, boarded gable top. 08966518
 
Manor house of the former manor
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Manor house of the former manor Lindenallee 15
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Around 1820 Striking plastered building with elaborate structure and a crooked hip roof with several roof houses, of architectural and local significance. Two-storey, solid, plastered, grooved ground and upper storey, plaster structure, segment arch portal (artificial stone) with the inscription "Go in, go out, stay a friend of the house", palm relief on the side, granite steles, door with skylight, rectangular window with shutters, cross-frame window, crooked hip roof, Plain tail covering, sill cornice, sills, profiled eaves, one-storey extension on the gable side with entrance and terrace, two-storey roof with wooden gable roof dormer windows, brick forge, balcony on the eaves side in the central axis, profiled cornice, completely renovated. 08966469
 
Side building and wash house of a forester's yard (Forsthaus I, Försterei Gräfendorf I) Weidenhainer Strasse 2
(map)
1857 (outbuilding); 1897 (horse stable) Together with the forester's house II (on the B 87), evidence of the forestry that characterizes Gräfendorf using clinker brick construction typical of the area. Forestry Office Falkenberg, Forstrevier Gräfendorf (forester's house not a monument)
  • Side building (horse stable with storage on the upper floor): two-story, red clinker building, on the ground floor stable, on the upper floor half-timbered with clinker infill, storage, segmental arched entrances with wooden gates, segmented arched windows, flat gable roof (purlin roof with profiled rafter heads), roofing felt, brick cornice (tooth cut), loading hatch on the upper floor, wooden shutters, single-storey extension on the gable side
  • Wash house: single-storey red brick building, gable roof, plain tile roofing, segmental arch entrance on the gable side, wooden gate, rectangular windows, old windows
08966517
 

Klitzschen

image designation location Dating description ID
House of a three-sided courtyard Alte Bahnhofstrasse 3
(map)
Around 1900 Well-structured, sophisticatedly designed, urban-looking building from the turn of the century, of architectural significance. Two-storey, solid, plastered, ground floor plastering, rectangular window with keystone, upstairs window framed by corner pilasters, straight profiled roofing, profiled sills, plastered structure, eaves side on the upper floor center window with triangular gable, saddle roof (curled brick), in the gable arched window. 08966482
 
Manor house (Rittergut Klitzschen) and memorial stone in the nearby forest
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Manor house (Rittergut Klitzschen) and memorial stone in the nearby forest Am Gut 1
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Around 1800, older northern part (manor house); 1910 (memorial stone) Plastered building with features of the reform style around 1910, essentially older, remarkable original interior fittings, of architectural and local significance.
  • Former mansion of the landowner Lautenschläger: two-storey, solid, plastered, in the middle a dwarf house or risalit with a gable roof (concrete tile), on the back entrance risalit with covered entrance with original entrance door (ornamental grille) and gable, side risalit with semicircular staircase tower and wooden spiral staircase , some old windows with skylight bars and winter windows, construction changed several times, (no basement), originally on an angular floor plan,
  • Remarkable interiors: original staircase with wooden ceilings (around 1910), leaded glass windows, on the ground floor a fireplace made of molded ceramic bricks, on the upper floor a mansion's room with built-in cupboards, semicircular bay window with leaded glass windows, wooden panels, original room doors
  • Memorial stone in the former park, roughly hewn granite stone, on two sides the inscription "Georg Friedrich Jung / January 7, 1910." and "Can't you look yourself / anymore / Where you spent with friends / Where you made it with love, / The memory lives on. "
08966481
 
Cantor and teacher residence with school annex and toilet block Dorfanger 4
(map)
Mid 19th century (house); around 1880 (school) Teacher's house on the upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential house: two-storey, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, gable half-timbered, plastered, eaves-side entrance with scratched walls (sandstone), in the gable old window with wooden walls, wooden eaves, gable roof (concrete tile), inside original staircase with wooden railing, old room doors
  • former school on the gable side: single-storey, solid, plastered, on the eaves side large arched entrance with skylight and keystone, original entrance door, granite steps, large rectangular windows, old windows, gable roof (bricked roof), profiled eaves (solid)
  • Behind it, a small, separate toilet building: one-storey, solid, plastered, gable roof, beaver tail covering
08966483
 
Gasthaus "Zum Wilddieb" with hall extension
Gasthaus "Zum Wilddieb" with hall extension Dorfanger 5
(map)
Inscribed with 1807 Half-timbered gable that characterizes the street scene, of architectural and local significance.
  • Inn: two-storey, solid, quarry stone, gable on the upper floor half-timbered, door jambs sandstone, rectangular windows, inside lintel arches (basket arches), half-hipped roof and tailcoat roof, large bat dormers
  • Hall extension: single-storey, solid, quarry stone, segmented arched windows, sills, large segmented arched gate on the gable side (brick lintel), gable roof
08966478
 
Church with church furnishings, churchyard and enclosure wall with a walled-in grave cross, memorial for those who fell in World War I on the west facade of the church and five tombs on the church wall
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Church with church furnishings, churchyard and enclosure wall with a walled-in grave cross, memorial for those who fell in World War I on the west facade of the church and five tombs on the church wall Dorfanger 39
(map)
Around 1200 (church); marked 1688 (altar); 1730 (gallery); 2nd half of the 17th century (field ceiling); marked 1583 (bell) Romanesque hall church made of field and quarry stones, three-part staggering in hall, choir and apse, on the west side octagonal wooden roof turret with hood, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: Hall church made of field and quarry stones, rectangular nave (single nave), semicircular apse with conical roof, retracted choir, corner cuboid made of lawn iron stone, on the north side sacristy extension with a sloping roof, arched window, on the west facade entrance portal (basket arch) with keystone, overall saddle roof, plain tile covering , on the west side, octagonal wooden roof turret with hood, knob and weather vane, profiled wooden eaves, gaupe
  • Remarkable interior: field ceiling with original painting, three-sided gallery, baroque painting with the coat of arms and name of the patron, patron's box, bells and Vasa Sacra
  • War memorial: on the west facade of the church (to the left of the entrance portal) set in a round-arched niche (with side pilasters and keystone, straight roofing), cuboid sandstone stele with a straight strong attachment and steel helmet plastic, as well as laurel relief, on the front side corner pilasters and in the middle inscription plaque "Your in World wars 1914–1918 dedicated in gratitude to fallen heroes by the community of Klitzschen ”, including granite tablet“ Heroes died ... ”and the names of the fallen
  • Five tombs on the church wall
  • Enclosure of the churchyard: quarry stone wall, unplastered porphyry stones, on the outside of the enclosure wall a walled grave cross made of sandstone (Latin cross) with the inscription "Here Theodore Meyer rests" (partly illegible), in the lower part a negative form of a standing figure (only outlines recognizable)
08966479
 
Rectory with annex, side building and former wash house of the rectory Dorfanger 40
(map)
Around 1800 (rectory); around 1900 (wash house) Rectory upper floor timber-frame boarded up, of architectural and local significance, forms an ensemble with the neighboring church.
  • Rectory: two-storey, solid ground floor, plastered, upper storey half-timbered, boarded up, rectangular windows, mansard hipped roof, beaver tail covering (crown covering), boarded gable, gable roof dormer windows, two-storey extension on the gable side (two window axes wide) with gable roof, plastered beaver tail covering, both floors Also on the gable side, a single-storey barn extension made of quarry stone, plastered, further overhanging roof, pitched roof (steep), boarded gable triangle
  • Wash house parallel opposite: single-storey red brick building, profiled eaves (brick), gable roof, plain tile roofing, crown roofing, arched windows in the gable, sills, rectangular windows, shutters, old windows, double-winged wooden door on the courtyard side (three-panel door with skylight), conversion to the cemetery hall
08966480
 

Langenreichenbach

image designation location Dating description ID
Rectory with parish barn and enclosure
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Rectory with parish barn and enclosure Am Heidelbach 97
(map)
Keystone marked 1804 Rectory presumably partly half-timbered on the upper floor, of architectural and local significance.
  • Rectory: two-storey, solid, sandstone walls, arched entrance with marked keystone, rectangular window, cross-storey window and winter window on the upper floor, plastered gable, hipped roof, profiled eaves, concrete tiles, eaves-side single-storey extension (possibly a bakery?)
  • Barn: one-storey, solid, quarry stone, plastered, elongated building, gable roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, wooden gates, partly lintel, brick gable triangle, boarded loading hatch with wooden shutters.
08966471
 
Waystone Main street
(map)
Around 1900 Sandstone stele with an inscription and a pyramidal closure, meaning of transport history. Chiseled inscription and direction arrows, "Langenreichenbach" and "Torgau 10 km", "Schildau 4 km" and "Klitzschen 2 km". 08966519
 
Transformer station
Transformer station Hauptstraße 24 (in front of)
(map)
Around 1910 Testimony to electrification, rare design, characterizing the townscape, testimony to electrification, of importance in terms of supply and technology history. Square floor plan, clinker base, rectangular entrance with straight roofing on strong beveled consoles, beaver tail covering, light yellow plaster, wooden box eaves, mansard tent roof, beaver tail covering, spherical top, tapering at the top on all four sides, blind niches (round arched). 08966474
 
Church and churchyard with enclosure as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War
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Church and churchyard with enclosure as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War Kirchstrasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 12th century (church); after 1918 (war memorial) Romanesque choir tower church, plastered quarry stone building with set choir tower, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: with apse (conical roof), tower on a rectangular floor plan with dwarf gable and triangular gable, lantern, point, slate covering, sphere, weather vane, rectangular window and ox eye in the tower, sacristy annex to the south and north side (square), nave with arched window, gable roof, beaver tail covering, Bat dormers, west facade entrance portal (basket arch) with fighter, straight roof
  • Enclosure: field stone wall, plastered, beaver tail covering
  • Entrance portal: three-step wall, raised in the middle, large arched gate, above the inscription “I want to give peace in this place. Hagg. 2.10 ”(outside) and“ Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord. Rev. Joh. 14.13 "(inside), flanked by two small people gates (round arches, partly walled up)
  • War memorial: reddish porphyry stele, raised in the middle with attic and triangular gable, iron cross (relief) and two figurative reliefs (angel / Fama with dead warrior), inscription "1914, 1918" and "your fallen heroes the grateful community of Langenreichenbach", in the names of the fallen in art deco frames on the side panels
08966470
 
Drubig post mill
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Drubig post mill Kirchstrasse 30 (near)
(map)
19th century Ruinous building with preserved mill technology, of local history, technical history and landscape design significance. Mill box with boarded half-timbered frame, rectangular floor plan, gable roof, wooden shingles, trestle, grinding passage, wing cross and codend partially preserved. 08966476
 
Mill building with mill technology and residential part with an angled floor plan (mill Rudolph Kretschmar)
Mill building with mill technology and residential part with an angled floor plan (mill Rudolph Kretschmar) Mühlgasse 1
(map)
Around 1900 (mill); Mid 20th century (mill technology) Watermill, of importance in terms of technology and local history.
  • Mill building: two-storey with jamb, solid, plastered, on an angular floor plan, segmented arched windows and rectangular windows, four-storey interior with old mill technology, shotgun with millstone, elevator, shaft drive, two mixing machines, roller mill (mid-20th century and around 1900)
  • Miller's house built at an angle: two-storey, solid, plastered, in the roof storage room, half-hip roof and gable roof, beaver tail covering, rectangular windows, cornice strips, doors and windows renewed
08966521
 
Manor house of the former manor Langenreichenbach (also Rittergut Zech) Zechs Weg 1
(map)
Around 1830 Named after the last manor owner Heinrich Zech, stately plastered building with a crooked hip roof, the exterior was negatively simplified, remnants of the original classicist facade structure have been preserved, of local and regional significance 09305096
 

Nice

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone
Waystone Salzstraße 26 (near), at the junction to Röcknitz and Strellen
(map)
19th century Sandstone stele with inscription, meaning of transport history. Square, partly weathered, carved inscription “Mölbitz”, “Schildau, Strelln” (difficult to read). 08966497
 
Church with furnishings, churchyard, enclosure wall and Masonic tombstone
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Church with furnishings, churchyard, enclosure wall and Masonic tombstone School loop
(card)
1st half of the 13th century (remains of the church) Mainly a late Romanesque hall church, rebuilt in the 15th century, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: single-nave, solid, plastered, arched windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, rectangular west tower with octagonal bell storey and Welscher hood (roofing paper), knob, weather vane, round arched bell tower windows, profiled eaves (solid), in the east 3/8 choir and rectangular sacristy annex
  • Masonic grave stone: sandstone stele on a rectangular base, front with triangular gable and figural relief (heavily weathered), framed by half-columns (Ionic capitals), the inscription carved on the back: “You who like to weep with me. And on the day of grief During the long lamentation, Consoling you have united around me: Hail to you! “, Relief six-pointed star
  • After 1990, a new war memorial was erected in the churchyard in front of the church choir, not a memorial
08966496
 
House of a former four-sided courtyard School loop 28
(card)
Late 18th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance. Two-storey, solid ground floor, rectangular windows, old wooden windows on the upper floor, partly sandstone window frames on the ground floor, steep pitched roof (concrete brickwork tiles), wooden eaves (profiled on the street side), solid gable, one-storey later annex on the courtyard side, inside cellar vaults, original doors (two-field doors ), on the upper floor baroque arches (basket arches), horizontal roof truss. 08966502
 

Strelln

image designation location Dating description ID
Manor park and avenue of the former manor Am Gutshof 3
(map)
18th century Of local history and garden art significance. Park on a hillside arranged in a ring around the manor house, remnants of the old trees. The Strelln manor was first mentioned in a document in 1445. It belonged to the noble families von Nischwitz, von Ploetz and von Arnstedt. In the middle of the 18th century it came into the possession of the von Hoym family, where it remained until 1830. From the middle of the 19th century, it was exclusively owned by bourgeois owners. The manor park was probably created at the end of the 18th century and was created as a landscape park. However, it can be assumed that ornamental and farm gardens existed before. Remnants of the path system have been preserved in the park, as have valuable old trees, including linden, hornbeam, English oak, red beech, sycamore maple and black pine. There are two stately blood beeches near the former location of the manor house; in the former farm yard four linden trees, which originally formed a row of trees in front of the facade of the building. One of the two ponds of the manor has been preserved, the other can be seen in the grounds. After the manor house was demolished in 2016, the manor park is the last testimony to the manor Strelln and is therefore of particular importance in terms of local history and garden history. The manor house and entrance gate were demolished in 2016. 08966504
 
Gasthaus “Zum Gambrinus” and hall construction of an inn Doberschützer Strasse 2
(map)
Mid 19th century Upper floor half-timbered restaurant plastered, massive hall with large arched windows, building that characterizes the locality and is significant in terms of local history.
  • Gasthaus (stable house): two-story, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, wooden sills, courtyard-side entrance with wooden walls, original entrance door with skylight (two-field door), partly cross-storey windows and winter windows, rectangular windows, inside basket arches, barn entrance with skylight, wooden eaves, gable roof, Brick bricks, single-storey extension on the eaves side (towards the pond)
  • Hall: two-storey, gable-side facing the street, basement access, central staircase to the hall, double-leaf entrance door with skylight (stained glass), rectangular window with sills, plastered structure, parapet with segmental arch gable crowning (center), hall elongated to the rear with round arched windows, gable roof (plain tile roof) , old windows with skylight bars, brick eaves, recessed stage extension with hipped roof (beaver tail covering), arched windows in the gable (twin windows)
  • Enclosure: quarry stone wall, plastered, brick cover
08966505
 
Church and churchyard as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War
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Church and churchyard as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War Mühlbergstrasse
(map)
1st quarter of the 18th century (church); after 1918 (war memorial) Baroque hall church, plastered building with a transverse rectangular west tower, of architectural and local significance.
  • Church: single-nave hall church, solid, plastered, west tower on a square floor plan, segmental arch entrance with keystone and old wooden door, bezels, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, weather vane, all in all arched windows, retracted rectangular choir, community room extension from 1960 on the east side
  • War memorial: cube-shaped sandstone block on a stepped plinth, stepped top with plastic (soldier's helmet and oak leaves), inscription carved on the front side “In memory of our fallen in the war 1914–1918. May they rest in peace and let the eternal light shine on them. ", On the narrow side inscription" Death for the fatherland died in the east: .. "(names of the fallen), on the reverse side inscription" Dedicated by the community of Strelln " Inscription "Death for the fatherland died in the west" (names of the fallen)
08966506
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Mühlbergstrasse 11
(map)
19th century Single-storey earth building, historically and socially important. Solid, clay, middle part brick (partly), plastered on the courtyard side, in the front part of the building entrance door with skylight, old door, in the rear part of the building formerly a stable, entrance with skylight, rectangular window, gable roof, plain tile roofing. 08966498
 

Wildenhain

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house and northern extension of a four-sided courtyard Alte Schulstrasse 5
(map)
Mid 19th century Stately plastered building with a crooked hip roof, testimony to the way of living and farming, of importance in terms of building history and shaping the street scene.
  • Residential building: two-storey, solid, plastered, window frames, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, segmental arch entrance with staircase, profiled eaves (solid), iron tie rods on the rear side of the eaves, rectangular windows
  • Extension on the gable side to the rear of the residential building: two-storey, but lower than the residential building, solid, plastered, gable roof, beaver tail covering, window frames, rectangular entrance with skylight, door renewed, all in all renovated in accordance with listed buildings
08966464
 
Western house and northeastern barn of a three-sided courtyard Alte Schulstrasse 6
(map)
18th century An impressive farmhouse that characterizes the townscape, probably the oldest homestead in the town, of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: one-storey, solid (partly clay, thick walls), plastered, mighty mansard roof (brickwork), barrel vaults in the basement, rectangular windows, windows renewed, courtyard-side entrance house (new), roof windows, clay walls inside
  • Barn: one-storey, solid, plastered (brick), wooden gate on the eaves side (possibly drive-through barn), wooden shutters, gable roof, beaver tail covering
08966465
 
School with attached teacher's house and outbuilding as well as enclosure wall Alte Schulstrasse 8
(map)
Around 1900 Clinker brick building for the school and teachers' residence, the outbuilding is both a toilet building for the students and a morgue for the adjoining churchyard, and is of importance in terms of both building history and local history.
  • School: one and two-story clinker brick structure, red clinker brick structure (sills, window frames, profiled eaves (tooth cut), lintel arches), segmental arched windows, gable roof, plain tile covering (partly crown covering) and bricked bricks, on the gable sides each three-tier gable-top coronation (teacher-stacked building on the courtyard side) Residential building), on the street side curb, two segment arch gates
  • Ancillary building: courtyard side toilet entrances, street side large segment arched door for hearses (morgue), segment arched windows, rectangular windows with wooden shutters in the gable triangle, single-storey red brick building with gable roof, plain tile roofing
  • Enclosure: red brick wall, square gate pillars with gable roof cover, wooden gate (new)
08966463
 
Waystone
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Waystone Graefendorfer Strasse
(map)
19th century Sandstone column with inscription of the places (Torgau, Weidenhain, Wildenhain, Gräfendorf), time information (in hours) and directional arrows, of importance for the history of traffic 08966523
 
Church and churchyard with enclosure and a tomb
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Church and churchyard with enclosure and a tomb Kirchplatz
(map)
1782 (church); Mid 18th century (tomb) Late baroque hall church, plastered sandstone building, west tower with hood and lantern, of architectural, art-historical and local significance.
  • Church: single-aisled west tower church, tower on a square floor plan, upwards octagonal with Welscher dome, octagonal lantern and top, segment arch portal with sandstone walls and keystone, above ox eye, arched window
  • Rococo sandstone grave of head forester Schulze in the cemetery: two fully plastic figures, allegories (skeleton and jester), palm branches on the side, base with cartouche
08966467
 
Rectory and side building of a rectory Kirchplatz 1
(map)
Around 1800 and later Winkelhof, parsonage, upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance.
  • Rectory: two-storey, solid (ground floor), plastered, upper floor half-timbered plastered, rectangular windows, partially cross-storey windows (wooden windows renewed), window bezels, gable massively renewed, saddle roof, profiled eaves
  • Barn extension: side building at an angle afterwards: one-storey, solid, plastered, gable roof, beaver tail covering (crown covering)
08966466
 
Motor mill with mill technology
Motor mill with mill technology Wildenhainer Hauptstrasse 29
(map)
Built in 1907 (as a steam mill) Of great importance in terms of mill technology, it forms an ensemble with the adjacent sawmill, both operated by the same steam engine.
  • Mill: originally a steam mill (operated from the sawmill from 1907 to 1954), expansion of the existing mill building in 1932, fire in 1945, reconstruction and start of mill operations in 1946/47, powered by a motor from 1954 (ground, crushed and squeezed until 1990), the last of the many mills (mostly post mills) in the immediate vicinity, the oldest of which was already mentioned in the 30 Years War, two-storey, solid, plastered (brick), flat roof (built in 1946/47), rectangular windows, loading hatches and wooden gates
  • Inside the mill technology: on the ground floor a roller mill (bought second-hand in 1955) from Sekt from Dresden and a second roller mill from Chemnitz, Maschinenfabrik Max Kaermssen (originally from a post mill), on the upper floor a peeling and cleaning machine from Enger, operated until 1989
08966462
 
Knöfel sawmill with old sawmill technology Wildenhainer Hauptstrasse 29
(map)
1901 (sawmill founded) Originally a steam sawmill, of great importance for the history of technology, it forms an ensemble with an adjacent grinding mill, both of which are operated by the same steam engine. One-storey, solid (brick, plastered), flat saddle roof (purlin roof), roofing felt, low extension on the street side (from 1945) with pent roof, boarded up jamb, two large wooden gates on one gable side, boarded gable, roof house with saddle roof (boarded up).

Inside saw frame (horizontal frame) and tensioning carriage (automatic lowering carriage), in the extension a grinding machine (photo 7) from 1936, steam engine in operation until 1954. Sägeplatz, sawmill founded by Julius and Ernst Knöfel (operated with a steam engine built in 1907, type from Lanz / Mannheim, has since been sold to Schkeuditz), sawmill used for contract cutting.

08966461
 

Wildschütz

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone
Waystone Dorfstrasse
(map)
Around 1900 Significant in traffic history. Porphyry stele (gray porphyry) with carved inscription (framed in black) “Hoburg”, “Schöna” and “Kobershain, Probsthain, forbidden way” as well as directional arrows. 08966493
 
Residential house, two side buildings, barn as well as a former smithy and enclosure of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 7
(map)
Around 1855, older in the core (farmhouse and forge); 1910 (barn) Solid buildings, courtyards that characterize the townscape, of architectural and local importance.
  • Residential house: two-storey, solid (brick masonry, mud brick inside), plastered, as a result of the establishment of a forge in the pull-out house around 1855, street-side extension for the elderly, on the upper floor late baroque ceiling painting (currently pasted over with paper for protection), floor covering made of (Wildschützer) in the hallway Quartz porphyry panels, entrance door replica of a door from around 1870 (oak, model door from Probsthain), saddle roof (roof structure largely renewed, covered with hand-painted beacons since renovation in 2004), rectangular windows inside with lintel arches, two-storey extension from 1910/11 on the north (outside), around 1960 renovations on the ground floor for use by the doctor and community nurse (consultation and waiting room)
  • Two side buildings adjoining the house: initially a single-storey building, solid stone and brick, plastered, entrance with skylight, low pitched roof, old cowshed with Prussian cap vault on cast-iron pillars, segmented arched windows, followed by a two-story building, also solid stone and brick, plastered, Stable and coach house, fodder floor, eaves profile in clinker
  • former blacksmith's shop (on the south side of the courtyard): originally old part, set up as a blacksmith's shop around 1855 (used as such until after 1930), extensive renovation between 1999 and 2005, two-story, quarry stone, plastered (lime plaster), gable roof (hand-painted beaver since renovation), gable side Large rectangular wooden gate facing the street, arched window in the gable
  • Barn: solid stone and brick, plastered, with storage cellar, stable part and passage, eaves profile in clinker
  • Gate entrance and enclosure: quarry stone wall (renewed) with iron fence, gate pillars also in quarry stone, wooden gates renewed
08966485
 
Residential house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as enclosure Dorfstrasse 9a
(map)
Around 1900 Testimony to the rural living and economy of bygone times, of importance in terms of building history and economic history.
  • Residential house: two-storey, solid, plastered, rectangular windows, winter windows, old windows, gable roof (beaver tail covering, crown covering), tooth-cut brick eaves, cantilever, arched windows in the gable, barrel vaults in the cellar, former shop entrance with wooden door on the courtyard side
  • Drive-through barn: single-storey, solid, gable roof (concrete tile), large wooden gate, with a cellar
  • Enclosure: granite pillars (Leutepforte) and quarry stone wall, plastered
  • Side building: single-storey, monopitch roof, massive, plastered
08966486
 
Scales house Dorfstrasse 25 (near)
(map)
Mid 20th century Testimony to the rural economy of the last century, of importance in terms of technology and local history. Single storey, solid, plastered, rectangular windows, wooden eaves, hipped roof (concrete interlocking tiles), brick forge, iron scales inside, rectangular entrance on the gable side with stepped brick walls, wooden door, intended to be used as a bakery. 08966484
 
Transformer station Dorfstrasse 26 (near)
(map)
Around 1900 Evidence of electrification, defining the townscape, of importance in terms of technology and supply. Tower on a rectangular floor plan, broken stone base, rectangular entrance, solid, plastered, gable roof, beaver tail covering, wooden eaves. 08966494
 
Rectory, side building, barn and enclosure of the rectory and the rectory garden Dorfstrasse 28
(map)
1772 (rectory); around 1900 (stable) As a parsonage of architectural and local significance.
  • Rectory: two-storey, solid, plastered, rectangular windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, cleaning bottles, rectangular entrance with sandstone walls, wooden door with skylight (door renewed), profiled eaves
  • Stable / side building: one-storey, solid, plastered, segmented arched window with brick walls, serrated eaves cornice (brick), gable roof, beaver tail covering, gable triangle facing brick, segmented arched entrances
  • Barn: one-storey, solid, plastered, large rectangular wooden gate, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Enclosure: square gate pillars (plastered), sandstone cover, wooden gate, quarry stone wall on the side, plastered, led over a wide area around the property
08966489
 
Northwest residential stable house with attached side building (stable) of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 31
(map)
Early 19th century Stable house, upper floor half-timbered, largely original evidence of rural living and economic practices, of architectural significance. Two-storey residential building, solid ground floor, plastered, upper floor half-timbered with clay pegs, gable and stable also on the upper floor solid, brick-facing gable triangle, rectangular windows with sills, some cleaning bottles, some winter windows, gable roof, rolled bricks, wooden eaves, clay ceilings inside, house on the outside Boarded up (eaves side) on the upper floor, loading hatch. 08966490
 
Village church and cemetery Wildschütz (entity)
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Village church and cemetery Wildschütz (entity) Dorfstrasse 36
(map)
18./19. Century (churchyard) Consolidation of the church and cemetery Wildschütz with the following individual monuments: Church with furnishings, morgue, tomb on the church wall and memorial for those who fell in World War I, as well as enclosure with cemetery gate (see individual monuments 08966491 at the same address) as well as the cemetery and the avenue leading to it (garden monument); Historicist hall church, quarry stone church with west tower, of importance in terms of building history and local history and shaping the townscape 09304762
 
Church with furnishings, morgue, tomb on the church wall and memorial to those who fell in World War I, as well as enclosure with churchyard gate (individual memorials for ID No. 09304762)
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Church with furnishings, morgue, tomb on the church wall and memorial to those who fell in World War I, as well as enclosure with churchyard gate (individual memorials for ID No. 09304762) Dorfstrasse 36
(map)
Tower 1863; Hall church 1873; 2nd half of the 18th century (tomb); after 1918 (war memorial) Individual features of the entity church and Kirchhof Wildschütz; historicist hall church, quarry stone church with west tower, of architectural and local significance 08966491
 
Former school and barn as well as enclosure Dorfstrasse 37
(map)
1883 Stately buildings in quarry stone construction with clinker brick structure, forms an ensemble with church, of architectural and local significance.
  • School: two-storey, quarry stone, unplastered, clinker brick structure (belt and eaves cornice, corner pilasters), segmented arched windows, old windows, gable roof (concrete tiles), ornamental gables with stepped eaves cornice (brick), arched windows and round windows, angular floor plan, one-storey entrance porch at an angle (brick) with corner pilasters
  • Barn (drive-through barn): one-storey, quarry stone, unplastered, clinker brick structure, segment arch gate (wooden gate), segment arch window, old windows, gable roof (plain tile roofing and concrete tiles)
  • Enclosure: quarry stone wall, plastered, cover plates
08966492
 
Memorial to quarry workers who died in an accident
Memorial to quarry workers who died in an accident Kobershainer Strasse 2
(map)
Around 1940 Significant local history, of artistic value. Porphyry square wall, stepped in three steps, on the front wall, sill on consoles and memorial stone with copper sheet inscription “The Victims of Labor” and the names of the fatally injured, including a head relief of a wounded man, crossed hammer and mallet, erected in memory of the quarry workers who died between 1912 and 1941 of the Wildschütz porphyry quarry. 08966513
 
Villa (No. 1) and enclosure wall with three gate pillars (No. 1 and 3) Lindenstrasse 1, 3
(map)
Late 19th century Villa of the quarry tenant, plastered building with a characteristically structured plastered façade, of architectural and local significance.
  • Villa: one-storey with jamb, broken stone base, otherwise solid, plastered, plaster structure, rectangular window with keystone, sills, central risalit with crooked hip roof, overall crooked hip roof (beaver tail covering), wooden serrated eaves cornice, profiled main cornice, in the gable round arched window, to part of the gable winter Corner pilaster strips with plastered fields
  • Enclosure: massive wall, plastered, cover made of glazed shaped bricks, three square gate pillars with tent roof (crab bricks)
08966487
 
Residential building Lindenstrasse 2
(map)
Around 1880/1890 Late classicist urban construction of importance in terms of architectural history and the street scene. Two-storey, solid, plastered, plaster structure (cornice, profiled window bezels), sills, rectangular windows, on the upper floor windows with triangular gable roofing, original entrance door on the gable side (high rectangular) with skylight and stained glass window, original staircase, profiled eaves, saddle roof. 08966488
 

Former monuments

Former monuments (Langenreichenbach)

image designation location Dating description ID
Gasthaus Apelt
Gasthaus Apelt Hauptstrasse 4
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Plastered building with pilaster strips on the upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and local history; Demolished in 2015. Two-story, solid, plastered, ground floor rectangular window, upper floor segmented arched window, brick eaves cornice, pilaster strips on the gable and upper floors, twin windows in the middle (arched windows), two arched windows in the gable triangle, gable roof, plain tile covering (crown covering). Eaves-side extension no memorial (to the cemetery), building adjoining the gable side (right) no memorial. 08966475
 
Northern dwelling house with barn extension, eastern barn and southern pull-out house of a three-sided courtyard Kirchstrasse 31
(map)
19th century (farmhouse); 1st half of the 19th century (moving house) Largely originally preserved courtyard complex, of architectural and economic importance; demolished between 2013 and 2015.
  • Residential house: two-storey, solid, quarry stone, plastered, rectangular windows, old windows, hipped roof, folded tiles, wooden eaves
  • Stable extension: one-storey, partly quarry stone, partly clay, plastered, entrance with skylight, horizontal rectangular windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, stepped brick eaves
  • Drive-through barn: one-storey, half-timbered with clay pegs, partly brick (eaves side), segmented arched gate and rectangular gate (slatted gate), gable roof, beaver tail covering, boarded gable
  • Pull-out house or side building: one-storey, quarry stone, plastered, rectangular windows, wooden walls, old windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, receding on the eaves and further overhanging roof, wooden eaves, boarded gable
08966472
 

Former monument (Wildenhain)

image designation location Dating description ID
barn
barn Torfhaus
(map)
Mid 19th century With brick masonry and remains of an older half-timbered construction as well as a remarkable roof structure, as a testimony to the old peat cutters and forest workers settlement of architectural and local significance; demolished between 2017 and 2018.

One-storey red clinker building, partly half-timbered with clinker infill, gable roof, plain tile covering (hand-painted roof tiles), gable crowning (pommel), openings similar to slits on the eaves, partly cross-shaped, in the central axis of the roof structure, St. Andrew's crosses, a large wooden gable framed on the eaves side Gable renewed, segmented arched window, wooden eaves.

08966357
 

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

  1. Mockrehna station:
    • Entrance building: two-storey, red clinker brick building, symmetrically structured by raised corner projections with a dwelling (three arched windows on the upper floor) and a smaller central projection (two arched windows on the upper floor), corner pilasters, stepped window walls (stepped walls), arched windows (brick), cornice, brick toothed frieze Eaves cornice, risalite with round window in the gable, segmented arched window on the ground floor, entrance vestibule offset from the central axis (one storey with staircase, wooden door, gable roof), old windows, overall gable roof (purlin roof), cardboard, to the platform, inscription board “Mockrehna”, gable side single-storey extension with Loading ramp (saddle roof)
    • Special features of the two-winged train station type with a central connecting structure in Mockrehna: A variation of the type is the higher, two-winged middle section. The particularly beautiful red clinker material and the window closings as segmental arches on the ground floor and as round arches on the upper floor are typical for reception buildings on the Halle – Cottbus route. The small, later additions match the original building in style and material and therefore do not disturb its authentic and well-preserved appearance, unlike the first roof damage.
    • Platform: basalt paving, granite edging
    • Toilet block: one-storey red brick building with jamb storey, segment arch entrances (bricked up), pilaster strips, toothed belt cornice, segment arch window in the jamb, two round windows on the gable side (towards the platform), gable roof (purlin roof with profiled rafter heads)
    • Ancillary building / shed: single-storey red clinker brick building, segmental arch entrance on the gable side, segment arch loading hatches, two segment arch entrances to the platform with skylights, segment arched windows, above board "Mockrehna", gable roof (purlin roof), profiled rafter heads
    • Goods shed: single-storey red brick building, gable roof (purlin roof), loading ramp on brick post facing the street, shower above (further overhanging roof), large sliding wooden gate, iron rail, also large wooden gate on the gable side (high entrance), rectangular window, single-storey extension on the gable side with profiled eaves (plastered) , Triangular gable with a profiled eaves cornice
    • Pavement: from the goods shed to Schildauer Strasse (cobblestone pavement) on Bahnhofstrasse, chestnut trees on one side to the entrance building, from the entrance building to Schildauer Strasse Kastanienallee
    • on Schildauer Straße switchman's house of the dispatcher at the level crossing: two-storey, solid, plastered (ground floor), rectangular windows (glass blocks on the ground floor), cantilevered upper floor, slated, tall rectangular wooden windows, hipped roof (beaver tail cover), towed on the gable side (tailcoat roof, beaver tail roofing), extension on the upper floor (Andreaskreuze), small square windows, protruding single-storey extension, wooden doors (1930s)
    • Second turnout house (located at kilometer 64.0): two-storey, clinker brick, flat hipped roof, purlin roof, profiled rafter heads, rectangular windows, segment arch entrance on the gable side, single-storey sills on the eaves side, single-storey extension, plastered, on the eaves side inscription board "Mockrehna"
    • Route history: Halle (Saale) –Cottbus, main line, 176 km long, opened in 1871/72, operated today. The Halle-Sorau-Gubener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (HSGE), founded by the Prussian "railway king" Bethel Henry Strousberg, established the Halle - Cottbus line as its first and central line, the first section of which between Cottbus and Guben was opened on September 1, 1871. The Falkenberg - Eilenburg section relating to Mockrehna was opened on May 1, 1872, and the entire line was put into operation on June 30, 1872. Since the Prussian private railway's income fell short of expectations, its management was transferred to the Prussian State Railway on January 1, 1877, which acquired the entire HSGE in 1885. In the years 1896 to 1911 the line was expanded to double-track as an important link between Central Germany and Silesia. This connection, which was no longer used after the Second World War, was replaced by the growing industrial sites in Cottbus, Guben or Eisenhüttenstadt. The line was electrified between 1984 and 1989. Until the fall of the Berlin Wall, express trains also ran, today regional traffic of the Central German Regiobahn, which belongs to Veolia Verkehr Regio Ost, and international freight traffic, which is increasingly determined by Eastern European transports, predominate.
    • Building history: The station was built together with the line and was opened on May 1, 1872. The entrance porch and the side extension were probably added to the original building later. It was hardly changed in the following. In 2008 the Federal Railway Authority gave the approval for the renewal of the house platform, which was subsequently rebuilt.
  2. Alter Reichshof Mockrehna (Reichsstrasse 21):
    • Inn: two-storey, solid, quarry stone plastered, on the ground floor gable-side small rectangular windows with profiled sandstone walls (renewed), upstairs rectangular windows with simply profiled granite walls, segmental arch entrance with wooden door (renewed), mostly new windows, eaves side (back on the upper floor still wooden walls), profiled eaves (brick, plastered), courtyard side center entrance, rectangular with sandstone walls, scratched, original wooden door worked up, spire with jagged frieze, skylight with muntin bars, wooden keystone, courtyard side rectangular window with sandstone walls, originally shutters, wooden windows renewed, high hipped roof (double-hipped roof ), Beaver tail covering, rectangular windows in the gable triangle, inscription on the street side on the gable (black on white background) with the name of the inn (illegible), basement (former beer cellar, vault), hall with galleries on the upper floor
    • Enclosure: mixed masonry made of quarry stone, brick and field stones, enclosure wall partly outside wall remains of the courtyard buildings of the four-sided courtyard in a rectangle around the courtyard, partly topped up with bricks, straight cover, on the eastern courtyard wall two round-arched openings made of yellow brick, meanwhile walled up ( Twin windows), several tie rods, rectangular windows and loopholes-like openings on the western enclosure wall, large raised arched gate with beaver tail roof, side car protector (large field stone), rectangular drapery and strong wooden beam lintel, side round arched people's paw with segmental arched drapery) (courtyard)
    • Barn extensions and conversions from 1913 no memorial, only the outer wall on the courtyard side
  3. Mockrehna church and churchyard:
    • Church: single-nave hall church, solid (made of boulders and field stones), plastered nave, unplastered tower, door and window frames made of lawn iron stone, original entrances on the north and south sides, partially walled up (segmented arched window), south-facing entrance with consecration cross, since 1705 on the West facade: round arched, round bar profile, sandstone walls, today's entrance through the west side, later porch or staircase tower with hipped roof (beaver tail covering), on the porch north and south side entrances (round arched), nave in the lower part segmented arched window, gallery arched arched window, plastered structure (plastered corner cuboid, fins, Corner pilasters), gable roof, bat dormers, beaver tail covering, in the east a cross-bar-like choir tower on a rectangular floor plan made of field stones, arched windows, in the bell storey twin windows (arched windows with set columns), bud capitals, one window on the narrow side, two windows on the long side in the east, tower roof with a gable roof two mid-houses (with ox eyes and triangular gables marked 1835 and 1902), in the gable the round clock face of the tower clock, lantern with arched openings, heavily profiled eaves, hood (copper sheet roofing), point, ball and weather vane, wooden stuck in the top of the tower since 1705 Beil, replaced by an iron hatchet in 1835, three bells (a bell from 1662, a steel bell from 1922 with the inscription "Honor be God in the height" and a new bell from 1985 with the inscription "Dona nobis pacem"), to the east of the tower adjoining semicircular apse with conical roof and arched window, old roof truss (lying), interior flat wooden beam ceiling (insert boards renewed), altar, pulpit, pews and galleries from 1705, to the choir Romanesque triumphal arch with lateral fighters, rectangular choir space and semicircular apse with set altar: carved altar (Crucifixion), iron lecture cross / crucifix, partly sheet metal, three carved figures, semi-sculptural, with attributes (tower, Chalice), sandstone baptismal font, wooden pulpit with depiction of the Evangelists (pulpit) and Jacob with the ladder to heaven (stairwells), three-sided wooden galleries, semicircular organ gallery vaulted
    • Church history: Mockrehna was an independent parish until 1525, then parish to Wildenhain, since 1945 it has been used for Protestant and Catholic services
    • Sandstone tombstone of the former landlord in the cemetery: Classical fluted column on a stepped base, on the column a medallion with inscription (illegible), heavily profiled top and amphora with flower relief, heavily weathered on the east side
    • Enclosure: quarry stone and field stone wall, partly plastered, beaver tail cover, street side entrance gate with sandstone gate pillars (square with pyramidal end)
  4. Rittergut Klitzschen:
    Klitzschen has been proven as a manor as early as the 15th century, the Klitzschen manor has been listed since the 16th century, this was owned by various noble families over time, and at the end of the 19th century it passed into the hands of bourgeois owners . Of the manor's buildings, the former manor house is a cultural monument, it closes off the former farmyard to the west. The building is not completely preserved. Originally the mansion was an angular building, which was probably built around 1800 in the form documented by historical maps and photos. The surviving part of this building now forms the north side of the manor house, and the southern extension was built around 1910. With the extension, the two-storey, massive mansion appears as an elongated structure, the plastered facade of which is structured on the courtyard side by a template with a pointed triangular gable and an immediately adjoining, suggested round bay window. In the axis of the template is the staircase, externally recognizable by the large window with leaded glazing, the building entrance is on the garden side and is also highlighted with a gable, south of the entrance is a narrow stair tower with a beautiful, broken hood. The time when the extension was built can not only be read from the stencil paintings typical of the time on the eaves, but also from the remarkable interior details (staircase with fireplace and handcrafted wooden elements, door, coffered ceiling, built-in cupboards and leaded glass windows in the former study). The property of the Klitzschen manor as a monument results on the one hand from its informative value for the development of the regional manor architecture. It illustrates the way of life of the manor owners in the past, whereby the associated claim is particularly expressed in the extension building. On the other hand, as the main building and the last largely authentic testimony to the former manor, it is also significant in terms of local history, as it recalls an important section of the history of the place. Here as elsewhere, the manor was, next to the church, the defining part of the village structure for centuries. The memorial stone in the nearby forest, which was probably erected in family memory of the manor owner Jung, also embodies a testimony to the history of the manor. In all likelihood, Jung was also the client for the extension of the manor house. The roughly hewn granite block bears the inscription “Georg Friedrich Jung / January 7, 1910.” and “Can't you look yourself / anymore / Where you hang out with friends / Where you made it with love / Live that Memory gone. "
  5. Listed tombs of the Klitzschen village church:
    • 1. on the west facade of the church (to the right of the entrance portal) tomb of Christine Friederike Baronin on Klitzschen (presumably), set in a round arch niche with a straight roofing sarcophagus made of sandstone, on which a female figure (full sculpture) with two boys (possibly Charitas) sits on the sarcophagus - Front side badly weathered inscription (illegible) and coat of arms relief, probably died in 1737
    • 2. On the north side of the church, a Rococo sandstone tomb with rocaille ornamentation
    • 3. on the south side of the church baroque grave stone made of sandstone with cartouche and inscription "Johann Heinrich Gotthelf Sahla, died 1736 zu Harzgerode"? (very difficult to read) in the gable crown, chalice and book relief, in the base tree stump relief
    • 4. On the north side of the church a simple sandstone grave slab with a coat of arms relief and the inscription "Mr. Gustav Alfred Wieder ...." (difficult to read) from 1848 (?), In the lower part a helmet and sword relief
    • 5. Baroque sandstone tombstone on the south side of the church, two semi-sculptural figures on the side with goblet and key, book and cross, heavily weathered inscription, presumably grave of a “Sahla, nee button”, seated figure with open book as gable top
  6. Manor Langenreichbach:
    The manor of the manor Langenreichbach was probably built around 1830, the fact that the purchase price for the manor was between 1822 (for 10,333 thalers to Christian Gottlob Wilhelm von Sperl) and 1840 (for 22,250 thalers to Louise Caroline Fanciska Böttcher and Karl Bieler) more than doubled, the facility was probably renewed during this period, which led to this increase in value, and the classicistic design of the exterior documented by historical illustrations, some of which is still recognizable, supports the dating. A cellar barrel was apparently taken over from the previous building. A renovation took place in the late 19th century, as can be seen from the interior fittings (e.g. tiled floor in the entrance area, stairs, doors, coffered ceiling and wall paneling on the upper floor), the owner at that time was Heinrich Zech. In 1945 the manor was expropriated as part of the land reform, the former manor house served as a school from 1950–1976, then as a day-care center and crèche, unfortunately this was accompanied by building measures that had a negative effect on the exterior (reduction of the facade design, new scratch plaster).
    The broad, two-storey plastered building with a crooked hip stands on the eaves side of the main street, north of the building is the former access to the manor house, which is still enclosed on the north side by the former farm buildings. Originally the ground floor was provided with a plaster groove, on the upper floor the building showed a tasteful, classical pilaster structure with the arched window to the staircase as a central emphasis and two, likewise preserved niches as a side border. The main entrance to the building is on the courtyard side, highlighted by a flat template, the disfiguring vestibule comes from GDR times. The interior in a simple, clear arrangement with central access via wooden stairs and hallway on the upper floor, impressive the passage room leading to the stairwell on the ground floor, which has arches on all four sides.
    The monument value of the former manor house in the Langenreichenbach manor is derived from its importance for the local and local history.
    Around 1800, the long street village of Langenreichenbach was divided into Oberdorf, Mitteldorf and Unterdorf. Upper and lower village formed the actual official village community. The middle village was mainly characterized by the manor that was founded in the 17th century by Ludwig Heinrich von Sebottendorf as a Vorwerk with seat, which is why it was also referred to as the manor community, the residents of which were mainly cottagers who were subject to the lordly jurisdiction. This peculiarity of the local history also had an impact on the structure of the locality, the tripartite division of the village is clearly recognizable in the historical map material, in particular the dominant role of the manor complex in Mitteldorf is noticeable both by its location and its size. Despite the losses as a result of the post-war development, the former manor complex is still recognizable today as the structural center, although this depends primarily on the existence of the manor house. Under these aspects, the mansion embodies a high value for information and documentation on local history. The aforementioned loss of historical design elements does not negate the importance of the object as a vivid, because it is authentic, testimony to the local history and development; a restoration of the original external appearance on the basis of historical images is also possible and is common practice in monument preservation.
    In addition to the local history, the manor house Langenreichenbach refers to the once supporting function of the manor lords in the economic, structural and cultural development of the rural area in Saxony and adjacent areas, which also provides a more general meaningfulness to the local history. The preservation of the property is therefore in the public interest.
  7. ^ Demolished mansion of the Strelln manor:
    The mansion was a two-story, elongated baroque building with three-story corner projections. Solid (mixed masonry made of brick and quarry stone), plastered, plaster structure, stepped cornice, window bezels, profiled wooden eaves, gable roof (central wing) and hipped roof (side wing), rectangular windows, inner lintel arches, clay ceilings, some with incised patterns (hand streak), original staircase walls, clay , Doors from 1856 with box locks, cross-storey window with logs on the upper floor, a side wing on the second floor half-timbered (plastered), originally window shutters, cellar vault, on the street side in the central axis entrance portal (basket arch) with medallion keystone (woman portrait relief), above straight gable field with floral relief and rake, sandstone walls (round bar profiling), to the left of the entrance to the basement access with segmented arched door and wooden door with fittings, empty building, last use as a library. Construction of great architectural and local historical importance. Enclosure: square gate pillars made of quarry stone, plastered, cover plates made of sandstone.
  8. ↑ Individual features of the whole church and Kirchhof Wildschütz:
    • Church: West tower church, single-nave hall, tower on a square floor plan, arched entrance with brick lintel arch, arched window, triple window (arched window) on the bell floor, gable on all sides with crab top, beaver tail covering, square lantern with arched window (slate covering), point, ball and weather vane, Nave quarry stone (porphyry stones, unplastered) with brick structure (corner pillars with pyramidal sandstone top, eaves cornice made of brick moldings), arched windows with brick walls, gable roof, beaver tail covering, on the north side entrance porch (brick), arched stepped portal with sandstone gable, triangular Sandstone cornice and cross attachment, two-wing historicist entrance door, apse with conical roof and arched window, sacristy annex on the south side (brick, hipped roof), inside three-sided galleries, organ by Wilhelm Rühlmann from Zorbig / Saxony, op. 304
    • On the outside wall of the church there is a late baroque tomb (sandstone) for Maria von Schlobach, died 1784: inscription cartouche, lateral personifications of Caritas and Spes
    • War memorial for the fallen of the First World War: sandstone block on a rectangular base, sandstone attachment Iron Cross, on the front side the inscription "To honor and thanks to the faithful dead from the home community Wildschütz" and the names of the fallen
    • Enclosure: square gate pillars made of red clinker brick with sandstone top, iron gate, people's gate, quarry stone wall (plastered) with brick cover, quarry stone base and iron fence, avenue of chestnuts
    • Mortuary: one-storey, brick, corner pilasters, gable-side deeply incised round-arched portal, segmented arch wooden gate, gable roof, concrete tiles, eaves cornice, arched windows, sill
    • Single-storey building attached to the gable side with a gable roof (plain tile roofing): on the gable side, segmental arch entrance with lintel arch and double-winged wooden gate, above two round windows (ventilation openings), corner cuboid made of porphyry

swell

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