List of cultural monuments in Rochlitz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rochlitz coat of arms

The list of cultural monuments in Rochlitz contains the cultural monuments of the Saxon city of Rochlitz , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of August 31, 2017. In addition, the cultural monuments deleted from the list of monuments are listed.

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Rochlitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Old town Rochlitz monument protection area (proposal)
Old town Rochlitz monument protection area (proposal) (Map) Old town Rochlitz monument protection area 09247643
 
City fortifications (Map) First mentioned in 1288 Total city fortification with remains of the city wall and four partially preserved city wall towers. Mentioned for the first time in 1288, abandoned to residents by a council resolution in 1831, remains of four towers (shell towers) on the south side of the city, a larger continuous part of the city wall in the property at Bahnhofstrasse 2 and in Gasse. On the city wall up to the former Obert, only remnants of the outer city wall (14th century) in plots on the Sauberg, city moat with rampart and city wall only preserved in the Gärtnerstrasse 27 plot, otherwise filled in in the 19th century (see map with the rear parcel boundaries below Streets: Burgstrasse, Markt, Hauptstrasse, Topfmarkt, Kunigundenstrasse, Kunigundenplatz, Schulgasse and Rathausstrasse, on parcels 176 and 184 there are remains of towers, the one on parcel 176 has been restored and provided with a roof structure). 09235324
 
Muldentalbahn (aggregate)
Muldentalbahn (aggregate) (Map) 1875 The aggregate component of the aggregate Muldentalbahn, sub-section Rochlitz with the individual monuments: Viadukt Rochlitz (see individual monument 09306154), Rochlitz railway station (see individual monument 09235172) as well as railway bridge (see individual monument 09306155) and the aggregate parts road bridge (see also object population 09306181); Totality with all railway systems, including track systems with substructure and superstructure, route kilometers, telecommunications and signal systems, railway stations including all functional buildings, guard houses, bridges and culverts in the communities of Glauchau, Stadt (OT Glauchau, Kleinbernsdorf, Reinholdshain, Niederlungwitz), Limbach-Oberfrohna , City (OT Wolkenburg-Kaufungen, Herrndorf, Uhlsdorf), Remse (OT Remse), Waldenburg (OT Niederwinkel, Oberwinkel, Waldenburg), Lunzenau, city (OT Lunzenau, Berthelsdorf, Cossen, Rochsburg, Göritzhain), Penig, city (OT Markersdorf, Penig, America, Arnsdorf, Thierbach, Zinnberg), Rochlitz, city (OT Penna, Rochlitz; Zaßnitz), Seelitz (OT Fischheim, Seelitz, Biesern, Steudten), Colditz (OT Colditz, Lastau, Leisenau, Möseln, Sermuth, Zschetzsch), Grimma, Stadt (OT Großbothen), Zettlitz (OT Kralapp). For the industrial development of the Mulde valley, important and landscape-forming standard-gauge railway, important in terms of economic history, railway history, landscape design and regional history. 09306179
 
Muldentalbahn (totality);  Rochlitz Viaduct (individual monument to ID no.09306179)
Muldentalbahn (totality); Rochlitz Viaduct (individual monument to ID no.09306179) (Map) 1875; partial reconstruction in 1937 Individual monument of the Muldentalbahn as a whole: railway viaduct (see population 09306179); parallel-belt steel girder bridge at km 37.905, over the Mulde in Rochlitz, with the originally preserved middle section in riveted steel truss construction, important engineering structure with a defining effect on the cityscape, parallel-belt steel lattice girders in the area of ​​the Glauchau – Wurzen railway line (Muldentalbahn), rarity, important in terms of railway history and traffic history.

256 m long bridge structure with three stream openings of 33 m clear width each, spanned by original lattice girders, as well as three flood openings spanned by solid wall girders with a clear width of 16.5 m or 17.2 m, in the city-side area of ​​the eight bank, path and road underpasses the supporting structure was replaced by reinforced concrete structures and the pillars partially renewed, river piers and supports made of porphyry and sandstone masonry.

09306154
 
Muldentalbahn (totality);  Rochlitz railway station (Glauchau – Wurzen railway line, individual monument for ID No. 09306179)
More pictures
Muldentalbahn (totality); Rochlitz railway station ( Glauchau – Wurzen railway line , individual monument for ID No. 09306179) At the train station
(map)
1870 (reception building); 1871 (engine shed); around 1890 (freight yard); around 1900 (coal shed); 1935 (signal box W1); 1965 (signal box B2) Individual features of the Muldentalbahn as a whole: station building, railway maintenance office, roundhouse with turntable, two farm buildings, coal shed, track scales, signal box B 2, signal box W1, six shape signals and six lamps of the Rochlitz station (see material group 09306179); Due to its geographical location in the middle section of the Glauchau – Wurzen (Muldentalbahn) railway line, an important station for the operation of the line, with mostly original high-rise buildings, of significance in terms of railway history, transport history and technology.
  • Entrance building: plastered facade, unadorned building, window and door frames preserved, windows renewed, central building with two wing structures (central building one-story, wing building two-story with jamb), gable roof with a mansard built later, window and door frames as well as the cornice made of Rochlitz porphyry, ground floor with round arch , Upper floor rectangular window, facade with classical style elements
  • Railway keeper's house with ancillary building: two-storey plastered brick building on a porphyry base, porphyry walls essentially preserved, door clogged
  • Coal shed: according to the importance of the station complex, plastered building with relatively large dimensions with a gable roof (Preolite covering), loading ramp on both sides, accentuation of the gate walls with clinker bricks, probably around 1902
  • Railway maintenance office: two-storey brick-faced building over a rectangular floor plan with a central staircase porch on the eaves side facing the railway, corner pilasters, cornice, blind arches over the segmented arched windows, windows defective, desolate
  • Before the First World War, the seven-hour roundhouse was expanded to 12 stands, roof construction (wood) still original, smoke outlets removed, gates original, brick-faced masonry, stone arch of the gates, a flat-bottom container in riveted construction preserved.
  • six (five?) shape signals (wing signals) track kilometers 39, 3
  • Signal box B 2; six lamps, four of them in the area of ​​the locomotive shed, clinker brick construction, commissioned in 1965
  • Signal box W1, clinker base Commissioned in 1935

History: laid out as early as 1870 (source sachsenschiene.de, accessed November 11, 2015) for the Rochlitz - Narsdorf - Penig connection built by the state, an important train station with predominantly originally preserved high-rise buildings, highlighted by its central location

09235172
 
Soviet memorial, with associated landscaped green area (no garden monument) At the train station (opposite the reception hall of the train station)
(map)
1958 Memorial for the heroes of the Soviet Union, once also the burial place for Soviet prisoners of war and forced laborers, later reburied in Chemnitz, as the center of the complex stele with a soldier figure, fire bowl and inscriptions, of contemporary and local historical importance. The memorial is located on a town square (station forecourt) in the southeast of the station.
  • Monument: porphyry cube with a fire bowl on a three-tiered base, a man-high half-figure of a soldier on the front, inscription on the reverse: 1945 year of liberation: "In honor of the / heroes of the / Soviet Union / who gave their lives for / the liberation of the / German people"
  • Green area: Rectangular green area with a path leading to the monument, herbaceous borders and lawns with groups of shrubs (creeping juniper and rhododendron)
  • Remnants of the old town square: footpath, two solitary trees (linden trees) in the northwest, rows of trees (linden trees) in the northeast, southeast and southwest, privet hedges, low iron bars

Note: The town square with rows of trees (linden trees), Bahnhofstrasse with avenue (linden trees) leading from the southwest to the station and the group of trees (3 horse chestnuts) in the northeast of the station building form a single urban planning unit. The town square is in the axis of the station building.

09300120
 
Multi-family house in open development At station 9, 10, 11
(map)
1940 Three-storey, scratched plaster, saddle roof, shutters on the ground floor, residential building with three entrances, part of a factory housing estate of architectural, urban development and urban development significance.

Built in 1940 as an apartment building in a small factory settlement of Mechanik GmbH Rochlitz, a subsidiary of the Leipzig tool manufacturer Pittler AG. The building was designed by the architect Woldemar von Holy, who was then working in Leipzig. As a settlement house for engineers and executives of an armaments factory, a building permit was granted even in 1940 and construction work was approved. However, the originally planned semi-detached house was probably no longer implemented due to the general ban on building new buildings in the same year. The works settlement includes the houses Friedrich-August-Straße 9/11 and 13 as well as the residential building Am Bahnhof 9-11, which were built almost at the same time. Obviously, the planting of the avenue trees and the redesign of the station forecourt took place almost at the same time.

As is characteristic of National Socialist residential building architecture, the Heimatschutz style was of decisive importance for the stylistic expression of the buildings. These are two-storey plastered buildings with natural stone plinths, almost square window openings with grooved windows, which are closed by a gable roof. The regularly arranged square window openings with grooved windows and shutters with lamellas are essential design elements. As is typical for the time of construction, the buildings were lined up on a gently curved street. Small green spaces in front of the houses and house gardens complete the ensemble. Inside, the size of the apartments (3 to 4-room apartments, each with chambers) and the generous dimensioning of the rooms are surprising compared to other housing developments of the time. Each apartment had a bathroom with bathtub and indoor toilet, as well as balconies.

The settlement houses of Mechanik GmbH Rochlitz were arranged directly on the station forecourt or at the confluence with Friedrich-August-Strasse, so that the development gap between the city and the station could be closed and a representative "gate" to the city was created. The residential area between the old town center and the train station grew very slowly after the city was connected to the railway network, due to the low level of industrialization in the city and its surroundings. For example, there was still a footpath in the area of ​​today's Friedrich-August-Strasse for many years. This unsatisfactory and unrepresentative urban situation could finally be remedied by the clever urban planning of the settlement houses and the planting of the avenue trees.

The buildings are among the few residential buildings in Saxony that were still allowed to be built after the start of the Second World War. In an exemplary manner, they document the conception of construction at the time it was built. On the other hand, they clarify the building policy premises of their time of origin (special permits for construction work in the armaments industry). The historical significance of this house and the associated neighboring buildings are derived from this. The monument value still results from the urban development history, as described above.

09235144
 
So-called Simonsche Laube, garden arbor in the allotment garden section "Am Klinkborn" Amselweg 1
(map)
1922-1923 Wooden construction on small pillars, one of the first arbors of the garden association. Wood on small stone pillars, as the system is in the floodplain. Plant founded in 1922, from autumn parceling, original also windows, door with original handle. 09236991
 
Apartment building in closed development Bahnhofstrasse 13
(map)
Around 1890 Largely originally preserved plastered building of architectural and urban value. Four axes, three-storey, brackets under the roof, triangular gable roofing on the 1st floor, fluted pilasters around the front door, horizontal window roofs. 09235188
 
Apartment building in closed development Bahnhofstrasse 15
(map)
Around 1900 Simple plastered building in traditional design of urban development historical value. Relatively lavishly structured facade, window roofing, seven axes, three-story, 1st floor with horizontal window roofing, cornice, caryatids. 09235185
 
Apartment building in closed development Bahnhofstrasse 17
(map)
Around 1890 Two-storey bay window, two-axis, house six axes, horizontal roofing on the 1st floor, three-storey, two-axis gable, front door and window changed, relatively complex facade 09235184
 
Former post office Bahnhofstrasse 18
(map)
1890, extension around 1925 Two-part building with a right-angled floor plan, older main part with representative clinker brick facade in neo-renaissance forms, natural stone and clinker brick divisions, extension building with clinker brick facade in the traditional style of the 1920s, of local and architectural significance. Clinker brick facade, red clinker brick, window roofing, original front door and window, attached side wing, probably around 1925/1930, also clinker brick. 09235263
 
Apartment building in closed development Bahnhofstrasse 21
(map)
Around 1895 Plastered facade, three-story, six axes, two-axis gable, window canopies on the 1st floor horizontally or two triangular gables, front door not original, original window 09235183
 
Villa Carola Bahnhofstrasse 33
(map)
1895/1896 Distorting extension, yellow clinker brick with porphyry window frames, porphyry corner blocks, cornice also porphyry, original front door, decorated conservatory wood, inscription over window on the ground floor "trew und vest" 09235189
 
Residential house, in open development and corner location Bismarckstrasse 16
(map)
Around 1890 Plastered facade in historicist forms, plastered structure, risalit-like corner design with balconies, lateral templates, of importance in terms of local development. Plastered facade with window roofs on the 1st floor, horizontal roofs or with triangular gables, balconies in corner positions, wrought iron balcony grilles, original front door, polygonal masonry on the base, simple facade design. 09235180
 
Residential house, in open development and corner location Bismarckstrasse 17
(map)
Around 1895 Clinker-plaster facade in late historical forms, subdivisions in plaster, clinker, natural and artificial stone, broken corner with balconies, of importance in terms of local development. Mixed clinker construction, first floor plaster ashlar, corner location, wrought iron balconies on the corner of the house, red clinker brick, offset with yellow clinker bricks, three-storey. 09235179
 
Residential house in open development Bismarckstrasse 19
(map)
Marked 1896 Villa-like building with clinker facades in late historical forms, natural stone, plaster and clinker brick structures, street front with side elevation, of importance in terms of local development. Orange clinker brick with strips of red clinker brick, door portal and window frames sandstone, richly decorated front door, small open staircase, base of polygonal masonry made of porphyry, winter garden in wooden construction. 09235178
 
Residential house in open development Bismarckstrasse 21
(map)
Around 1900 Plaster construction in late historical forms, plaster and natural stone incorporation, street front with template as central emphasis, of importance in terms of local development. Plastered facade with stucco, balconies, front door and windows original, base polygonal masonry, simple design. 09235177
 
Former vocational school center House II, today Rainbow Elementary School Bismarckstrasse 23
(map)
1897 School with fencing and paving in front of the school entrance; Former secondary school, symmetrical plastered building in the style of historicism, plaster and stone structures, of importance in terms of building history and local history. Richly structured building with a central projection, two-winged, window roofing, original front door and window, 14 axes, plastered construction, walls, cornices, etc. details in natural stone. 09235176
 
villa Bismarckstrasse 25
(map)
Marked 1897 Plastered construction in late historical forms, natural stone incorporation in porphyry tuff, varied building structure design, lateral templates with ornamental gables, important in terms of local development and architectural history. Plastered facade with balconies and bay windows, front door and one of the extensions changed. 09235175
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure Bismarckstrasse 35
(map)
1897 Mansion-like plastered building in late historical forms, plaster, stone and clinker brick structures, center-emphasizing template with a stepped gable, rich corner bay on a pillar base, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history. Neo-Gothic stepped gable, bay window, plastered facade, cornice, balconies, windows from the time of origin. 09235174
 
Former royal district tax revenue, later tax office Bismarckstrasse 37
(map)
Around 1910 Former administration building; Plaster construction in the forms of the outgoing historicism, plaster and natural stone incorporations, testimony to the development of the Saxon tax and financial administration, of importance in terms of building history and local history. Plastered facade, stone plinth, corner blocks, porphyry window frames and cornices, stairwell emphasized. 09235173
 
Former inn and house, in open development Brückenplatz 1
(map)
Around 1750, remodeled in 1838 (marked) Solid field stone, with a crooked hipped roof in the central axis, five axes with loft extension, keystone dated "1838" on the door portal, older house, later additions, original front door 09235360
 
Residential building in closed development Brückenstrasse 11
(map)
Around 1800 Typical small town residential building with massive ground floor and half-timbered upper floor, both plastered, window and door walls on the ground floor in Rochlitz porphyry tufa, of importance in terms of local development and building history. Half-timbered upper floor plastered, six axes, two-storey, gable roof. 09235255
 
Residential building in closed development Brückenstrasse 13
(map)
Around 1800 Typical small town residential building with massive ground floor and half-timbered upper floor, both plastered, base in porphyry tufa, of importance in terms of local development. Three-axis, two-story, plastered half-timbered upper floor, gable roof. 09235256
 
Residential building in closed development Brückenstrasse 14
(map)
Marked 1795 Typical small-town residential building with plastered facade, window and door walls on the ground floor in porphyry tuff, keystone with initials and dates, of importance in terms of building history and development, two-storey, six axes, crooked hip roof 09235254
 
Residential building in closed development Brückenstrasse 23
(map)
Marked 1774 Typical small town residential building with a massive ground floor and half-timbered upper floor, of local and architectural significance. Half-timbered upper floor, door portal with keystone and rococo cartouche, mansard roof, two-story, five axes, three modified roof extensions. 09235253
 
Residential house with shop in closed development (building in the corner of the market also belongs to Burgstrasse 1)
Residential house with shop in closed development (building in the corner of the market also belongs to Burgstrasse 1) Burgstrasse 1
(map)
1805 Architecturally important, former lintel dated 1539, decorative house brand, Rochlitz porphyry tuff, three-story, five axes, hipped roof on one side, center window on the upper floor emphasized 09235349
 
Residential house in closed development and side building Burgstrasse 3
(map)
1803 Residential house originally with shop, three-storey, six axes, saddle roof, cross vault in the hallway, original front door, on the ground floor too large window 09235348
 
House in closed development with shop Burgstrasse 11
(map)
After 1802, 1888 (2nd floor built) Cross vaults in the hallway, front door and first floor from 1888, fluted pilaster strips, three storeys, three axes, facade structured by pilasters, cornices and mirrors, gable roof 09235346
 
House in closed development with shop Burgstrasse 12
(map)
before 1800 Residential house: on the courtyard side keystone, former door portal from Baroque with monogram, offset on courtyard side in 1802, auxiliary building: probably with arcade, partly half-timbered on the upper floor, massive ground floor, residential building dated 1803 on the door portal, three-story, shop modernized; Residential building renovated, outbuilding demolished in 2003 09235347
 
House in closed development with shop Burgstrasse 14
(map)
After 1802 Three-storey with shop, three axes, gable roof, cross vault in the hallway; 1st auxiliary building: solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, mansard roof, 2nd auxiliary building: probably with a former arcade, boarded up; Outbuildings: demolished in 2003, residential building partially renovated 09235345
 
House in closed development with shop Burgstrasse 16
(map)
After 1802 Cross vaults in the hallway, facade and shop changed, three-story, five axes, gable roof, built-in cupboards in the hallway 09235344
 
Residential building with shop in closed development, with shop
Residential building with shop in closed development, with shop Burgstrasse 19
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Three-storey, large archway, eight axes, gable roof, cross vault in the doorway 09235343
 
Residential house in closed development with shop and two side buildings Burgstrasse 20
(map)
Around 1760 Side building half-timbered, formerly arcade; Residential house: three-storey, shop, cross vault in the hallway, subsequently raised, pitched roof, stucco ceilings on 1st floor from 2nd construction phase, side building at risk, residential building partially renovated 09235351
 
Residential building in closed development Burgstrasse 24
(map)
Around 1750 Three-storey, gable roof, cross vaults in the hallway and stairwell, raised by one floor, originally probably a mansard roof; Birthplace of Hans Theo Richter (painter and graphic artist 1902–1969) 09235342
 
House in a corner in a closed development
House in a corner in a closed development Burgstrasse 25
(map)
Around 1800 Solid, mansard roof, porphyry walls, door changed, as well as door walls 09235340
 
Residential house and back building in closed development Burgstrasse 35
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Typical late baroque residential building with arched portal made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff . Half-timbered on the upper floor plastered, mansard roof, ground floor massive, with porphyry window and door walls. Two-storey backyard building, regular and well-preserved half-timbering on the upper floor, massive ground floor, typical backyard building from the 1st half of the 19th century in a good state of preservation. 09235339
 
Residential building in closed development Burgstrasse 37
(map)
1802 Half-timbered construction on the upper floor, solid ground floor, porphyry door and window walls, gable roof 09235338
 
Two residential buildings in closed development, one of which is an apartment building with shops and equipment Burgstrasse 45
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building); around 1905 (house with shop) The older residential building with a plastered half-timbered upper floor, the second, Wilhelminian-style apartment building with original shop fittings, in the corner of Mühlgasse and in view of the Petrikirche, significant in terms of urban development and architectural history.
  • Residential house: two-storey, developed attic, ground floor solid, house passage with clay ceiling, upper floor with half-timbering (plastered), ground floor walls made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, base made of porphyry tufa blocks, partly renovated in 1998; original: windows, interior doors with fittings, dormer windows, porphyry stairs to the 1st floor
  • Residential building with shop, in the corner of Mühlgasse: around 1905, ground floor smoothed plaster, upper floors red clinker brick facade with clinker brick structure, base made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, shop with original furnishings (wall tile pattern, frosted glass ceiling with gold pattern and slogan), in the house original stairs with iron railings, doors
09235336
 
Residential house in semi-open development Burgstrasse 53
(map)
1802 Originally with a shop, window shutters with original fittings from the time it was built, hallway with cross vaults, former bakery, house possibly added later 09235335
 
Muldentalbahn (totality); Railway bridge (individual monument for ID no.09306179) Casparistraße
(map)
1875 Individual monument of the Muldentalbahn as a whole: railway bridge with tracks (see as a whole 09306179); Renewed in 2008, km 39.8, polygonal masonry, arched with bricks, of importance for the history of railways and technology 09306155
 
Postal settlement Casparistraße 4, 6, 8, 10, 12; Friedrich-August-Strasse 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14; Hochuferstraße 4, 5, 6; Körnerstraße 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
(map)
Around 1925 to 1930 Sub-entity postal settlement, consisting of nine apartment buildings (all sub-entity parts); simple plastered buildings of architectural, socio-historical and urban value. Settlements with corner buildings and intermediate buildings, house types vary, simple facade design, plastered facades. 09235141
 
Saxon postal mileage column
More pictures
Saxon postal mileage column Clemens-Pfau-Platz
(map)
Marked 1722, 1820 (coat of arms renewed), copy 2006–2007 Saxon post mile pillars (totality), copy of a distance pillar, of importance in terms of traffic history:

Copy of a Saxon distance column made of Rochlitz porphyry from the former Untertor; Obelisk on base, with coat of arms, “AR” monogram, post horn mark and inscriptions, on two adjacent sides with distance information, on the other sides “O.Th.” (Upper Gate) and “Rochlitz 1820”. The year indicates the year in which the entire upper part including the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Saxony that was valid in the 19th century (bar shield with diamond wreath) was made anew. The original head piece was rediscovered in Methau (Zettlitz) walled up in 1965, restored by the stonemason company Gebr. Heidel KG (Rochlitz) and set up at today's location (year unknown). 2006 renewed restoration, put up again in 2007. In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began erecting the Saxon post-mile pillars . Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679–1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half pillars and full pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km). This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in terms of the history of transport as part of the nationally important postal system.

09235341
 
House in a corner
House in a corner Clemens-Pfau-Platz 1
(map)
1862 Gable roof, historicism facade, two-storey, rich stone carving, molded tiles, portal, neo-Gothic, birthplace of the local researcher Professor Dr. Clemens Pfau memorial plaque above the entrance: "The Rochlitz local history researcher Prof.Dr.WCPfau lived and worked in this house April 20, 1862 July 25, 1946" 09235241
 
Former hospital in half-open development, today residential building
Former hospital in half-open development, today residential building Clemens-Pfau-Platz 2
(map)
1854 Pretty building in neo-Gothic style, of architectural and local significance, saddle roof, two-storey, turret over gable, five axes, central axis framed by pilaster strips, with a stepped gable over the main cornice, neo-Gothic 09235240
 
Secret Annex Building Clemens-Pfau-Platz 3
(map)
Around 1800 Half-timbering, gable roof 09235243
 
Residential building in closed development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 8
(map)
Around 1860 Three-storey, six axes, plastered facade with plaster groove and plaster stucco, window roofing on the 1st floor, gable roof, cornice roofing on consoles 09235233
 
House in closed development with shop Clemens-Pfau-Platz 10
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Plastered facade, gable roof, six axes, two-storey 09235231
 
Residential building in closed development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 11
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Dating according to external appearance, plastered facade, three-storey, five axes, window roofing on the 1st floor, gable roof 09235230
 
House in a corner Clemens-Pfau-Platz 13
(map)
Reshaped around 1800, around 1860 Seven axes, first floor plaster ashlar, porphyry walls with grooves (around 1800), facade overformed after 1860, pilaster strips, cornice 09235229
 
Residential building Clemens-Pfau-Platz 14
(map)
1806 Door and window frames, plastered half-timbering on the upper floor, half-hip roof 09235234
 
House in a corner
House in a corner Clemens-Pfau-Platz 19
(map)
18th century Door and window frames, two-story, six axes, flattened hipped roof, probably half-timbered on the upper floor 09235235
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 20
(map)
Before 1700 Two-storey, two axes, modified windows, door and window frames on the ground floor not from the time of origin, very steep pitched roof 09235236
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 21
(map)
Around 1680, 1826 the ground floor was massively replaced Half-timbered structure on the upper floor with curved St. Andrew's crosses, leafed headbands, very steep pitched roof, massive ground floor, door and window frames from 1826, subsequently built-in shop 09235237
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 22
(map)
16th century (portal), 19th century (facade) 19th century facade, ground floor Renaissance door portal from the 16th century and Renaissance window frames, door portal and front door younger, house interior modernized, gable roof, five axes, two-storey 09235238
 
Residential house in semi-open development
Residential house in semi-open development Clemens-Pfau-Platz 26
(map)
Around 1860 Two-storey, saddle roof, polygonal ground floor, above canopy-like wooden architecture, roof extension, half-timbered elements, building substance older than 1860, was subsequently shaped, half-timbered drapery 09235239
 
Old cemetery between Dresdner Strasse, Schützenstrasse and Brückenstrasse, later urban green space, as well as two memorial stones with inscriptions, inserted into the park wall Dresdner Strasse
(map)
Inscribed with 1631 (memorial stone), inscribed with 1673 (memorial stone) Plant of great importance in terms of urban history and urban development. Both memorial stones on the remaining wall of the old cemetery mark the construction time of the house on the cemetery wall, construction time results from the Thirty Years' War;

1st stone: “Started in 1631 and bit stuck here” 2nd stone: “Ao 1673 completely finished - sub concile - Messrs. Moritz and hospital administrators Michael v… chen.” Spittelfriedhof: around 1535 a new cemetery was opened in front of the city gates created. It was in the garden behind the former Spittal. After a new cemetery was laid out in 1894, the old one ceased to exist. In the 1930s, the old churchyard was leveled, with most of the historic tombstones being lost. Instead of the cemetery, a simple green area (no garden monument) was created. The monument value results mainly from the town's historical significance as well as from the urban significance of the complex.

09235242
 
Residential house in semi-open development Dresdner Strasse 1
(map)
Around 1855, probably older in the core 09306513
 
Residential house in semi-open development Dresdner Strasse 4
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Originally with a shop, six axes, plastered half-timbering on the upper floor, door portal missing, new front door, high mansard roof 09235244
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 5
(map)
1st third of the 19th century Two-storey plastered building of architectural and urban development value, three axes, segmental arch portal made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, window frames with a cove, also Rochlitz porphyry tufa, mansard roof with too large dormer windows, simplified windows, front door renewed 09300422
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 6
(map)
Around 1830 Half-timbered building in good original condition of architectural and urban value, two-storey, ground floor massively plastered, house entrance arranged in the center with porphyry tuff garments with horizontal beams, on both sides of the house entrance two window axes also with porphyry tufa garments with a hollow, originally with shutters, the shutters probably renewed, timber-framed upper floor , profiled cornice, too large dormer windows, but not important due to the historical value of the building and the city's development 09300423
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 7
(map)
Around 1820 Typical plastered building with porphyry tufa structures, significance in terms of building history and local development, two-storey, plastered building, four axes, segmented arch portal, presumably partially renewed, among others marked with 1794 and "No 519" "No 320" (former house numbers), facade designed with porphyry tuff garments with one or two Hollow coves, partially renewed, base also faced with porphyry tuff panels, front door with skylight, mansard roof with extensions 09235245
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 9
(map)
Around 1830 Typical plastered construction with porphyry tufa elements, architectural and urban development historical significance, two-storey, simplified with doors and windows that have not been renewed in accordance with listed buildings, plaster also renewed, but house structure and arrangement of the window axes as well as the entrance preserved in the original, arched portal with keystone made of porphyry tuff and window frames also made of porphyry tuff, in Upper floor renewed, on the first floor from around 1830, mansard hipped roof with dormers that are too large 09300428
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 12
(map)
Around 1830 Typical plastered building with porphyry tufa elements, significance in terms of building history and urban development, two-storey, broadly layered plastered building, ground floor with porphyry tufa walls and porphyry tufa portal with horizontal beams, upper floor with renewed window walls, possibly even concrete, mansard hipped roof 09300427
 
House in closed development with shop Dresdner Strasse 16
(map)
Around 1820 Door portal is missing, cross vault in the hallway, mansard roof with a more recent loft extension, two-story, seven axes, shop fitting in the 2nd half of the 19th century 09235246
 
Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 20
(map)
Around 1800 Mansard roof, two-storey, five axes, high water mark on the base of the house from 1.8.1858 09235247
 
Residential house in semi-open development Fischergasse 6
(map)
1807 Window and door frames preserved, front door changed, hipped roof, gable clad 09235260
 
Fisherman's house Fischergasse 10
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Craftsman's house, probably fisherman's house; socially important 09300121
 
Apartment building in open development Fleischerstrasse 5
(map)
Marked 1885 Typical plastered construction with a rich facade design in historicizing, classicist echoing forms, plaster and natural stone incorporations, significance in terms of building history and urban development history. The residential building, built in 1885, outside the historic town center, which was formerly surrounded by the town wall. The building belongs to a time when other Saxon cities experienced a stormy development due to industrialization and these developed into large and medium-sized cities. This development also left its mark on Rochlitz, albeit only very slowly, which is probably related to the city's location in the middle of a rural environment. The plastered brick building, which is still isolated today, has been preserved in its design. It is characterized by the regular row of segmental arched windows, which are framed by porhyrtufa walls. Window roofing with segmental arches and triangular gables on the slightly protruding central projection as well as the fine plaster structure with corner blocks and friezes are also characteristic. Only a few buildings have been preserved in this impressive originality, so that this building is also of architectural significance in addition to its urban development value. Plaster ashlars and plaster grooves on the ground floor, fluted pilaster strips; Central projection, triangular gable as window canopy on the 1st floor, two-story, four axes, triangular gable. 09235261
 
Duplex house Friedrich-August-Strasse 9, 11
(map)
Around 1940 Residential house in open development, probably cooperative or municipal housing, two-storey, plastered facade, scratched plaster, saddle roof, shutters; Part of a factory settlement near the train station of architectural, urban development and urban planning importance (see also 09235144) 09235142
 
Residential building Friedrich-August-Strasse 13
(map)
1940 Multi-family dwelling in open development, residential building with settlement character, possibly cooperative or communal housing, scratch plaster, window shutters, saddle roof, two-storey; Part of a former factory settlement of architectural and urban development historical importance (see also 09235144) 09235143
 
Residential house in semi-open development Gärtnerstrasse 9
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Four axes, two-storey, with plaster ashlar 09235262
 
Residential building, former agricultural school
Residential building, former agricultural school Gärtnerstrasse 34
(map)
1877 Significant in terms of local history, two-storey, seven axes, the central three axes highlighted by pilasters, simplified facade, painted porphyry walls, solid, plastered facade; Agricultural school founded in 1877 09235298
 
Residential building in closed development Gärtnerstrasse 42
(map)
Around 1880 Door and window frames, flap cornice, frieze under the roof, original front door, stairs porphyry, gable, two-story, four axes 09235297
 
Residential building Gärtnerstrasse 43
(map)
Around 1880 Of local and architectural importance, plastered facade with corner blocks, porphyry walls, cornice, gable roof, mezzanine floor 09235296
 
Residential building Gärtnerstrasse 44
(map)
Around 1890 Residential house in half-open development; Typical plastered building in good original condition 09236782
 
Diaconate Gärtnerstrasse 46
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Plaster construction, porphyry walls, stairs 09235295
 
Royal Saxon milestone
More pictures
Royal Saxon milestone Gröblitzer Weg, corner of B 175
(map)
After 1858 Copy of a whole milestone with a crown, the original was erected in 1860 and redesigned into a kilometer stone around 1900, renewed in 2008 by the Rochlitz History Association and set up not far from the place of discovery, of significance in terms of traffic history 09300168
 
Residential house in open development with remains of the enclosure
Residential house in open development with remains of the enclosure Gröblitzer Weg 1
(map)
1707 (portal), 1904 (residential house) Corner house with broken corner and elevated storey in the main viewing area, seating niche portal with keystone from 1707, plastered facade with clinker brick elements, brick ashlar, bossed ashlar on the ground floor, half-timbered drama, original roof structures, dominant location, balcony railing elaborately decorated, half-timbered gable gable, renaissance of the castle gable portal 09235211
 
Residential building in closed development Gröblitzer Weg 2
(map)
1803 Neo-Gothic plastered building in good original condition, of architectural significance. Early neo-Gothic, simple, mansion-like building, two-storey, seven axes with simple pointed arch windows, hipped roof, central projection with balcony and stepped gable. 09235353
 
House in closed development with shop Hauptstrasse 1
(map)
1805 Three-story, five axes, gable roof, three loft extensions, cross vaults in the hallway, shop installation later. 09235283
 
Residential building in closed development Hauptstrasse 8
(map)
After 1800 Two-storey, four axes, saddle roof, gable over two axes, original door and window frames 09235284
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Hauptstrasse 10
(map)
After 1800 Half-timbered construction on the upper floor, massive ground floor, original window and door frames, probably originally with a shop, simple design of the house 09235285
 
Residential building in closed development Hauptstrasse 12
(map)
After 1800 Half-timbering on the upper floor plastered, the ground floor solid, window frames preserved, arch of the door portal missing 09235286
 
Residential house with shop in closed development and rear building Hauptstrasse 13
(map)
1805 according to the inscription Town house, built in 1805 over older cellars, of importance in terms of house history, building history and urban development history. Two-storey residential building, five axes, saddle roof, gable with three axes, original front door, original door fittings in the stairwell, three-story cellar, in the lowest ogival door walls, vaulted cellar 09235282
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Hauptstrasse 15
(map)
1805 Porphyry door and window frames, cross vaults in the hallway, two storeys, seven axes, gable roof with three extensions, front door younger, but good craftsmanship 09235280
 
Residential house in closed development with shop, garden table in the garden (1654) Hauptstrasse 17
(map)
After 1800 (house); 1654 (stone table) At its core, presumably an older house, later structurally remodeled and expanded, as well as a singular table made of porphyry tufa, significance in terms of architectural and local history. Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff garden table, square shape, curved table cheeks , engraved with the year “1654”, the only known example in the old Rochlitz district, the original use and location are unknown; The shop was installed in the house around 1925, today there is no shop equipment, but the front of the shop with plastic depictions of cows and pigs above the shop windows has been preserved, which is an indication of a butcher shop. 09235278
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Hauptstrasse 18
(map)
1819 With other residential buildings, an important building complex between Hauptstrasse and Rathausstrasse. Seven axes, simple construction, two-storey, inner courtyard, west side porch two-storey, Welsche hood, crowned with a copper vase, Popyr columns on the ground floor, plank truss roof with seven extensions (arched roof like the hull), the only example in the Rochlitz district. 09235279
 
Residential house in closed development with shop and rear building Hauptstrasse 19
(map)
1805 Shop from the time it was built, portal and door preserved, three-storey, six axes, gable roof, remains of the old buildings in the courtyard, added door jambs, rear building: half-timbered plastered 09235277
 
Residential building with shops in closed development Hauptstrasse 25
(map)
After 1800 Plastered facade, cross vaults in the hallway, old door frames on the courtyard side, historically important, three-story, six axes, gable roof, three extensions, cross vaults in the hallway, old door walls on the courtyard side, cross vaults in the shop, property with partially preserved city wall tower 09235276
 
Residential building Hauptstrasse 27
(map)
Around 1800 Example of the original two-storey development on the market square, two-storey plastered building with door and window walls made of Rochlitz porphyry, gable roof, renovated today 09300122
 
Saxon postal mileage column
More pictures
Saxon postal mileage column Hohe Gasse, corner of Burgstrasse
(map)
Renewal marked 1820, in the core 1722 Saxon post mile pillars (totality), copy of a distance pillar, of importance in terms of traffic history:

Copy of a Saxon distance column made of Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff from the former Obertor; Obelisk on base, with coat of arms, "AR" monogram, post horn mark and inscriptions, on two adjacent pages with distance information. 2006 renewed restoration, put up again in 2007. In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began erecting the Saxon post-mile pillars . Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679 - 1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half pillars and full pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km). This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in terms of the history of transport as part of the nationally important postal system.

09305158
 
High house;  Residential house with side building and small bridge
High house; Residential house with side building and small bridge Hohe Gasse 5, 6
(map)
1740 Dendro (residential house); 1793 Dendro (outbuilding) Simple baroque building on the site of a former fortified mansion, of architectural and urban significance. Two-storey baroque building, mansard roof with extensions, important urban development location on the site of a former fortified manor house, formerly associated farmyard, today laundry, side building with mansard hipped roof, good original condition, probably 2nd half of the 18th century. 09235329
 
Residential building Hohe Gasse 7
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Modernized 09235330
 
Residential house in semi-open development Kirchgasse 2
(map)
Before 1800 09235215
 
Kunigundenplatz and the Matthesius monument
Kunigundenplatz and the Matthesius monument Kunigundenplatz
(map)
1904 (monument); End of the 12th century to the end of the 15th century (plaza) Slightly trapezoidal square next to the Kunigunden Church with not inconsiderable remains of medieval river pebbles and a portrait bust of historical relevance.

Mathesius monument: larger than life copper bust on a high porphyry base, sculptor Arthur Schulz (Berlin), initiator of local history researcher Clemens Pfau . Johann Mathesius was born in Rochlitz in 1504 and died in Joachimsthal in 1565, pastor, first Luther biographer

The Kunigundenplatz was originally part of the elongated market square of the city, which was probably founded in the 12th century. This square was divided into several sections by later development. The Kunigundenplatz surrounds the church of the same name from the 2nd half of the 15th century. The appearance of the square has largely been retained until today. Footpaths with granite pavement, modern lanes in the south, east and north of the square, in the north a small green area as an extension of the old Latin school from 1538 (status 1993).

Note 2007: The square was renovated using the old pavement after 1993, the solitary tree in the northeast of the church was replaced by a young tree (linden), bands made of old granite pavement slabs were inserted into the square, and parking pockets were pushed into the square in the southwest of the church. The small square in the northeast of the church has been supplemented with a low wall made of quarry stone masonry as a demarcation from the street and two solitary trees (Norway maple).

09235320
 
Kunigunden church with high altar and other furnishings
More pictures
Kunigunden church with high altar and other furnishings Kunigundenplatz
(map)
1470-1499 (church); 1513 (high altar); 1688 (church tower) Important late Gothic hall church, of architectural, local history, artistic and urban significance. Late Gothic new building, restored 1933–35, basement in the core Romanesque (13th century), central tower 1688, exterior in ashlar technique (Rochlitzer porphyry), high altar: carvings by the master of the Freiberg cathedral apostles, paintings of the middle change Hans Dürer . 09235319
 
House in closed development with shop Kunigundenplatz 2
(map)
1806 Three-storey, six axes, gable roof, portal, vault in the hallway, a shop built in later and a former shop from the time it was built 09235224
 
Residential house in closed development with shop and back building Kunigundenplatz 3
(map)
Around 1800 Three-storey, four axes, gable roof, cross vault in the hallway, rear building with half-timbering 09235225
 
Residential building in closed development Kunigundenplatz 4
(map)
Around 1800 Two-storey, six axes, shop installation, door portal 09235226
 
House in a corner
House in a corner Kunigundenplatz 5
(map)
Around 1800 Three-storey, five axes, gable roof, with a crooked hip on one side, half-timbering plastered over on the 2nd floor, cross vaults in the hallway 09235227
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 1
(map)
Around 1800 Typical plastered building with a half-hipped roof, beautiful baroque segment arch portal, of historical importance. Store younger, recessed, well-finished front door, two-storey, seven axes, gable roof, window frames, plinth, cornice and Potal natural stone 19th century. 09235291
 
Residential building in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 2
(map)
Around 1800 Three-storey, four axes, gable extension over two axes, gable roof, remains of the cross vault in the central corridor 09235218
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 3
(map)
Around 1800 Seven axes, central projection over one axis, door portal, also on the courtyard side door portal, gable roof probably renewed 09235220
 
Residential building in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 4
(map)
Around 1800 Three floors, four axes 09235219
 
House in closed development with shop Kunigundenstrasse 6
(map)
Marked with 1805 Five axes, two-storey, mansard roof with a small gable triangle, shop subsequently, portal with dated keystone 09235221
 
Residential building in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 10
(map)
Around 1800 Five axes, two-storey, saddle roof, door portal and front door original, originally had shops 09235222
 
Residential building in closed development Kunigundenstrasse 15
(map)
Around 1800 Two-storey, steep pitched roof, building probably older than 1800, three axes, door portal preserved, vacant 09235223
 
Residential building in closed development Leipziger Strasse 1
(map)
Around 1800 Typical plastered building with the original half-hip roof, of architectural and urban significance, original door and window frames as well as windows and front door, two-storey, half-hip roof, roof extension over three axes 09235206
 
Residential building in closed development Leipziger Strasse 3
(map)
1712 Formerly a baroque building with period equipment, the birthplace of the painter Leopold Thieme , of architectural and regional significance. Simple baroque building, two-storey, mansard roof, lies on the site of the former castle forecourt, central projection over three axes, plaster structure over windows and plaster ashlar around the portal, inside stucco ceilings, cross vaults, chimneys, original doors and windows. During the Seven Years' War, Prussian King Friedrich II stayed in the building. 09235207
 
Detached house Leipziger Strasse 18
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Porphyry window and door frames, crooked hip roof, simple construction 09235264
 
Villa with enclosure and outbuildings Leipziger Strasse 21
(map)
1880 Mixed clinker construction, one and a half storeys high, irregular floor plan, high ground floor with ashlar plinth, corner ashlar, low upper floor, veranda glazed and covered, architect Hugo Franz (Leipzig) 09235192
 
Villa with outbuildings and fencing Leipziger Strasse 23
(map)
Late 19th century Porphyry cladding, plastered facade, plastering, one and a half story, irregular floor plan, high ground floor and low upper floor, strong ashlar around windows on the ground floor, open veranda, suspected, flat hipped roof 09235193
 
Residential building Leipziger Strasse 24
(map)
Around 1890 Free standing 09235190
 
Former superintendent Leipziger Strasse 26
(map)
Around 1895 Two-storey, four axes, central projection with two axes, plaster facade with porphyry window frames, horizontal window roofing or roofing with segmented gable, corner cuboid plastered, plastered grooves, gable roof, balcony, elaborately designed door walls 09235191
 
Villa with enclosure Leipziger Strasse 30
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Two-storey, flat hipped roof, central projection with three window axes separated by pilasters, plaster blocks, porphyry window frames, brackets under the roof, windows only partially original 09235194
 
Villa with enclosure and outbuildings Leipziger Strasse 47
(map)
Around 1870 Plastered facade, wrong color scheme, original windows, porphyry window frames, two-storey, steep pitched roof, gable over central projecting with balcony on the upper floor, tower, side building is a former farm building 09235195
 
Rochlitz cemetery Lindenallee, corner to Schützenstraße
(map)
1896 (cemetery laid out) Material entirety of the Rochlitz cemetery with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel (1906), 15 tombs and five tombs of important Rochlitz personalities and war memorials for those who fell in the First and Second World Wars (see object 09235212) as well as cemetery design with avenue and solitary trees (garden monument), cemetery section administrator house and unitary cemetery administrator ; of local history, architectural and gardening as well as social history importance.
  • Cemetery design: structure of the cemetery by main axes and central chapel square, emphasis on the longitudinal axis by a cut linden tree avenue and the central area by pyramid oaks, the southern and western enclosure wall with south and west gate and cut linden tree avenue in front of the southern enclosure wall that characterizes the cityscape, Partly still undisturbed succession of valuable family graves along the western enclosure wall, district division largely preserved
  • Enclosure: south, west and north enclosure wall made of clinker masonry with a base made of porphyry masonry and cover plates made of concrete as well as pillars made of clinker masonry with concrete cover stones, inside of the wall plastered, eastern enclosure hedge (hornbeam), south gate on the right and left with a gate each four gate pillars made of clinker masonry with bases made of porphyry masonry and profiled cover plates, two wrought iron gate wings and one wrought iron door wing each to the right and left of the gate, west gate and south gate without wickets
  • Access: north-south route axis to the south gate, east-west route axis to the west gate, chapel square, circular space at the north end of the north-south route axis, curved path from this space to the north-west entrance, paths parallel to the enclosure walls and straight side paths between the quarters, some paths as grass paths
  • Water: manual pump in the north area
  • Trees: row of trees (cut linden) in front of the southern enclosure wall, hedge (hornbeam) overgrown on the north border, in the south section of the north-south path axis Allee (26 cut summer linden trees), on the west section of the east-west path axis Row of trees (five cut summer linden trees), two pairs of trees and two solitary trees in the central area on the north-south axis of the path and a solitary tree in the southeast of the chapel (seven pyramid oaks), in the southern section of the eastern border remains of a row of trees (summer linden trees), solitary trees ( Weymuth pine, spruce, oak, maple, ash), groups of shrubs (rhododendron and yew) on the circular square, hedges, grave borders (mainly yew), remains of rows and pairs of conifers (mainly trees of life), wooded area at the chapel with white flowering rhododendrons, mohonia, Lilac, rose, ivy
  • Visual relationship: from the cross path in the south area axial visual relation to the Kunigunden Church, in the main longitudinal axis axial visual relation to the wooden cross at its northwest end
09300157
 
Cemetery chapel (1906), 15 grave monuments and five grave structures of important Rochlitz personalities as well as war memorials for those who fell in the First and Second World Wars (individual monuments for ID No. 09300157) Lindenallee, corner to Schützenstraße
(map)
1907 (consecration of the cemetery chapel); 1917 (Wolf family grave); probably around 1918 (Julius Karl Hartmann family grave complex); around 1918 (Schlobach family grave complex); 1946 (grave of Prof. William Clemens Pfau ); 1801–1979 (tombs) Individual features of the aggregate Friedhof Rochlitz; of local and socio-historical importance (see also the cemetery Rochlitz - object 09300157):
  • Cemetery chapel: central building on an octagonal floor plan, Art Nouveau, architects: Schilling & Graebner , Dresden
  • 1. Classicist column tomb with urn
  • 2. Grave of master organ builder Reinhard Schmeisser (died 1978) and Alfred Schmeisser, master organ builder (died 1957), Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, 1/4 columns arranged like organ pipes, right and left two panels with inscriptions, around 1957
  • 3. Tomb of the love family from Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, sarcophagus-like wall plate on feet with inscription, around 1965
  • 4. Grave complex for local researcher Prof. William Clemens Pfau (died 1946), cube made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff with portrait bust as 3/4 relief in the upper third, enclosure: wrought iron fence
  • 5. Tomb Pastor Dr. Georg Buchwald, gravestone with Gothic pointed arch, inscription weathered, 1947?
  • 6. Emil Fischer's tomb (landlord of the Fischers Weinstube), large cross with wrapped cloth on a porphyry base
  • 7. Grave of the Richter family from Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, central area: plaque with inscription, framed by garlands; Laterally, putti with torches arranged on stumps, polygonal porch with planter, around 1908
  • 8. Grave complex of the Schlobach family, mill owners, grave slab with a plant bowl in front of it on a three-tiered base, flanked by flanked pilasters made of Rochlitz porphyry tufa, elaborate roofing, on the right and left of it another tombstone of family members
  • 9. Gustav Hartmann family tomb, polished granite slab with inscription framed by elaborate porphyry tufa architecture, around 1910/1920
  • 10. Tomb of the Bermann family, Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, three inscription panels flanked by channeled columns, above a cornice with flower bowls, among other things buried Heinrich Bermann, died in Ypres on May 16, 1915
  • 11. Grave complex of the Prof. Friedrich Franz Wolf family, school director (died 1933); Neo-Romanesque arch architecture supported by columns made of Rochlitz porphyry tufa arranged in pairs, inscriptions in the lower area, fencing with porphyry stones
  • 12.Tomb of the Arthur Junghans family (master builder), arched architecture made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, in the middle area grave inscription for the son who died in World War I, above it a relief with a soldier's helmet and oak leaves, around 1918
  • 13. Tomb of the Kurt Hausmann family, here only a metal relief with a rising sun and a horse plow
  • 14. Guido Schneider tomb, pilaster architecture with arched end, flanked by a row of balustrades, 1926
  • 15. Tomb of the Albrecht and Emil Haberkorn families (master builder and stonemason, owner of quarries), flat sarcophagus-like structure with arched frieze made of porphyry tuff, 1948
  • 16. Rudolf Zimmermann's tomb, local historian, porphyry slab with inscription and relief, 1943
  • 17. Tomb of Dr. med. Fritz Hammerschmidt, gravestone with a bas-relief of two mourners, 1911
  • 18. Tomb of Franz Moritz Thalemann, Kgl. Music director and senior seminar teacher, Granit, 1911
  • 19. Tomb of Pastor Wilhelm Fricke, Porphyrtuff, tombstone with a round end and relief with the crucified, 1979
  • 20. War memorial for the fallen of the First World War, large, roughly hewn porphyry stone with metal inscription plaque "Our fallen comrades"
  • 21. War memorial for the fallen of the Second World War, large, roughly hewn porphyry stone with a metal inscription plaque "Our fallen brothers"
  • 22. Grave complex of the Julius Karl Hartmann family with stone enclosure, Rochlitz porphyry tuff, large three-zone plaque with inscriptions and ornamental decorations, lateral framing by pilasters, triangular gable roofing
  • 23. Tomb of the Loser family, grave wall with a central stone cross with a wreath and a Maltese cross as well as lateral pillars with a flat pyramidal end. decorated with laurel leaves and dagger (galvanized reliefs), inscription on stones on both sides of the cross, material: Rochlitzer porphyry tuff, probably created in 1915 for Johannes Walther Löser, who fell in World War I.
  • 24. Gravestone for Alfred Heidel, died 1995, presumably use of an older gravestone from the 1920s, material: Rochlitzer porphyry tuff, base stone with pointed arch with inscription, in the areas outside the arches there are bas-reliefs with representations probably of the Naumburg donor figures Ekkehard and Uta , Structure with two squat fluted columns, which support a strong entablature, in between a small stone cross with a wreath
  • 25. Hereditary funeral of the Dr. Jochen Ihmels, for Dr. Jochen Ihmels, Superintendent, died 1995 and his wife, Christa Ihmels, died 2004, possibly an older tombstone or fragment of an older tombstone, perforated grave wall made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff with decorative framing and crowning, in the center of the grave a white stone cross with a wreath, a base stone with Inscription: "WE LIVE OR DIE, SO WE ARE OF THE LORD: ROMANS 14: 8"
  • 26. Gravestone for the haulier Bruno Bauch, died in 1950 and his wife Martha Bauch, died in 1968, gravestone 1950, material: Rochlitzer porphyry tuff, raised lettering and bas-relief depicting a horse, a horseshoe, a whip and grain
09235212
 
Market fountain, at the same time a memorial for those who fell in the First World War
Market fountain, at the same time a memorial for those who fell in the First World War Market
(map)
1929, 1969 change basin Bavarian Muschelkalk, artist from Dresden ( Georg Wrba ), profiled well shaft with bronze sculpture, depicting two warriors with mother and bride 09235308
 
town hall
More pictures
town hall Market 1
(map)
1825-1828 Two-storey, almost square floor plan, hipped roof, late classicist new building using older components, first mention in 1442, moderate building of good proportions, four wings with inner courtyard, west side with portico and three axes, balcony, gable, roof turret, tower with bell 09235307
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Market 2
(map)
1802 Three-storey, seven axes, gable roof, hallway with vaults, inscription above the door portal: "If the master does not build the house, those who build it work for free.", "Rebuilt after the great market fire on April 2nd, 1802 in the same year" 09235309
 
Hotel Golden Lion
Hotel Golden Lion Market 3
(map)
marked 1735 (portal); around 1870 (hotel) Dated door portal, three-storey, six axes, saddle roof, richly decorated portal with coat of arms keystone, offset on the courtyard side of the house in the 19th century, facade beginning of the 19th century, stucco ceilings around 1860, plaster ashlar, porphyry garments 09235310
 
House in closed development with shop
House in closed development with shop Market 4
(map)
Around 1810 Five axes, gable roof, porphyry portal and window frames, simple building, the only example of an old commercial building on site, portal with four richly decorated wings, former shop windows and shop entrance, inside original ceilings and doors, inlaid floors, house signs with anchors, steep cross vaults 09235311
 
House in closed development with shop Market 5
(map)
After 1800 Cross vaults in the hallway and partly in the shop area, major building changes, especially in the facade area, facade after 1800, older structure, originated from originally two parcels 09235359
 
House in closed development with shop
House in closed development with shop Market 9
(map)
After 1800 Three-storey, seven axes, gable roof, hallway cross vault, original doors with fittings, originally two-storey 09235265
 
House in closed development with shop Market 10
(map)
After 1800 Three-storey, five axes, gable roof, window canopies over the middle three windows on the 1st floor, hallway barrel vault 19th century with stucco decorations on the belt arches 09235266
 
House in closed development with shop
House in closed development with shop Market 11
(map)
1790 according to the inscription Three-storey, five axes, gable roof, central axis accentuated like risalit, front door around 1900, originally two-storey 09235267
 
Residential house with shop in closed development and rear building Markt 12
(map)
Around 1800 (front building); 1820 (rear building, demolished before 2012) Rear building: half-timbered plastered on the upper floor; Solid residential building, three-storey, six axes, gable roof, facade well preserved, cross vaults in the central corridor, original residential building with shop or craftsman's house, shop fitting around 1900, plastering and windows changed, probably one floor higher, the house belongs to the representative, relatively uniformly designed and Market square development, largely preserved in its original form, which was shaped by the 18th century. 09235268
 
House in closed development with shop Market 14
(map)
1802 Rebuilt after the city fire in 1802, restored in 1990, three-story, four axles, gable roof 09235270
 
House in closed development with shop Markt 16
(map)
Around 1800 Three-storey, seven axes, gable roof, middle three axes one storey higher, flanked by pilasters and crowned by a gable triangle, the rest of the facade also flanked by pilasters, ground floor plastering, stucco ornamentation, probably overformed in the 19th century 09235271
 
House in closed development with shop Markt 17
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Elaborate, richly structured facade with plaster grooves on the ground floor, tooth-cut frieze as cornice, pilasters next to windows on the upper floor, protruding roof, shop from the time it was built, porphyry plinth and porphyry walls, original front door 09235272
 
House in closed development with shop Markt 18
(map)
Around 1880 Plaster ashlar on the ground floor, three-storey, gable roof, central projectile, triangular gable, original front door, window canopies on the upper floor 09235273
 
House in closed development with shop Markt 19
(map)
Around 1880 Plaster use on the upper floor, original shop with richly decorated shop door, window canopies on the upper floor, four axes 09235274
 
Residential house with shop in closed development and rear building Markt 22, 23
(map)
Around 1800 Probably 2nd half of the 18th century, three-storey, five axes, saddle roof, plastering on the ground floor, extension, probably an older part of the house with old door and window fittings, parts of the cross vault, the front building, however, younger, porphyry window and door frames 09235275
 
Pavement of Mühlgasse between Burgstrasse and Mühlgraben Mühlgasse
(map)
19th century 09235151
 
Residential building with high water mark Mühlgasse 3
(map)
Around 1700 (house); 1696 (high water mark) One of the oldest buildings in the Mühlgassenviertel, part of the old local structure. Residential building two-storey plastered construction, first floor quarry stone masonry; in the gable the framework has been massively replaced, very steep gable roof; High water mark porphyry cube with inscription and water level mark; until 2009 incorrectly entered in the list of monuments as Mühlgasse 2. 09235352
 
Zaßnitzer footbridge
More pictures
Zaßnitzer footbridge Mühlgraben
(map)
1958 Wire rope suspension bridge over the Zwickauer Mulde, important in terms of technology history and landscape.

Pedestrian bridge, rope suspension bridge (overhead bridge), total length 83.5 m, span 60 m, width 1.7 m; Concrete abutment, above pylons (pylon height 5.8 m) made of riveted steel framework with circular segment bearings, wire rope with 45 mm diameter anchored on the pylons and guided over the bearings, walkway suspended from these with tie rods, walkway with wooden decking and wooden railing, bridge with ramps ( South side: embankment, north side: steel girders); Year of construction of the present bridge structure 1958, due to the construction of the pylons reuse of parts of a previous bridge is assumed; Suspension bridge construction for crossing the trough since 1889, replaced a wooden footbridge that had been occupied since the beginning of the 16th century, the bridge was renewed several times after flood damage, most recently after the flood in 1954 with a significantly higher gradient; 2006 Repair (renewal of the transition structure while retaining the construction method, also retaining the original abutments and pylons) with monument protection approval from September 8, 2005, documentation of findings in the documentation collection; Pedestrian bridge, among other things, for the way to work of residents of the opposite district of Zaßnitz to the nearby, now demolished old spinning mill, construction typical for the Muldental (one of several such wire rope bridges over the Zwickauer Mulde: Sörnzig swing bridge, Rochsburg and Thierbach-Zinnberg suspension bridges), thus a technical history and significant in terms of urban development history and landscape.

09235328
 
Residential house in open development Mühlgraben 1
(map)
Around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered clad, ground floor massive, porphyry window and door frames, simple design, half-hipped roof, historically important 09235323
 
Old bathing shop
Old bathing shop Mühlgraben 10
(map)
Marked with 1707 Historically significant baroque building. First documented mention in 1464. Built in 1707 according to the inscription on the keystone above the house entrance. Two-storey plastered quarry stone building, street front with 5 window axes, central axis highlighted by plaster and triangular gable. The house entrance is also in the middle of the eaves side. It is emphasized by a portal with a richly decorated and marked keystone. The baroque building is completed by a high hipped mansard roof. The building impresses with its authentic appearance. As a result, it is of great importance in terms of architectural history. The original function of a bathing establishment also establishes a city-historical value. Five axes, two-storey, high hipped roof, simple baroque building, first mentioned in 1464, portal with richly decorated keystone, dominant urban location, small gable, keystone dated. 09235325
 
High heist
High heist Mühlgraben 11 to 24
(map)
After 1800 Subject aggregate row of houses Hohe Heiste with the following individual monuments: Mühlgraben 17, 19, 22, 23 and 24 (see object 09235326) as well as Mühlgraben No. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 21 and Heiste as aggregate parts; of urban significance. 14 former craftsmen's houses, built on the former city wall in a dominant urban location, important for the city silhouette, steep stairs to each house, heiste, former wall embankment was built over, mostly half-timbered on the upper floor, solid ground floor, porphyry window and door frames, some original windows and doors, saddle roofs , of which single monument: building no. 17, 19, 22, 23 and 24. 09300158
 
Hohe Heiste (individual monuments for ID no.09300158)
Hohe Heiste (individual monuments for ID no.09300158) Mühlgraben 17, 19, 22, 23, 24
(map)
After 1800 Individual features of the population Hohe Heiste: residential houses Mühlgraben No. 17, 19, 22, 23 and No. 24 (see also population Hohe Heiste - Obj. 09300158); of urban significance.

Short row of houses, two-storey, on the former city wall with high urban value for the city silhouette (view from the south). The Hohe Heisten in front of it, picturesquely situated high garden walls with staircases of different inclines according to the principle of "each his own staircase", created by overbuilding the former embankment. Hohe Heiste with 14 former craftsmen's houses, including a single monument:

  • No. 17: Solid ground floor, window and door frames made of porphyry, upper floor renewed half-timbering, gable roof
  • No. 19: Solid ground floor, porphyry door walls, old front door, upper floor half-timbered, gable roof
  • No. 22: Solid ground floor, porphyry door walls, upper floor plastered half-timbering, gable roof
  • No. 23: Solid ground floor, half-timbering on the upper floor presumably replaced by stone, porphyry door walls, old front door
  • No. 24: Solid ground floor, plastered half-timbered upper floor, porphyry window and door frames, old front door, saddle roof
09235326
 
Castle mill
More pictures
Castle mill Mühlgraben 29, 30
(map)
1862, later redesigned (residential building); 1854 mill building and technical equipment (mill); 1870 and 1896 (industrial building) Mill complex, consisting of a mill building with three dated keystones or memorial stones, silo building, residential house and garage extension; Small industrial mill with partially preserved equipment, a mill location that has been in use since the 13th century and was producing until the end of the 20th century, one of the oldest mills in Saxony, significance in terms of local history, architectural history and technology history.
  • Mill building on the weir: four-storey, gable roof divided into 13 axes, two memorial stones from 1526 with Arabic and Roman numerals, a keystone with the electoral-Saxon coat of arms from 1718, built into the defensive wall, plans by the local council builder Johann Gottlieb Pfau, alterations around 1862; Today's appearance due to modifications by the architect Albert Gessner, Girard turbine still present in 1988 ; Renovations in 2001 and 2005
  • Silo building: dated 1896 (keystone), 1862, four-storey, clinker brick, small arched windows, five axes, gable roof
  • Mühlgraben (EXAMINATION monument value!) Renewed
  • Residential building: nine axes, neo-Gothic saddle roof, central projecting over three axes, two-storey, extended attic, rich stone carvings, Tudor style, architect: master mason and councilor Johann Gottlieb Pfau
  • Garage extension (to the house): single-storey building, gable roof and 4 gate openings of different sizes

Four buildings, industrial architecture, including the house in neo-Gothic style, furnishings mostly renewed, Girard water turbine

09235331
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Mühlplatz 1
(map)
Around 1800 Facade changed at the end of the 19th century, dormer window from this period, solid, white and green glazed brick cladding 09235333
 
House Haberkorn;  Residential house in open development with outbuildings and fencing
House Haberkorn; Residential house in open development with outbuildings and fencing Mühlplatz 3
(map)
1888 (residential house); around 1800 (outbuilding) Picturesque designed building with rich ornamental framework, important in terms of local development and architectural history. Copy of a renaissance door portal (seat niche portal), steep gable roof, references to an older date of origin: old door handle around 1800, partly older window frames on the ground floor, ornamental framework on the upper floor, belonged to the former quarry owner, gable, floating gable 09235334
 
Residential building
Residential building Mühlplatz 4
(map)
1790 Massive ground floor with porphyry window and door walls, probably half-timbered on the upper floor, extended in the roof area by jamb 09235332
 
Rectory with enclosure Mühlplatz 6
(map)
Around 1890/1900 Simple facade design, outer house, decorated wood, cornice, corner blocks, plaster facade, gable roof, stone plinth, porphyry window frames 09235205
 
Residential building in closed development Muldengasse 1
(map)
Early 19th century Plastered facade, probably originally with plaster grooves on the ground floor, porphyry window and door frames, very beautiful, original front door, porphyry base, two roof structures that were too large 09235269
 
Row of town barns Noßwitzer Weg
(map)
2, half of the 19th century Row of town barns with seven town barns (see also Zwickauer Straße), some construction changes 09235203
 
Döhler memorial stone in the allotment gardens Döhlergärten e.  V.
Döhler memorial stone in the allotment gardens Döhlergärten e. V. Pestweg (in the garden section)
(map)
1916 Memorial stone for Johannes Döhler; in memory of the founder of the allotment garden, in a small complex, stone from Rochlitz porphyry tuff, meaning for the local history.

Stein Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, Iron Cross; Döhler founded the plant in 1915, war volunteer, killed in France in 1915, stone set in 1916; Inscription: JOHANNES / DÖHLER / gef. Aug. 17, 1915 / Founder / of the possible national / workers' association

09236992
 
Petrikirche
More pictures
Petrikirche Petrigasse
(map)
1470 (church), 1667 (wooden altar crucifix); 1653 (parts of the high altar); 17./18. Century (pastor portraits) Church (with equipment); late Gothic hall church with tower top, in the immediate vicinity of the castle, main parish church of the city until the 15th century, of architectural, artistic, historical and local importance. In the area of ​​the outer bailey, the town's main parish church until the 15th century; wooden altar crucifix (1667), crucifixion painting (parts of the old high altar, 1653) and pastor portraits (17th / 18th century). 09235200
 
Detached house with a fence Poststrasse 2
(map)
1894 Red clinker brick, cornice, central risalit with balcony, window renewed, gable crowned with triangular gable, corner cuboid on central risalit 09235186
 
Detached house Poststrasse 4
(map)
Around 1890 Plastered facade with red clinker as a square at the corners, window frames decorated with leaf motifs, boarded gable triangles, floating gables, horizontal window canopies, original roof structures, windows renewed, base polygonal masonry 09235187
 
Detached house Poststrasse 6
(map)
Around 1900 Plastered facade, porphyry window frames, skylights made of lead glass with Art Nouveau ornamentation on the ground floor, two-axis gable, triangular gable as crowning 09235181
 
House in closed development in a corner Rathausstrasse 1
(map)
Around 1800 Original portal, quarry stone masonry on the ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered ?, creating space, important for the townscape, two-storey, six axes, gable roof, hipped on one side, original dormers 09235290
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Rathausstrasse 2
(map)
Before 1800 Three-storey, six axes, gable roof, original dormers, door portal with original front door, carved door panels and skylight, facade after 1800, on the Oberlaube residential building on the upper floor, two-arched 09235317
 
Residential building in closed development Rathausstrasse 3
(map)
After 1800 Four axes, two-storey, door and window frames preserved, probably originally with a shop 09235289
 
Residential building with shop in closed development Rathausstrasse 4
(map)
After 1800 Two-storey, five axes, gable with three axes, two door portals on the ground floor 09235316
 
House in closed development with shop Rathausstrasse 5
(map)
Dated 1805 Two-storey, six axes, gable roof, loft extension over the middle part of the house, gable with two axes, crowned with triangular gable, hallway with vault, original dormers, door portal preserved 09235288
 
Residential building with shop in closed development with rear building Rathausstrasse 6
(map)
Around 1800 Original front door, door and window frames, formerly a shop on the ground floor, five axes, two-story, not viewed 09235315
 
Residential building in closed development Rathausstrasse 8
(map)
Around 1800 Two-storey, four axes, gable roof, roof extensions over two central axes, crowned by a triangular gable, facade around 1800 09235354
 
Residential house in closed development, with shop Rathausstrasse 12
(map)
Around 1800 Four axes, two-storey, shop from the end of the 19th century, original door frames 09235314
 
Keystone with house brand of the former cookshop (gable side of the side building) Rathausstrasse 15
(map)
1766 Spent in the present location in the 19th century 09235287
 
Duplex house Rathausstrasse 20
(map)
1802, remodeling 1815–1817 Three-storey, two gables, crowned with a copper vase, eight axes, two rows of standing dormers with ashlar framing, two gate entrances with original gates, stucco ceilings and other original architectural details, portal added today, former factory owner's house with office: yarn and goods warehouse of the worsted weaving mill Winkler & Sohn , Quartered in 1813 of the generals, temporary stay of the composer Conradin Kreutzer , rich original inventory: gates, bay windows, grilles, cross vaults 09235313
 
Residential house with shop in closed development and rear building Rathausstrasse 22
(map)
Around 1800 The pharmacy in it, about 300 years old, was also a butcher's shop, cross vaults, porphyry door and window frames, three-story residential building, seven axes, saddle roof, hallway and staircase original; Residential building renovated, rear building not renovated, vacancy 09235312
 
Residential building in closed development Rathausstrasse 24
(map)
Before 1800 Three-storey, four axes, gable roof, vaults in the hallway and stairwell, Baroque keystone with house brand 18th century, offset on the courtyard side at the end of the 19th century, facade after 1800 09235355
 
Mulder school, former community school Schulberg 9
(map)
1872-1876 School and quarry stone wall (former enclosure wall to the bleach garden of the linen weaving mill Winkler & Sohn); Plant of urban, architectural and urban historical significance.

Facade probably simplified; The Mulde school was built between 1874 and 1876 in the large bleaching garden of the Winkler & Sohn weaving mill. Most of the walls surrounding the weaving mill, including a neo-Gothic gate, have been preserved. The weaving mill was the most important factory in the city from 1762 to 1930. Topping-out ceremony on September 18, 1875, and on October 2, 1876, the school building was ready for use.

09235214
 
Old Latin school
Old Latin school Schulgasse 8, 10
(map)
Marked with 1595, 1804 renovation and new building Plastered building with porphyry tufa, of local and socio-historical importance. Two-storey, with hipped roof, roof pike, built in 1595, rebuilt in 1804 using older masonry, south side with inscription panel from 1595 with Greek inscription, representative facade on the main facade. 09235318
 
Residential building in closed development Schulgasse 13
(map)
Around 1800 Renaissance door portal on the courtyard side, simple design, former portico, two-storey, four axes, cross vaults in the hallway, gable roof, simple building 09235322
 
Row of town barns Schützenstrasse
(map)
Around 1800 Row of barns consisting of 11 barns (originally possibly 12 barns) of urban historical value. The peculiarity of the so-called town barns denotes an essential stage in the development of small and medium-sized towns in Saxony. It refers to a generally forgotten circumstance that, in addition to the craftsmen and small industrialists, the arable citizen also helped determine the economic profile of the municipalities. Because of the many city fires, which were documented even in the 19th century, strict city and state fire protection regulations were imposed. These forced the farmers to build their barns on the outskirts or at the gates of the cities. Numerous fires have also been documented in Rochlitz, which regularly led to new fire protection measures. The Rochlitz barn row is one of the best preserved examples in the former Chemnitz administrative district. It is a simple one-storey quarry stone buildings with jamb floors, which are closed by saddle roofs. The large, arched wooden gates are striking. In Rochlitz there is still a small group of town barns on Noßwitzer Straße. Both rows of barns in Rochlitz are of great importance both in terms of town history and building history. 09235213
 
Johann-Mathesius-Gymnasium, former teacher training college Seminarstrasse 1
(map)
1895 School building with gymnasium, school yard with large greenery and enclosure; Gymnasium, formerly known as a "seminar", representative school building with a richly structured central projectile and two wings, good original inventory, of architectural and local significance.

School building: Representative school building with a richly structured central projectile and two wings, good original inventory, inscription under the roof "Deutsche Oberschule", four-storey, auditorium with lead-glazed windows, clinker brick facade, porphyry square and pophyr window garments

History: inaugurated as a teachers' seminar in 1895 after two years of construction. According to the school chronicle, this building was the most modern school building in Saxony. The building was equipped with the most modern standards of the time it was built (for example gas lighting and hot water heating). From 1922 the building was inaugurated as the "German High School Type B". In this school the students were prepared for study in colleges and universities. Girls were also admitted to the school. After the end of the Second World War, the building initially served as accommodation for Soviet soldiers. By 1949, however, a school could be set up in the building again. It was named "Friedrich Engels School". From 1953 to 1992 the “Clara Zetkin” teacher training institute was also housed in the building.

09235182
 
Muldenbrücke
Muldenbrücke Sofienplatz
(map)
1933 A road bridge over the Zwickau Mulde based on the model of a road bridge built in the 14th century and subsequently renewed several times, an important Mulden crossing, of architectural and transport historical importance.

Five-bay bridge over the Zwickauer Mulde, new construction in 1933, in line with the Saxon homeland security movement, Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, built largely based on the image of the medieval previous bridge, 1st bridge 14th century, renewed in 1574, 1783, 1816.

This well-proportioned bridge is a stone arch bridge with very flat circular segment arcs. The spans decrease from the main opening to the banks. They are 15.4 m + 20.0 m + 26.0 m + 20.0 m + 15.4 m with a total length of the structure of about 125 m. The curved gradient gives it an interesting tension. Beautiful parapet walls and simply structured pillars as well as the warm color of the reddish porphyry tufa contribute to the harmony of the building. The width between the parapets is 10.5 m. The bridgeheads are representative. The Saxon state coat of arms with heraldic lions is attached to the upstream parapet of the left abutment bastion. Immediately above it is a name stone. The bridge piers are pointed in both directions.

09235251
 
Residential building in closed development Sofienplatz 9
(map)
Late 18th century Three-storey, seven axes, gable roof, hipped on one side, cross vaults in the hallway, two-winged front door 09235250
 
Residential building in closed development Sofienplatz 10
(map)
Around 1800 Originally with shop, original door and window frames, front door changed, mansard roof, disfiguring loft extensions, plastered facade 09235249
 
Rochlitz Castle (entity)
More pictures
Rochlitz Castle (entity) Sörnziger Weg 1; Petrigasse 3, 5
(map)
11th century, 14th century (new buildings and renovations) The whole of Rochlitz Castle with the following individual monuments: Castle, transept, chapel, ducal house, battlements, west towers, castle bridge, the building parts on the south side, all walls and pond with island (see the same address list of individual monuments - object 09235199), the areas of the former gardens (garden monument) as well as the castle hill as part of the whole; of architectural, cultural and local historical importance.

Located on a rock ridge above the west bank of the Zwickauer Mulde, the castle is one of the most impressive and important structures in the Saxon castles and palaces. It owes its external appearance above all to the construction activity in the last quarter of the 14th century as well as two major renovation and conversion phases around / after 1470 and around 1588/89. As the German center of Burgward has been documented in writing since 1009, the former imperial castle was several times the residence of German kings and emperors in the 11th century. In 1143 King Conrad III gave the Burgward Rochlitz to the Margrave of Meißen. After his death in 1156 massive extensions to a castle with residential character began. 1210 the castle fell back to the Wettin main line and was placed as a bailiwick in the territorial context of the Marquis. Up until the first half of the 14th century, the castle was the secondary residence of Margrave Heinrich the Illustrious and Margrave Friedrich I. In the late 14th and 15th centuries, the castle experienced various construction phases and now acquired its castle character. The last major construction work was carried out in 1588/89. From 1591 to 1601 the palace served as a widow's residence for the widow of Elector Christian I, at the beginning of the 17th century as a hunting lodge, and after the Thirty Years' War it was the seat of government. In 1717 the ruins of the upper castle were demolished, further buildings since 1789: in the area of ​​the lower castle the locksmith's shop and the gatekeeper house on the east side, the granary on the south side and the large horse stable on the north side. In the area of ​​the upper castle, the bay-like fountain house, which was built onto the palas on the river side, the south parapet to the “Lichte Jupe” tower and the bath house on the north parapet. In 1850 a district court was set up in the castle, so in 1852 further renovations and construction of a prison next to the Princely House. 1945–47 prisoner of war camp. First restorations 1934–36, since 1963, demolition of the prison in 1990/91.

Gardens originally belonging to the palace: Former High Garden, Zwingergarten, Long Garden, Bleichgarten (formerly Kirchgarten), Upper Garden (formerly "small garden") and parts of the church garden, pond with meadow, Upper Schlossgraben (part of the historic fortification), Middle Schlossgraben With a former bear kennel (part of the former weir system, separation of upper and lower castle), moat (lower castle moat), Lohbach, bridges of the castle (upper, middle and lower arch bridge), path to the castle (between lower and middle bridge), castle courtyard, northern Schlossberg, former gardens opposite the High Garden, former kitchen garden (formerly rental garden).

09302729
 
Rochlitz Castle (individual monuments for ID no.09302729)
More pictures
Rochlitz Castle (individual monuments for ID no.09302729) Sörnziger Weg 1
(map)
before 1482 (Kemenate); 12th and 13th centuries (castle); around 1150 (gate tower); 13th century (battlement); after 1482 (castle chapel) Individual features of the totality of Rochlitz Castle: Rochlitz Castle with transept, chapel, ducal house, battlements, west towers, castle bridge, the building parts on the south side, all walls and pond with island (see also list of objects at the same address - object 09302729); of architectural, cultural and local historical importance.
  • Castle: The buildings of the upper castle grouped around an irregular, elongated courtyard, total length about 90 m. To the east the so-called transept (with bower and gate tower) as well as the chapel, to the north-west adjoining it the royal house and the battlement up to the mighty towers on the west side. Residential towers and farm buildings on the south side.
  • Transept: The lower part of the bower and the southern gate tower from around 1150, heightening of the bunker and integration of the gate tower into the structure before 1482, after 1482 redesign of the upper floor, high cross-bar-like plastered building with porphyry structure, hipped roof, passage with large pointed arched portals, in the Several late Gothic rooms with beamed ceilings have been preserved on the upper floor, the “Duchess's Room” was built after 1537, only one of the bay windows has survived, this one with a pointed arch and cell-vaulted niche with a curtain-arched window.
  • Chapel: City side, unplastered porphyry building with 5/8 end, roof structure with slated half-timbering still late Gothic, referred to in 1519 as "Frauenzimmer", roof turret broken off in 1589. The three large three-lane windows, interior with reticulated vaults, west side with a wide gallery, then a likewise vaulted box, so-called duke gallery, stone pulpit on the north wall, of which only the substructure has survived, significant remains of late Gothic paintings preserved, restoration in 1973/74 and 1990 / 91, painted ceiling, on the north wall curved ogival sacraments niche, on the west wall several inscription tombstones made of Rochlitz porphyry, 16. – 18. Century, on the west gallery two late Gothic Madonnas, end of the 15th / beginning of the 16th century and two late Gothic dugout chests. A small Wendelstein connects the chapel with the west gallery and the princely living rooms.
  • Princely House: Erected around 1390, converted around 1470 into a two-aisled hall building, which formerly contained the "large court room" on the ground floor above the wine cellar, the "table room" on the first floor and a ballroom with a cantilevered ceiling on the second floor. This hall was directly connected to the wine cellar via the small Wendelstein from 1390. Around 1537 the first subdivision of the rooms for use as representative living spaces, further renovations around 1588, demolition of the Gothic gable on the west side and change of the roof, construction of the Great Wendelstein, the ballroom was divided into two floors, a representative residential wing with four was created in the lower one Rooms, further subdivision for service rooms in 1852. Restoration since 1996. Four-storey building with a half-hipped roof, rectangular windows, pointed arched portal, the interior today characterized by built-ins from 1852, in the red room a renaissance ceiling with illusionistic coffered paintings, medieval battlements with high half-timbered parapets up to the north tower, renewed in 1588 and 1990/91.
  • The buildings on the south side are lower and from different construction periods:
    • Palas or the “Old House”, around 1180/90, the first floor was originally opened to the courtyard via large arcades, after 1537 the large hall on the upper floor was divided
    • The residential tower of the 11th century, contained the “small kitchen” on the ground floor, and the upper floor part of the palace hall since the 12th century
    • A residential tower from the 14th century, inserted into a vacant lot, on the ground floor "Hofstube", referred to in 1593 as "Gewelbe" (= pantry), clay blanket around 1360/90, on the upper floor "Marschalls Stube"
    • Basement house with "cellar room", upper floor boarded up.
    • Large courtyard kitchen, built in 1360/90, 91 m² room with chimney, ribbed vault from the 1st half of the 15th century
    • Small house with three "dining vaults" on the ground floor, formerly the "small hall" on the upper floor.
    • The towers “Lichte und Finstere Jupe”, which characterize the cityscape, have a square floor plan, in the lower part at the end of the 12th century, the upper part at the end of the 14th century, the spiers around 1360/90. On the upper floors of the "Lichten Jupe" before 1838 prison cells, towers connected by a western defense corridor, two-story building between the towers, 1586, on the ground floor formerly the "brush stables" for horses, on the upper floor the "Harnisch Cammer".

Dehio vol. I pp. 855–859 / Ingolf Gräßler, Stefan Reuther: The castle and castle chapels of Rochlitz Castle. State palaces, castles and gardens. Yearbook 2005, vol. 13, p. 24

09235199
 
Villa, villa garden and enclosure, in enclosure keystones of the former Lohmühle and two former millstones
Villa, villa garden and enclosure, in enclosure keystones of the former Lohmühle and two former millstones Sörnziger Weg 2
(map)
1900 (villa); 1743 (1st keystone); 1790 (2nd keystone) Significant in terms of building history and garden design. Keystone 1743 of the Lohmühle and 2nd keystone dated 1790, around 1900 both stones were inserted into the garden wall, good original inventory, etched windows, turrets with a helmet roof, plastered facade, plastering, base Rochlitzer Porphyry, was the villa of the former brewery owner, Rentier Julius Härtwig. 09235197
 
Schlossaue Sörnziger Weg 5
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Late half-timbering on the upper floor; Barn Haus Zschalig (according to the old list of monuments) 09235196
 
Residential house with shop in closed development as well as workshop and two courtyard buildings Pot Market 1
(Map)
Before 1900 (residential building); 1885 (workshop); 1887 (courtyard building) Urban planning important residential and commercial building with courtyard buildings characteristic of the late 19th century; Three-storey house, seven axes, saddle roof, window frames, base, cornices and portal in natural stone 19th century; Workshop in 1885 as a workshop for car construction, sled construction and chair construction, later only chair construction and upholstery; Side wing on the ground floor utility rooms, upper floor living and storage rooms, furniture trade in the front building, shop installation there in 1894 09235216
 
Residential building in closed development Pot Market 2
(Map)
Around 1800 Two-storey, seven axes, gable roof, loft extension, beaver tail covering, gate around 1800, plaster ashlar, gate walls, two gate leaves with central door and skylight 09235292
 
Residential building with shop in closed development
Residential building with shop in closed development Pot Market 4
(Map)
1805 according to the inscription Three-storey, five axes with a single-axis template, gable roof, portal, shop afterwards, on the courtyard side the upper arbor no longer visible, inscription 1805, cross vault in the central corridor 09235217
 
Residential building in closed development Pot Market 8
(card)
1806 Door and window frames preserved, three-story, three axes 09235294
 
Former Härtwig brewery Topfmarkt 9
(card)
Around 1805 (house); marked 1845 (brewery); 1st half of the 19th century (two three-story outbuildings); around 1870 (two two-story outbuildings) Former brewery property, consisting of the front building, two courtyard wings (four outbuildings) and the former brewery as well as the cellars belonging to these buildings or accessible from them, of local and architectural importance. Three-storey front building, ten axes, gable roof, large segment arch over portal; Courtyard wing, two three- and two two-storey outbuildings, pent roofs; Brewery marked 1845, one and a half story, natural stone masonry, hipped roof, one half of the building later rebuilt and raised 09235293
 
Residential building in semi-open development, former secondary school
Residential building in semi-open development, former secondary school Uferstrasse 4
(map)
Marked 1796 Structurally and locally of importance. Dated on the door portal, original front door, door and window frames, three-storey, seven axes, gable roof, inscription: Realschule, house inscription: "All my beginning, exit and entrance Thun and end, I command God into your hands". 09235257
 
Residential building
Residential building Wallgasse 1
(map)
Inscribed with 1802 House in closed development in a corner 09235306
 
Residential building in closed development Wallgasse 3
(map)
1818 Solid ground floor, porphyry window and door frames, two-storey, half-timbering on the upper floor plastered, four axes, mansard roof 09235305
 
Residential building in closed development Wallgasse 4
(map)
1802 A town house typical of the times and the landscape in very good original condition of architectural and urban development value. Town house, built in 1802 according to the inscription on the door portal. Two-storey, solid on the ground floor, upper floor presumably half-timbered plastered, building end with high mansard roof. The appearance of the house is characterized by the regularly arranged rectangular windows with porphyry window walls or porphyry-colored plaster surrounds. Originally preserved arched portal with inscribed keystone. The house is part of a street that was built at the same time and is characterized by similar developments. As a typical, largely original town house from the beginning of the 19th century, this residential building is of architectural historical value. As part of a simultaneous building ensemble, it is also gaining urban significance. 09235304
 
Residential building in closed development Wallgasse 5
(map)
1803 Four axes, two storeys, window frames possibly older, mansard roof, possibly originally with a shop 09235303
 
Residential building in closed development Wallgasse 7
(map)
1802 Two-storey, four axes, door and window frames porphyry, keystone with three-dimensional representation: plane, compass and angle, guild mark 09235301
 
Residential building in closed development Wallgasse 9
(map)
1803 Door and window frames, two-story, three axes 09235300
 
Town barn Zwickauer Straße (at the entrance to the village, corner of Noßwitzer Weg)
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Today standing alone due to the demolition of the neighboring barns, of local history, close to the castle, solid, porphyry, saddle roof 09235204
 
Residential building Zwickauer Strasse 6
(map)
After 1800 Residential house in open development; residential building typical of the time of urban significance 09235356
 
Residential building in closed development Zwingergasse 1
(map)
1802 Four-axis, two-storey, window and door frames 09235299
 

List of cultural monuments in the district of Breitenborn

image designation location Dating description ID
Village church and cemetery in Breitenborn (entity)
More pictures
Village church and cemetery in Breitenborn (entity) Breitenborner Strasse, next to No. 9
(map)
Choir 14th century, nave baroque Material entirety of the village church and churchyard in Breitenborn with the following individual monuments: Church and morgue (see Obj. 08955025) as well as churchyard with enclosure as totality parts; of local historical importance 09300190
 
Church and morgue (individual monuments to ID no.09300190)
More pictures
Church and morgue (individual monuments to ID no.09300190) Breitenborner Strasse, next to No. 9
(map)
Choir 14th century, nave baroque Individual features of the aggregate village church and churchyard in Breitenborn (see also aggregate document - object 09300190); of local historical importance. Church compact structure with flat-arched Gothic windows in the choir. Strong square tower above the choir aisle. One-aisled hall, rectangular in the west with a flat ceiling, throat, flat-arched windows, choir arch and gallery. Late Gothic eastern section with 5/8 choir closure, choir vestibule with ribbed vault and two-tier raised choir. In the north there is a tabernacle. Baptism and pulpit neo-Romanesque, as well as the altar and wood paneling in the choir. Stained glass window in the choir around 1900. Ceiling painting in the nave with medallions of the evangelists. 08955025
 
War Memorial First World War
War Memorial First World War Breitenborner Strasse, next to the churchyard
(map)
After 1918 War memorial for the fallen of the First World War; made of porphyry as a doorway from the churchyard to the rectory, on the left a relief of a soldier, on the right that of a mourning angel, inscription in the gable. 08955024
 
Transformer station
Transformer station Breitenborner Strasse, corner of Schulstrasse
(map)
1913 (renovation 2013) Type "Borna", today a bus shelter, early evidence of electrification, of importance in terms of local history and technology.

Protected property: square floor plan, base porphyry polygonal masonry. Tower separated by a pagoda-like intermediate roof, there a tent roof. Entrance embossed porphyry cuboid

History:

  • Built in 1913 and commissioned in 1914 by Licht und Kraft GmbH Borna
  • In operation from 1914 to 1989, initially from the Oberelsdorf substation, later supplied with 15,000 V from the Geithain substation; Transformation to 230V / 380V low voltage
  • 1989 Decommissioning, replacement by the Breitenborn I tower station and conversion to a bus shelters
  • 2013 renovation, also important as a breeding place for the barn owl
08955035
 
Residential stable house (half-timbered house) of a three-sided courtyard Breitenborner Strasse 11
(map)
Around 1700 Originally preserved half-timbered house of great historical significance, upper floor half-timbered, slated on all sides, block room missing, large yoke widths, surrounding framework with headbands; only rarely found type of construction in a circle; Wrap around right 2/2 08955022
 
Stable house and barn (former rectory)
Stable house and barn (former rectory) Breitenborner Strasse 12
(map)
Marked 1618 (stable house, renovation in the 1st half of the 19th century); 1588 Dendro (barn) Originally preserved rural residential and farm buildings, very ancient half-timbered barn. Residential stable house, solid ground floor, porphyry walls, upper floor half-timbered, gable slated, barn with large gate, half-timbered reconstruction, ground floor of the residential stable house changed by installing a garage. 08955023
 
Stable house of a farm Breitenborner Strasse 16
(map)
Marked with 1822 (keystone) Originally preserved farmhouse of architectural value; Ground floor grooved porphyry walls, arched door lintel with keystone; Upper floor half-timbered, in the upper gable part sun gable, roof overhang 08955031
 
Cottage Breitenborner Strasse 17
(map)
Marked 1630 Very old half-timbered house of great architectural value. Upper floor half-timbering, roof overhang, window sizes preserved; narrow cottage with a steep roof. Boarded gable. 08955032
 
Residential stable house, barn and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Breitenborner Strasse 34
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Well-preserved four-sided system, residential stables ground floor changed, solid gable side, upper floor half-timbered, roof overhang; Half-timbered barn on the ground floor, jamb, outbuildings upstairs half-timbered, gable-side freight elevator, ground floor porphyry walls, two arched portals, gable on the eaves side with integrated dovecote, second outbuilding upstairs half-timbered, partly porphyry preserved, on the ground floor 1/3 half-timbered, with large entrance. The residential stable house has a defining effect on the townscape. 08955034
 
Residential stable house and two side buildings of a farm Mühlweg 7
(map)
Marked with 1827 (panel) Typical rural residential and farm buildings of architectural value, solid gable housing, upper floor half-timbered, beaver tail covering, roof overhang, barn half-timbered, auxiliary building, ground floor massive, upper floor half-timbered, center pivot window 08955033
 
Residential stable house, barn and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Schulstrasse 12
(map)
1802 (according to information) Originally preserved farm near the church of architectural, urban and socio-historical value. Stable house upper floor half-timbered, half-hip roof; Drive-through barn and stable barn, massive ground floor, partially preserved porphyry walls. Barn part still half-timbered on the ground floor. Window sizes retained throughout; beautifully preserved courtyard near the church in the original sense. Sliding windows are available in the drive-through barn. 08955028
 
Residential stable house and two side buildings of a three-sided courtyard Schulstrasse 13
(map)
Panel outside wall 1686 (Dreiseithof); marked 1818 (keystone); 2nd half of the 19th century (side building) Typical farm of the time of architectural and socio-historical value.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, plastered, arched portal with keystone, windows on the courtyard side partially enlarged, steep pitched roof - cantilevered on the courtyard side, stable with vaults on porphyry columns, around 1800
  • 1st side building: solid ground floor, large entrance to the courtyard, upper floor half-timbered, hardly any bracing, flat sloping pitched roof, hay elevator on the gable side, inside probably moving out apartment, late 19th century
  • 2nd side building: ground floor solid and plastered, large gate entrance, upper floor half-timbered - simple half-timbered with corner struts, gable roof, late 19th century
08955029
 
Residential stable house and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Schulstrasse 18, 19
(map)
18th and 19th centuries (four-sided courtyard); 1st third of the 18th century (stable house); 1629 Dendro (side building); marked May 3, 1749 on the stable (side building) Well-preserved residential and farm buildings with partly very old half-timbered construction of architectural significance. Residential stable house massive gable, upper floor half-timbered with jamb, K-struts, at an angle to this stable building with marked door frame, upper floor half-timbered with arcade (is being reconstructed). Solid barn, only the upper third half-timbered. 19th century barn, not a monument. 08955030
 

List of cultural monuments in the Noßwitz district

image designation location Dating description ID
Peasant or village stone Lindenstrasse 1
(map)
Probably 16./17. century Round porphyry block; there the congregation held their meetings, standing under the village linden tree 08955016
 
Residential stable house, stable barn, barn, side building (Ausgedinge) and pump of a four-sided courtyard
More pictures
Residential stable house, stable barn, barn, side building (Ausgedinge) and pump of a four-sided courtyard Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 6
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable barn); around 1880 (barn); around 1750, remodeling marked 1858 in the door frame (pull-out house) Stable house upper floor regular half-timbering, profiled threshold, double-profiled window frames, stable barn ground floor large gates, upper floor half-timbered with freight elevator, barn two sides of wood construction. Side building (Ausgedinge) Massive ground floor with stable, two-bay upper arbor with head struts, very flat arches and large bay widths, several original central pivot windows, parapet in remains with sawed-out boards present, remarkable courtyard, of architectural and economic importance 08955003
 
Residential stable house, barn, side building (with Kumthalle), pull-out house and gate with enclosure of a four-sided courtyard
More pictures
Residential stable house, barn, side building (with Kumthalle), pull-out house and gate with enclosure of a four-sided courtyard Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 14
(map)
Around 1800 (stable house and moving house); Mid 19th century (horse stable) Stable house upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered barn, side building with three-arched Kumthalle, gate pillars with spherical crowning, important courtyard in a location that characterizes the townscape, building historical value. Stable house upper floor half-timbered, roof overhang, profiled porphyry walls, entrance portal with profiled lintel. Half-timbered barn with large sliding gates, massive Kumthalle, two porphyry columns on a high plinth with flat round arches, roof houses, trimmings, upper floor half-timbered, porphyry walls everywhere, twin windows in the gable. Porphyry gate post with spherical crown. Important courtyard in a location that defines the townscape. 08955002
 
Stable house of a farm
More pictures
Stable house of a farm Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 16
(map)
1603 Dendro Upper floor half-timbered with a Thuringian ladder motif, ship throat on threshold, protruding roof, window frames Rochlitz porphyry tuff, historically important, stable barn partly timber-framed, front face boarded gable, barn (1603d): demolished in 1996; Half-timbered house on the stable house partially renewed, stable house renovated 08955001
 
Village smithy with attached workshop building as well as espalier fruit (three pear trees)
Village smithy with attached workshop building as well as espalier fruit (three pear trees) Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 19
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Typical plastered construction of architectural and local history as well as the townscape-defining value. Two-storey plastered building, eaves, central entrance, 5 × 2 axes, porphyry window frames and door portal, gable triangle semicircular window, gable roof, on the left former blacksmith's workshop consisting of two construction sections, wooden window, sprouted, original, gable roof and high rectangular chimney, on the building three trellis trees - pear , in the middle of the village between the two village centers. 09302876
 
Conceived of a four-sided courtyard, with upper arbor and hatch in the roof
Conceived of a four-sided courtyard, with upper arbor and hatch in the roof Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 21
(map)
Marked with 1796 (door frame) Upper arbor with standing man, wooden parapet and boarded staircase 08955004
 
Side building with upper arbor, side building (one storey with passage) and barn of a farm
Side building with upper arbor, side building (one storey with passage) and barn of a farm Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 26
(map)
1699 Dendro, remodeling marked 1750 (barn); 2nd half of the 18th century (outbuilding with stable) Typical rural farm buildings of great importance in terms of architectural and local history, outbuildings with stable on the ground floor, three-bay upper arbor with baluster-like supports and an integrated dovecote; cantilevered upper floor, door in the parapet. Barn with wide roof overhang and loading hatch. 08955015
 
Waystone
Waystone Noßwitzer Hauptstraße 27 (below)
(map)
19th century Made of porphyry, gabled stone, heavily weathered inscription "Rochlitz", of importance in terms of traffic history 08955013
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 30
(map)
Around 1800 Striking half-timbered building of socio-historical, architectural and local value, residential stable house with magnificent half-timbered gable, massive ground floor, roof overhang. It shapes the townscape with its gable. The gable side has been rebuilt, windows on the ground floor. Given the monumental value despite structural changes. 08955014
 
Residential stable house, two side buildings and gatehouse with enclosure
More pictures
Residential stable house, two side buildings and gatehouse with enclosure Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 32
(map)
Around 1820 (Vierseithof); Marked 1821 (stable house) A farm that shapes the townscape and is of architectural and socio-historical importance. Plate: "This apartment was damaged by lightning on August 12, 1820 and rebuilt by TG Haberkorn, aD 1821". Residential stable house with lavishly profiled door walls and straight lintel, side building with large gates, indicated capitals and keystones. Image-defining, large barn with slit windows and a Palladio motif in the gable, two gate entrances, Krüppelmansarddach. Gatehouse with richly carved two-winged gate, restored in 1992. Roof house, all hipped roofs. Massive four-sided farm on a large farm. 08955011
 
Residential stable house, three side buildings and three gates of a four-sided courtyard
More pictures
Residential stable house, three side buildings and three gates of a four-sided courtyard Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 33
(map)
Mid 19th century (four-sided courtyard); marked 1859 in the gable (residential building) Striking farm, presumably owned by the quarry owner Haberkorn, of architectural and local value. Demanding plastered construction, two-storey with jamb, structured by pilaster strips, cornices, corner blocks and porphyry window roofs, flat-arched windows throughout. Side buildings with a large roof overhang, some with slotted windows, also plastered buildings with porphyry walls. 08955012
 
Former school, now a residential building
More pictures
Former school, now a residential building Noßwitzer Hauptstrasse 37
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Simple plastered construction of architectural and local historical value. Two-storey, eaves-standing school building with a flat, gabled central projection, double beaver tail covering, door with a large roof on consoles. Simple plastered construction, which is accentuated by porphyry door and window frames. School buildings in such good condition are rare in the district. 08955027
 
Murder and Atonement Cross and Wegestein
Murder and Atonement Cross and Wegestein Rochlitzer Berg, path between Rochlitzer Berg and Eulenkluft
(map)
Marked with 1629 (stone) Local historical value, murder and atonement cross (porphyry) with sword on it, 50 meters further porphyry stone (rounded at the top), plus stone path with crossed swords 08955063
 
Triangulation column 1st order station
Triangulation column 1st order station Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
Marked 1869 Totality of the Royal Saxon Triangulation ("European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony"), Station 17 Rochlitz, historically and technologically important:

The “southern point of the platform of the König-Friedrich-August-Thurm” on the Rochlitz mountains was chosen for the construction of the Rochlitz station. Nagel writes that the tower is excellently suited, but that some difficulties had to be overcome during construction. There were delays in obtaining the building permit and the building design had to be approved separately by the Ministry of Finance. To stabilize the observation pillar on the top floor of the tower, a shaft was built into the surrounding wall of the floor below as a foundation through the ceiling. “When this shaft was arranged, it could be seen that the openings of the round windows in the lantern were not blocked and that the shaft and the pillar bothers the visitors of the tower as little as possible.” This reinforcement in the masonry is still on the climb today to see the tower well. From the platform and the observation post, you can enjoy a beautiful panoramic view of western Saxony. The Rochlitzer Berg was part of the first order network of the GDR. A ground point was created around 39 m south in 1960. The measurements, also to include the Völkerschlachtdenkmal in the network instead of the station 20-Pleißenburg, took place on the tower. The column with the inscription “Kön.Sächs. / Station / ROCHLITZ / der / Mitteleuropean / Degree measurement / 1866 “is about 1.40 m high and consists of Rochlitz porphyry and Grillenburg sandstone . The cover plate is made of cast iron. 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 referred to as "Nagelsche columns". This surveying system was one of the most modern layer networks in Germany. The surveying columns set for this purpose remained almost entirely in their original locations. They are an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany and in Saxony. The system of surveying columns of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance.

09301592
 
Rochlitzer Berg (entity)
More pictures
Rochlitzer Berg (entity) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
Late Middle Ages until 1900, dismantling from the late Middle Ages until 1947, 1579/1580 (millstone quarry first mentioned in sales deed), 1870/80 (administration building) Aggregate Rochlitzer Berg with the following individual monuments, of local significance:
  • Königshöhe (Object 08955047)
  • Economic cellar (object 08955052)
  • Husarenstein (Item 08955050)
  • Karl-Gleisberg-Stein (Object 08955046)
  • Schilling stone (object 08955062), stone standing outside the area of ​​the material entity at the entrance to the Schillingbruch
  • Wettinstein (Item 08955055)
  • Shredding machine (Object 08955049)
  • Hermitage (Object 08955048)
  • Old forge (Object 08955045)
  • Türmerhaus (Object 08955041)
  • König-Friedrich-August-Turm (Object 08955040)
  • former horse stable (Object 09301361)
  • Wegestein (Item 09301362)
  • former inn Zum Waldschlößchen (Object 08955051)
  • in the area of ​​the millstone quarry crane, a millstone, a forest boundary stone and four porphyry slabs (see object 08955053)
  • as well as the following aggregate parts: Seidelsteinbruch, Haberkornbruch, Gleisbergbruch and the administration building near the Haberkornbruch, Mühlsteinbruch and Bruch Meeresauge

Administration building of the United Porphyry Quarries: two-storey, profiled porphyry walls, cornice (lettering "United Porphyry Quarries" can still be seen); three quarries: Haberkornbruch, Seidelbruch, Gleisbergbruch (this one on the upper edge dry stone wall for protection, approx. 60 meters deep; shelters for the stonemasons, with dates and stonemason's mark)

Since 1613 the Haberkorn family from Rochlitz had breaking rights on the Rochlitz mountain. In 1897, Oswald Haberkorn and other quarry owners founded the United Porphyry Quarries on the Rochlitzer Berge GmbH. The millstone quarry was first mentioned in the official accounts in 1579/80, at that time Lengelt Peter Repsch acquired the quarry from Liborius Frenzeln, the so-called "fördere Bruch" (possibly the break of the sea eye?) Was owned by Blasius Frenzel in the 17th century, as was the mill quarry (1615 ), later by Thomas Frenzel (1624), from 1667 in the possession of the official forester Georg Haberkorn from Noßwitz, whose family owned the quarries until the 19th century.

08955042
 
Schillingstein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042)
Schillingstein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
Marked 1877 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : so-called Schilling stone, porphyry stone / road stone, reminiscent of Emil Schilling's quarry (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of local importance 08955062
 
Wettinstein (individual monument to ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
1889 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : memorial stone (see also aggregate document Object 08955042); Porphyry blank with inscription and year: "Heil Wettin / HA 1089-1889", of regional history 08955055
 
Memorial stone for the promenade and tourist association Rochlitzer Berg, at the Mordgrundbrücke
(map)
Marked with 1882 (memorial stone); Marked 1932 (memorial stone) Large central stone with inscription, two smaller monoliths on the side, porphyry 08955054
 
Mill quarry (individual monument to ID no. 08955042)
Mill quarry (individual monument to ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, near Mühlsteinbruch and Mühlsteinweg
(map)
Marked with 1820 (possibly forest boundary stone); Marked with 1818 (4 stone slabs, use unclear); around 1900 (crane) Individual monument belonging to the Rochlitzer Berg entity: four porphyry slabs (presumably former salt licks), millstone blanks, crane above the millstone quarry and forest boundary stone northeast of the millstone quarry; Material evidence of the porphyry mining on the Rochlitzer Berg of regional and technical historical importance (see also general document - object 08955042).
  • Crane: Parcel 472, near Mühlsteinweg, iron construction standing on the edge above the quarry hole, riveted and screwed iron U-profiles, base body designed as a tripod, pivoting crane boom at the front edge, rope pulleys have been preserved, connections partially secured by iron straps (construction period), behind the crane foundation of the former cable winch with screw stumps
  • Millstone blank: Parcel 470, at the continuation of the Mühlsteinweg (yellow marking) behind the millstone quarry on the right side of the path (from the direction of the parking lot on the road to the observation tower)
  • 4 stone slabs, Rochlitzer Porphyry: parcel 470, behind the millstone quarry, to the right of the uphill path (southeast of the quarry and the path), referred to in the former monument list as millstone blanks, presumably they are not millstone blanks - the stones are not thick enough for this , the four nearly square stone slabs have worked stone surfaces (bush hammered), on the front there is the inscription "1818", they are joined by iron clips to form a box, the use of which is not explained in the relevant literature, possibly the trough was used to feed cattle or it is a former salt lick
  • Forest boundary stone: northeast of the millstone quarry, near the fork of the uphill hiking trail on the wall of a small quarry, parcel 471; 50 to 60 cm high stone on an approximately square base with a semicircular end, labeled on two sides: 1st side with crossed swords, 2nd side probably labeled "7 L / 7 K", one of numerous forest boundary stones on the Rochlitzer Berg, which the Marked the Electoral Saxon Forest
08955053
 
Crusher (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, in the Seidel quarry
(map)
Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : crusher and associated system for crushing porphyry residues, outside wooden crate as protection (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of significance in terms of technology history 08955049
 
Hermitage (individual monument for ID no. 08955042)
Hermitage (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, at the entrance to the Seidel quarry
(map)
1817 (memorial plaque) Individual monument belonging to the whole of Rochlitzer Berg : Former accommodation for nature lovers and hikers as well as a memorial plaque for the stonemason and quarry owner Christian Gottlob Seidel; A hostel built by Seidel, originally consisting of two small rooms for overnight stays, today a ruin (three pointed arched windows and rising masonry have been preserved) as well as a memorial plaque for Christian Gottlob Seidel, stonemason and quarry owner, promoter of tourism on Rochlitzer Berg (see also object 08955042) , of local history.

Description by Prof. Clemens Pfau : “Here, separated from one another, stood two high, broken rocks, which he connected with a front wall in a very picturesque way, so that their appearance could be reminiscent of a beautiful chapel. It got cornices, gothic windows made of porphyry, and two crowning figures made of white sandstone, which probably came from a tomb. The door at the back led into two small chambers, some of which were carved out in old rubble heaps. That is why the building was called "the grotto" in earlier writings. The whole complex, which is mainly still standing today, was undoubtedly a unique sight in her youth, which was much visited, especially since Seidel laid out a book in it, in which the visitors of the break could sign; it began in 1817 and was later thankfully donated to the history association by Seidel's descendants. "

The hermitage was originally a chapel-like stone building, the front of which was provided with Gothic elements. Two large human figures were carved out of the stone on both sides, the gable was crowned by an urn. On September 17, 1822, Duke Friedrich August also visited the hermitage and made a note in the guest book.

08955048
 
Old forge and millstone blank from the millstone quarry (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, in the Gleisbergbruch
(map)
Late 19th century Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg (see also aggregate document object 08955042); Significant in terms of local history and technology, porphyry ashlar masonry, twin windows in the gable, gable roof, profiled window frames, two bat dormers 08955045
 
Türmerhaus (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
1860 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : Türmerhaus (see also aggregate document object 08955042); Significant in local history, built in connection with the tower, small house on a hooked floor plan, birthplace of animal photographer and ornithologist Rudolph Zimmermann. The house was built as a tower keeper's house. 08955041
 
König-Friedrich-August-Turm (single monument for ID-Nr. 08955042)
More pictures
König-Friedrich-August-Turm (single monument for ID-Nr. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
1855-1860 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : observation tower on the Rochlitzer Berg (see also aggregate document object 08955042); Significant in terms of local history, made entirely of porphyry, square base, octagonal at the top, plaque above the entrance commemorates the king, architect Eduard Heuchler two lions to the side of the entrance 08955040
 
Former horse stable (individual monument to ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
19th century Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : Former horse stable (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of importance in terms of building history and local history. Accommodation for animals that served the workers and stonemasons in the quarry. 09301361
 
Wegestein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042)
Wegestein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
19th century Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : Wegestein (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of importance in terms of traffic history. Porphyry stone with inscription: "after the tower in the mountain economy"; "To Rochlitz". 09301362
 
Cellar in the Haberkorn quarry (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, near the Gasthof Waldschlößchen
(map)
Around 1900 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : business cellar and entrance with a relief of a bearded man as a crown (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of local importance. Old mountain cellar on the bottom of the Haberkorn quarries. The cellar belonged to the house of the forest ranger, who had to collect the fee for every piece of work by the stonemasons. The exterior design probably dates from around 1900, the cellar itself is older. 08955052
 
Königshöhe (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
1815 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : Königshöhe, column stump on base and board (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of local significance, everything made of porphyry; best vantage point at the time; also a memorial to King Friedrich August I , who was released from captivity by the Allies in 1815. 08955047
 
Husarenstein, also Böhmestein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042)
Husarenstein, also Böhmestein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg, diagonally across from the Gasthof Waldschlößchen
(map)
1871 Individual monument of the whole Rochlitzer Berg : memorial stone for a hussar who fell at this point, porphyry, approx. 1.65 meters high (see also material document object 08955042); of local importance. Today there is a replica of the first and original stone next to the memorial stone. The stone, weathered today, is already a replica of the first stone. The royal Saxon hunter Rudolf Böhme had an accident after a Christmas party on the Rochlitzer Berg in 1866 in the Haberkornschen quarries. 08955050
 
Karl-Gleisberg-Stein (individual monument for ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg
(map)
Late 19th century Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : Wegestein (see also aggregate document object 08955042); Porphyry stone, about 1.60 meters high, narrow rectangular, denotes the entrance to the Karl Gleisberg quarry, of local historical importance 08955046
 
Zum Waldschlößchen (individual monument to ID no. 08955042) Rochlitzer Berg 1
(map)
1860/61 Individual monument of the aggregate Rochlitzer Berg : stately inn with ancillary building, porphyry bench and stone (see also aggregate document object 08955042); of importance in terms of building history and local history. Particularly at the rear, it has a representative design with a glazed arbor, two risalits, ornamental framework and arcades on profiled pillars. Roof overhang with ornamental framework, profiled window frames and cornice; Antique porphyry bench with outwardly curved sides; Porphyry stone, approx. 60 cm high, profiled. Built as a mountain inn in 1860, after the Second World War, the last owner of the mountain restaurant, Max Kiesel, gave up his business for reasons of age. After that the inn was used as a convalescent home for lung patients, later it belonged to the Rochlitz hospital and was mainly used as a convalescent ward. Today privately owned - no public use. 2017 vacancy, refurbished. 08955051
 
Residential stable house, barn, stable barn, side building with old courtyard paving and manure instead of a four-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, barn, stable barn, side building with old courtyard paving and manure instead of a four-sided courtyard Rochlitzer Strasse 5
(map)
1745 (door frame) Typical farm in good original condition of architectural, socio-historical and local value. Stable house with magnificent half-timbered gable; Solid ground floor, roof overhang. It shapes the townscape with its gable. 08955008
 
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War Rochlitzer Strasse 6 (near)
(map)
After 1918 Porphyry pillar with a protruding headboard, on which a steel helmet with oak leaves of local historical value 08955010
 
Residential stable house in a four-sided courtyard Rochlitzer Strasse 10b
(map)
1850/1860, marked 18 .. (door frame) Architectural and socio-historical value. Large, massive stable house made of quarry stone masonry; Plastered, corner blocks, cornice made of bricks, profiled window frames, in the gable three oculi and triplet windows, star decorations in between, all porphyry curtains. 08955005
 
Former Noßwitz inn, now a residential building
Former Noßwitz inn, now a residential building Rochlitzer Strasse 13
(map)
1754 Dendro, renovation from 2004 to 2007 In terms of cultural history and urban development, the building is in very good original condition, two-storey, rectangular floor plan; today a single-storey extension with a gable roof that has been rebuilt several times (around 1900 and later); Ground floor main building quarry stone masonry made of porphyry, window walls with a hollow groove and arched portal with keystone made of porphyry tuff, half-timbered upper floor - 2/3 renewed in 2004 according to the historical model using old technology, filled with clay bricks, steep gable roof, inside good stock: old room structures, original room doors at Vaulted room on the ground floor and upstairs; House with partial basement: a larger vaulted cellar - barrel vault with porphyry benches for beer barrels, a small barrel vaulted cellar behind the stairs, on the ground floor storage room with barrel vault and stitch caps, originally there also porphyry bench for beer kegs and former opening to the mansion, former mansion / today kitchen to the right of the entrance Remnants of an old wooden ceiling, all window openings on the ground floor with basket arch soffit, on the ground floor originally a guest room, master bedroom, kitchen with oven and pantry, upstairs bedrooms and living rooms - originally all heated by stoves, originally a small corridor with cantilever chair no longer available before the renovation began, but verifiable from the building findings; Roof space: collar beam roof with double lying chair, lateral wind bracing and cock beam 08955006
 

List of cultural monuments in the Penna district

image designation location Dating description ID
Cottage Am Ring 2
(map)
Last third of the 19th century Typical Saxon farmhouse, half-timbered building typical of the region and of architectural value. Upper floor half-timbered, gable slate (the silvery typical for the area), ground floor profiled porphyry walls. Well preserved in substance and structure, location defining the townscape. 08955059
 
Barn and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Am Ring 3
(map)
Around 1850 (barn) Typical rural farm buildings of historical value, barn entirely half-timbered with jamb, protruding corner, both gables quarry stone masonry, the outbuildings upper floor half-timbered, one with a protruding corner, porphyry walls on the ground floor 08955058
 
Porphyry stone Am Ring 3 (at)
(map)
19th century Significant in terms of local history and traffic history 08955165
 
Barn and outbuildings of a four-sided courtyard Am Ring 4
(map)
Around 1850 Typical rural farm buildings of architectural value. Barn well-preserved half-timbering on a sandstone base, hipped roof. Outbuilding on the upper floor and partly on the ground floor half-timbered with casement windows, roof overhang, original door leaf, large barn door. 08955057
 
Arched bridge made of slate
Arched bridge made of slate Am Ring 14 (at)
(map)
19th century 08955038
 
Barn next to the town hall Am Ring 17b
(map)
Late 19th century Entirely in wood construction, gable and back slate. It catches the eye because of its location on the curve. In good condition. 08955060
 
House, stable, barn and side building of a four-sided courtyard
House, stable, barn and side building of a four-sided courtyard Am Ring 17c
(map)
Mid-19th century (farmhouse); 2nd half of the 19th century (barn and side building); 1st half of the 19th century (horse stable) Socio-historical and architectural value. Solid house with porphyry walls, oculus in the gable and triplet window, horse stable with three-bay kumthall on porphyry columns, upper floor half-timbered; Barn ground floor half-timbered remains; Jamb truss; Side building on the ground floor and the remaining three sides solid, porphyry walls, central freight elevator, upper floor half-timbered. 08955037
 

List of cultural monuments in the Poppitz district

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house and former stable building as well as courtyard wall with gate system of a farm Mühlenstrasse 5, 5a
(map)
Around 1800 Residential house (No. 5, parcel 2/15) one gable slated, windows that are too large, eaves-side extension, remainder of the village development, dominant location; Side building (No. 5a, parcel 2/16) 09235208
 

List of cultural monuments in the Stöbnig district

image designation location Dating description ID
Two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Stöbniger Strasse 5
(map)
Around 1850 Well-preserved half-timbered building with marginal changes of value that characterizes the townscape. Changes on the ground floor, both upper floors half-timbered, half-hipped roof, casement windows. Very well preserved and characteristic of the village. 08955056
 
Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Stöbniger Strasse 6
(map)
Marked with 1811 Residential stable house of a no longer preserved farm of architectural value without any village connection. Ground floor porphyry walls, door arched lintel with keystone, upper floor half-timbered, roof overhang, winter windows preserved, gable clad. 08955039
 
Horse stable and barn in a four-sided courtyard Stöbniger Strasse 9
(map)
Marked with 1699 (horse stable) Rural farm buildings of historical significance in half-timbered construction, partially renovated; Horse stable with three-bay Kumthalle on porphyry columns, upper floor half-timbered with headbands, gable upper part boarded up. Large barn with half-timbering on the courtyard side. 08955036
 

List of cultural monuments in the Wittgendorf district

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone
Waystone Stollsdorfer Strasse
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Significance in traffic history 08955061
 
Residential stable house and side building of a farm Stollsdorfer Strasse 7
(map)
Inscribed with 1765 (keystone); around 1600 (side building) Farm, consisting of an old stable house (one-storey building from the 16th century), which is one of the oldest remaining stable houses in Saxony, as well as a younger stable house from the mid-18th century, an ensemble of national importance in the history of the house. Large stable house, upper floor half-timbered with “wooden wreath”, ground floor solid with porphyry walls, solid gable; Arched portal with keystone. Stable with three aisles with porphyry columns, Prussian cap vault. Side building multi-storey building, probably built as a residential building. One of six multi-storey buildings still preserved today in central and western Saxony; Capstone marked with. "LK ... 1765". 08955026
 
Residential stable house and archway of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house and archway of a three-sided courtyard Stollsdorfer Strasse 19
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century (stable house); marked 1797 (keystone on the archway) Half-timbered house typical of the time of architectural value, residential stable house on the ground floor modified by horizontal windows, residential stable house upper floor half-timbered, large roof overhang, upper part of the gable ornamentally slated, half-hipped roof, some winter windows preserved 08955017
 
Side building of a farm Stollsdorfer Strasse 21
(map)
Probably around 1800 Typical farm building of architectural value, ground floor porphyry masonry with porphyry walls, upper floor half-timbered, gable partially slated, upper arbor with wooden staircase, boarded parapet, crooked hip roof 08955018
 
Railway keeper's house on the former Rochlitz-Narsdorf railway line and the associated shed Stollsdorfer Strasse 23
(map)
Around 1900 Originally preserved type buildings of historical importance. One-storey gatekeeper's house with jamb, plastered brickwork, plinth, window and door frames made of Rochlitz porphyry, some of the window frames come from another gatekeeper's house, windows have been refurbished, inside some wooden ceilings from other houses, double-shell masonry with an unfilled cavity in a rare brick bond, vestibule in front of the front door badly damaged. The outbuilding was originally used for keeping small livestock, a wash house, possibly coal storage, largely unchanged brick construction, with a wooden extension on the eaves, a gable roof, decorated purlin heads. 09303522
 
Residential stable house, two side buildings, gatehouse and enclosure (ancillary facility) of a four-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, two side buildings, gatehouse and enclosure (ancillary facility) of a four-sided courtyard Wiesengrund 1
(map)
Marked 1831 (stable house); Marked 1847 (Torhaus); 2nd half of the 19th century (barn) Closed preserved farm, example of rural construction from the 19th century, remarkable barn with slot-shaped window openings of architectural value. All buildings are massive and with a half-hip roof, residential stable house with porphyry walls, door with profiled, straight roofing and tooth cut, curved eaves cornice, Palladio motif in the gable; the side buildings with large gates and slotted windows. Gatehouse with arched passage and keystone, next to it two illegible inscriptions. 08955019
 
Small rural house (shepherd's house) Wiesengrund 3
(map)
1st half of the 19th century The only building of this type in the village of house-historical and socio-historical value, both floors are half-timbered, gables boarded up, original window sizes have been preserved throughout 08955020
 
Residential stable house, barn and side building of a farm Wiesengrund 5
(map)
1813 according to information Of architectural and socio-historical value, outbuilding with two-bay groin vault, upper floor half-timbered with integrated dovecote, barn half-timbered, formerly with upper arbor, well-preserved example of wooden architecture; Residential stable house upper floor half-timbered, further roof overhang, one side covered 08955021
 

List of cultural monuments in the Zaßnitz district

image designation location Dating description ID
House, side building and barn of a four-sided courtyard Zaßnitzer Strasse 30
(map)
1612 dendro (barn); around 1800 (side building and farmhouse) Well-preserved ensemble of rural residential and farm buildings of architectural and local value. Side building half-timbered on the upper floor, solid ground floor, gable roof. Half-timbered residential building on the upper floor, massive ground floor, saddle roof, gable to the street massive and disfiguring changed, eaves side extension. Barn in very good condition, half-timbered structure, gable roof, leaf struts, cross-head and foot struts, possibly before 1700 (barn parcel 1612d). 09235782
 

Deletions from the list of monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
House sign of the former Goldener Löwe inn Bismarckstrasse 2
(map)
17th century House sign of a former inn; of local importance. No longer listed in the monument map as of 2017. 09235358
 
Residential house with enclosure Fischergasse 3
(map)
Around 1800 Part of the old local structure, of importance in terms of urban development; probably demolished 09300123
 
Residential house in semi-open development Petrigasse 8
(map)
1827 Demolished in 2014, originally part of a twin house. Small town house built in 1827. Two-storey half-timbered building with a solid ground floor, original door and window frames were preserved there. Upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable slated. The house was closed by a half-hip roof. The other half of the former twin house was demolished in 2008. The monument value of the residential building was derived from its building and socio-historical value due to its good original condition. 09235201
 
Residential building
More pictures
Residential building Schulgasse 25
(map)
Around 1800 Demolished in 2015, residential building in closed development 09235228
 

swell

  • List of listed monuments of the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, as of September 25, 2015
  • Monument map of Saxony , accessed on August 29, 2017

Web links