List of cultural monuments in Thiendorf

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The list of cultural monuments in Thiendorf contains the cultural monuments of the municipality of Thiendorf in the Saxon district of Meißen , which were recorded in the list of monuments from the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2013. It comprises 34 listed objects. This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .

Legend

  • Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
  • Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
  • 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 .

Dobra

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone
Waystone S100 (Am Dobrabach)
(map)
19th century (Wegestein) traffic-historical importance 08956985
 
Dobra village church (church (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure and two tombstones of the von Boxberg family)
More pictures
Dobra village church (church (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure and two tombstones of the von Boxberg family) Am Dobrabach
(map)
1750 (church); 1807 (church furnishings); 18th century (altarpiece); probably 1st half of the 18th century (crucifix); around 1840 (organ) simple baroque hall church with west tower, architectural and local significance 08956989
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1
More pictures
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Am Dobrabach 4 (near)
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) local historical significance 08956990
 
Residential building
More pictures
Residential building Am Dobrabach 8
(map)
Mid 19th century (residential building) One-storey plastered building typical of the time and the landscape, with a jamb and arched twin window in the gable, possibly the poor house of the place, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08956995
 
Rectory
More pictures
Rectory Am Dobrabach 27
(map)
Mid 18th century (rectory) Local historical significance, timber-framed upstairs, one of the few surviving timber-framed houses in town 08956991
 
House of a three-sided courtyard
More pictures
House of a three-sided courtyard Mittelstrasse 12
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse) with half-timbered upper floor, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance 08956992
 
Transformer house
More pictures
Transformer house To Kohlbusch 5 (opposite)
(map)
around 1915 (transformer station) Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history; former address Tauschaer Straße 5 08956994
 

Kleinnaundorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Memorial to the Swedish camp (Map) re. 1706 (monument) roughly hewn granite stone with inscription, local historical significance 08957010
 
Memorial to those who fell in World War I, with enclosure
More pictures
Memorial to those who fell in World War I, with enclosure Dorfplatz
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) local historical significance. 08957000
 
Waystone
More pictures
Waystone To Springbach / corner of Am Eichberg
(map)
19th century (Wegestein) Significance in traffic history (old address Dorfstrasse / Kurzer Weg) 08956998
 
Gasthof Kleinnaundorf (Inn (with hall))
More pictures
Gasthof Kleinnaundorf (Inn (with hall)) Zum Springbach 12
(map)
re. EU 1878 (inn) massive plastered construction, door frames with straight roofing, local historical significance.

former address Dorfstrasse 12

08956999
 
House of a farm
More pictures
House of a farm Zum Springbach 28
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse) Upper floor half-timbered, gable and jamb boarded up, part of the old local structure, historically important.

former address Dorfstrasse 28

08957001
 
Path pillar
More pictures
Path pillar To Springbach / corner of Zur Feldmühle
(map)
19th century (Wegestein) Traffic-historical significance (former address Hauptstraße) 08956997
 
Waystone
More pictures
Waystone To the Feldmühle / corner of Am Eichberg
(map)
19th century (Wegestein) Traffic-historical significance (old address Hauptstraße) 08957002
 
Landmark
More pictures
Landmark To Springbach / corner of Zur Feldmühle
(map)
19th century (boundary stone) Granite, importance for traffic history (former address Hauptstraße) 08956996
 

Liège

image designation location Dating description ID
Side building (residential stable) of a three-sided courtyard Am Graben 3
(map)
End of the 19th century Typical site and time building from the Wilhelminian era, largely preserved in its original form, massive plastered building with jamb and twin windows in the gable, of architectural significance.

One-storey solid plastered construction, quarry stone masonry, jamb, plaster grooves at the corners, sandstone window frames, original windows, entrance area with straight, profiled lintel, profiled cornice, Palladi motif in the gable

08956651
 


Residential stable house (without extensions) and free-standing bakery in a three-sided courtyard Heidestrasse 5
(map)
Mid 19th century Residential stable house one of the few preserved half-timbered buildings in the village, of architectural significance, bakery of rarity, of economic significance.
  • Farmhouse: solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, gable roof
  • Oven: Quarry stone, plastered, the interior of the clay core preserved, gable roof, beaver tail covering.
08956652
 

Naundorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 150 and 15 runner stones (see also general document Obj. 09305644) (Map) after 1828 (boundary stone) In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815

After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones No. 1 - 212, left Elbe No. 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between No. 1 and No. 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From No. 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, and more extensive documentation is available

08957197
 
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone: Pilar No. 149 as well as 11 runner stones (see also general document Obj. 09305644) (Map) after 1828 (boundary stone) In terms of surveying and regional history, it is important as a contemporary document of the historical demarcation between Saxony and Prussia after the Congress of Vienna in 1815

After Napoleon's reign ended, the borders of Europe were redefined at the Congress of Vienna from September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815. Saxony, which fought alongside Napoleon and was therefore among the defeated, had to cede almost two thirds of its territory by decision of the victorious powers. Almost all of these areas were assigned to Prussia and became part of the Prussian province of Saxony. The new border ran - beginning in Wittig on the Witka River (now Poland) across the Upper Lusatia, met the Elbe at Strehla, continued west to Schkeuditz and finally ended south of Leipzig at today's border with Saxony-Anhalt. Even today it can be traced back to the division of the church provinces between Saxony and Brandenburg. The first marking of the newly created border line was made in 1815 by means of wooden stakes erected in pairs. The distances between the boundary signs were not uniform, but referred to local conditions such as ditches, rivers or roads and varied between 200 and 4,350 meters. From 1828 the wooden border posts were gradually replaced by much more solid border stones, the design of which goes back to Prussian designs and which are known as pilare (Spanish for "column"). A total of four types of boundary stones can be distinguished. They are numbered from east to west, with the counting starting anew on the Elbe (right Elbe boundary stones No. 1 - 212, left Elbe No. 1 - 74). East of the Elbe, the stones between No. 1 and No. 82 are initially designed as a pair of granite blocks, between which a runner stone marks the exact boundary. From No. 82 to 148, truncated pyramids stand directly on the border line. Then the forms alternate unsystematically between slender sandstone steles and truncated pyramids with plinths. Several volunteer local researchers have brought together essential findings on the course of the former Saxon-Prussian border. The property of the Saxon-Prussian boundary stones as a monument results from their historical significance; they are reminiscent of a decisive event for Saxony's history. The public interest in preservation is based on the great attention that individual people, groups and communities pay to these stone testimonies of history. In the meantime, several publications have appeared, and more extensive documentation is available

09305484
 
Transformer house Rohnaer Strasse 16 (opposite)
(map)
around 1920 (transformer station) Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history 08956672
 
Land reform stone Rohnaer Strasse 24 (opposite)
(map)
re. 1952 (memorial stone) local and regional historical significance 08956670
 

Ponickau

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Brunnenstrasse 15
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Local and time-typical building from the Wilhelminian era, solid construction with plastered structure, twin windows in the gable, of architectural significance.

Two-storey plastered building, plaster structure, plaster grooves at the corners, partly original windows, cornice, cornice, twin windows in the gable.

08956664
 
Waystone Main street
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

gray granite stele without inscription (weathered).

08957022
 
Side building (residential house) of a three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 31
(map)
End of the 19th century Typical building of the Wilhelminian era and landscape, largely original plastered facade, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered construction on quarry stone masonry, plastered pilaster strips, cornice, profiled window frames, saddle roof.

08956669
 
Alte Schmiede (blacksmith's workshop (with equipment) and adjoining residential building) Hauptstrasse 34
(map)
around 1905 Part of the old local structure, of importance in terms of local history and technology.
  • Residential house: two-storey quarry stone building, plastered, arched windows, original windows and front door, molded profiled walls, hipped roof, beaver-tail crown covering
  • Forge: single-storey quarry stone building, plastered, on a right-angled floor plan, inside: anvil, bellows, equipment.
08956662
 
Ponickauer Schule (former school, now residential building) Hauptstrasse 35
(map)
1905 The building, largely in its original state, with Art Nouveau details, of relevance to local history.

Polygon base made of natural stone, on it two-storey solid plastered building, large arched windows and original entrance door, beaver tail covering.

08956661
 
Ponickau village church (church (with equipment), churchyard with enclosure, eight blackened iron crosses and a tomb as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War)
More pictures
Ponickau village church (church (with equipment), churchyard with enclosure, eight blackened iron crosses and a tomb as well as a memorial to those who fell in the First World War) Hauptstrasse 36
(map)
1589 (church) Stately hall church with a baroque south tower, significance in terms of building history, the townscape and history, iron crosses belonging to the Auerswald family (pastor).
  • Evangelical parish church. Stately hall church with two strong buttresses on the west wall and a mighty tower on the south side. Using the previous Romanesque building, the huge hall was rebuilt in 1589. Tower from the octagon from 1778, the hood renewed in 1876. Comprehensive renovation of the interior in 1912 by Woldemar Kandler . The simple building with drawn-in, just closed choir, basket arched windows. The tower on a square floor plan of considerable size, with eight-sided bell storey. Hood over a strongly structured profile. The flat interior is very simple. Galleries in the nave, the organ gallery swinging forward in a semicircle. The tower vestibule with beamed ceiling and ogival portal. Remarkable carved altar from 1511. In the center shrine a representation of the Coronation of Mary, in the wings the twelve apostles, in the predella four female crowned saints. Particularly noteworthy are the paintings with scenes from the life of Mary on the outside of the wing. The representations are placed in richly furnished architectural spaces, with various uses of perspective. The faces are individualized to the point of grotesque. South German influence recognizable, previously attributed to the painter Pankratius Grueber . - Sandstone pulpit from 1587 on a column with a wooden sound cover. The font of Romanesque origin, changed in 1911. Organ by Gottlob Heinrich Nagel around 1835, changed several times.
  • Six grave monuments set into the east wall, especially from the 16th century. The sandstone grave slab of a Herr von Ponickau († 1578) is outstanding. The fully armored figure is shown in an elegantly moving motif, probably a work by Christoph Walther II. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)
  • Sandstone grave: base, cube on top, profiled roofing, urn on top, weathered inscription
  • War memorial: granite cube on a granite plinth, upper part iron cross made of granite, inscription: Our Heroes 1914–1918.
08956659
 
Residential stable house and side building of a three-sided courtyard, with two courtyard trees at the entrance to the courtyard Ortrander Strasse 1
(map)
Mid 19th century Buildings typical of the time and landscape from the Wilhelminian era, an obvious part of the village landscape near the church, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: one-storey solid plastered building with plaster structure and grooves at the corners, cast walls, partly original windows
  • Side building: two-storey plastered building with sandstone walls, some original windows, door roofing of a former sandstone portal preserved, two large old chestnuts to the left and right of the courtyard entrance.
08956668
 
Rectory Rosenbornstrasse 1
(map)
around 1650 one of the oldest buildings in town, simple two-storey, massive plastered building, of local historical importance.

Quarry stone base, on top of it a two-storey plastered structure, solid, 3: 8 axes, sandstone walls, bat dormers, gable roof, beaver tail covering.

08956665
 
Side building (residential stable house) and stable building (with Kumthalle) of a three-sided courtyard Rosenbornstrasse 7
(map)
Mid 19th century Plastered buildings typical of the time and the landscape, largely preserved in their original state, Kumthalle of rarity, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential house: two-storey quarry stone building, plastered, plaster structure and grooves, arched windows in the gable, some original windows
  • Side building: quarry stone, plastered, two-bay Kumthalle, above triangular gable structure, windows as a triumphal arch motif.
08956666
 
Stable house of a farm Rosenbornstrasse 12
(map)
Mid 19th century Part of the old local structure, largely preserved in its original form, with a half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

First floor quarry stone, plastered, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, gable half-timbered, partly boarded-up, original windows, sandstone walls, half-hipped roof, back of tailcoat roof.

08956667
 

Sacka

image designation location Dating description ID
Saxon post mile pillars (totality)
More pictures
Saxon post mile pillars (totality) B98, between Sacka and Glauschnitz, near junction Tauscha and Röhrsdorf, corridor border to Laußnitz
(map)
re. 1722 (all-mile column) Remainder of a Saxon full mile column from 1722 09304982
 
Boundary stone of the rectory At rental place 3 (opposite)
(map)
re. 1828 Site and survey history testimony.

Natural stone cube, inscription: Pfarrgut Sacka, 1828.

08956677
 
Gasthof Sacka (inn (Zum Oberdorf 1, with hall extension and stage), side building (Königsbrücker Straße 2) and manual pump in the courtyard) Koenigsbrücker Strasse 2
(map)
re. 1829 Stately ensemble in a location that characterizes the townscape, the inn remodeled in the Wilhelminian style, beautiful segment arch portal, with local historical significance.
  • Inn: broad, two-storey solid plastered building with hall and stage, arched windows on the upper floor, original windows, arched curtain motif in window roofing on the ground floor, arched segment door with keystone, marked JGM 1829, inscription in the arch, stepped gable
  • Side building: single-storey plastered building, quarry stone, sandstone walls, gable roof, cast-iron manual pump.
08956680
 
Signpost
Signpost Loetzschener Strasse
(map)
re. 1834 traffic-historical importance.

Sandstone stele with two inscriptions: 1st: Radeburg 2 St., Tauscha 1/2 St., 2nd: Lötzschen /. St.

08956683
 
Dorfkirche Sacka (church (with furnishings), churchyard with five tombs and enclosure)
Dorfkirche Sacka (church (with furnishings), churchyard with five tombs and enclosure) Radeburger Strasse
(map)
re. 1615, in the weather vane simple baroque hall church with west tower, medieval core, architectural and local historical significance.

Evangelical parish church. In the immediate vicinity of the former manor, several times rebuilt church with west tower. Today's appearance is largely determined by the work done in 1667–70. The tower on a square floor plan with a late Gothic portal, weather vane marked 1615. The nave erected on a rectangular floor plan, the choir retracted, the three-quarter circle apse remnants of the Romanesque rotunda. On the north side of the choir there is an annex for the sacristy and above the prayer room. The interior is attractive due to the staggering of the individual spatial bodies. The nave is vaulted with a wooden barrel, the choir has a beamed ceiling and the apse is covered with a dome. The central axis slopes to the right. The galleries from the time of the renovation in 1862, by Michael Schumann. The prospect of the stately prayer room above the sacristy north of the choir from 1667–70. It rests on three (four) winding columns with composite capitals. Equipment: Altar from 1619, the central picture shows the resurrection of Christ in strong plastic relief. To the side of it two Tuscan columns, niches and scrollwork. Above it cranked entablature and cartridge, demanding work. The wooden pulpit also from 1619. The six parapet panels are provided with figural reliefs. Organ by Julius Jahn, 1902, with mechanical cone shutter. Some notable grave monuments are placed in the choir. Of excellent quality that of Christoph von Loß († 1551), of Hans Walther I. - The monument of Margarethe von Loß († 1541), also of good quality. - In the nave the epitaph of Dietrich von Loß († 1576), wood, colored. Two columns frame the image of the resurrection, above the attic and triangular gable. Including representation of the family of the deceased. - The sophisticated monument of Johanna Sibylla von Ihlow († 1707), also placed in the nave. Marble epitaph with corner pillars and two female allegories to one side. A portrait bust of the deceased with two mourning putti attached to the side serves as the crowning conclusion. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996, edit).

For the text of the church, see Dehio Sachsen I, 1st tomb: rectangular slab, embedded in the church wall, flat reliefs with putti heads in the upper gusset, oval medallion with inscription, palm fronds and consoles with putti heads at the bottom, 2nd tomb: rectangular sandstone slab with putti heads in the gusset, in between sun with halo, inscription plaque, lower end coat of arms ornament, 3rd tomb: weathered sandstone pedestal, sandstone stele with triangular gable end, 4th tomb: plate embedded in the church wall, upper part semicircular niche with urn, center inscription board, lower part weathered, sandstone (Friedericke Charlotte von Winckler, born von der Heyde, died 1779), 5th tomb: Natural stone plinth, pyramid-like structure with urn and ivy tendrils, sandstone (Johann Ernst von Winckler, died 1803, inscription: Dem Andenken / des Churfürstl. Saxon Captain / Johann Ernst von Winckler / ... born on March 20, 1734 in Chemnitz in / Voigt- / lande ... father ... Oberster / Johann Ernst von Winckler ... married / himself ... 1774 mi Johannen Julianen / Sophien born. von Altmannshof / and died on September 3rd. 1803).

08956675
 
Rectory with rectory, side building, rectory garden, fountain and enclosure
Rectory with rectory, side building, rectory garden, fountain and enclosure Radeburger Strasse 55
(map)
around 1920/1930 distinctive in the locality, rectory in the local style, local historical importance.

Rectory: single-storey plastered building with terrace, inside original door frame with clothing and lamps, gable roof with loft extension, side building: single-storey plastered building with sandstone walls, gable roof, fountain: baptismal font-like substructure, with a fish-person standing in it as a gargoyle, quarry stone wall, garden with orchard.

08956678
 
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Radeburger Strasse 55 (opposite)
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) local historical significance.

Rectangular stone base with a pyramidal porphyry tuff structure on top, upper end with an eagle made of porphyry tufa, on the face side a panel with weathered inscription, oak leaves and dagger.

08956674
 
Sacka manor; Sacka moated castle: moat, wall remains and sandstone portal of the former moated castle and later manor Settlement 1
(map)
17th century or much younger (portal) Testimony to the earliest settlement history, local historical significance, richly decorated portal of artisanal and artistic importance.

Remnants of the wall of the so-called castle, sandstone walls, wrought iron bars in window openings, richly decorated sandstone portal preserved, drained moat of the former moated castle.

08956676
 
House and side building of a two-sided courtyard Tauschaer Strasse 4
(map)
1937 Property of a settlement from the 1930s that has largely been preserved in its original state, in the local style, of architectural significance.

The Reichsiedlungsgesellschaft established a settlement for the resettlers from the nearby military training area in 1937/38. 17 families, mostly from Rohna, came to Sacka. Two hereditary farms with twenty hectares and twelve farms were created.

  • Residential building: single-storey plastered building, half-timbered on the long side in the jamb, one gable plastered, the other boarded up, gable roof, beaver tail crown covering, some original windows and shutters
  • Side building: one-story plastered building, boarded up at the rear.
08956682
 
House and side building of a two-sided courtyard Tauschaer Strasse 14
(map)
1937 Property of a settlement from the 1930s that has largely been preserved in its original state, in the local style, of architectural significance.

The Reichsiedlungsgesellschaft established a settlement for the resettlers from the nearby military training area in 1937/38. 17 families, mostly from Rohna, came to Sacka. Two hereditary farms with twenty hectares and twelve farms were created.

  • Residential building: one-storey plastered building, mezzanine and gable half-timbered, beaver tail crown covering, original windows and shutters
  • Side building attached at an angle to the residential building: partly solid, partly wooden construction, beaver tail crown cover.
08956681
 
Gasthof Sacka (inn (Zum Oberdorf 1, with hall extension and stage), side building (Königsbrücker Straße 2) and manual pump in the courtyard) Zum Oberdorf 1
(map)
re. 1829 Stately ensemble in a location that characterizes the townscape, the inn remodeled in the Wilhelminian style, beautiful segment arch portal, with local historical significance.
  • Inn: broad, two-storey solid plastered building with hall and stage, arched windows on the upper floor, original windows, arched curtain motif in window roofing on the ground floor, arched segment door with keystone, marked JGM 1829, inscription in the arch, stepped gable
  • Side building: single-storey plastered building, quarry stone, sandstone walls, gable roof, cast-iron manual pump.
08956680
 

Stag

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone (Map) 19th century traffic-historical importance.

made of gray granite, inscription: Lüttichau, with arrow indicating the direction (stone probably shifted, as arrow points in a different direction)

08956654
 
Fuchsmühle (former mill building)
More pictures
Fuchsmühle (former mill building) (Map) around 1800 Half-timbered building typical of the landscape, the oldest mill in the large community of Thiendorf, significant in terms of architecture and local history and, from a local point of view, a rarity.

Ground floor quarry stone masonry, plastered, partly changed, upper floor half-timbered, struts on the gable with clay infill, partly boarded up, original windows, double beaver tail covering.

08956655
 
Waystone Dorfstrasse 2 (opposite)
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

Natural stone, whitewashed, two inscriptions: Sacka, Stölpchen.

08956656
 
Waystone Dorfstrasse 2 (opposite)
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

Natural stone, whitewashed, two inscriptions: Welxande 1/2 h, Sacka.

08956657
 
Stable house of a farm Dorfstrasse 9
(map)
according to information regarding 1757 oldest preserved house in the village, with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable roof, tail-coat roof at the rear over extension, a gable half-timbered plastered.

08956653
 

Swap

image designation location Dating description ID
Landmark
More pictures
Landmark (Map) 19th century Corridor or district stone, significance in terms of surveying history.

gray granite, approx. 50 cm high, inscription: Tauscha

08957016
 
Waystone
Waystone Tauschaer Strasse
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

scratched granite base, inscription: Tauscha, Dobra, Sacka

08956987
 
Landmark
Landmark (Map) 19th century (boundary stone) Corridor or district stone, significance in terms of surveying history 08956988
 
Landmark
Landmark (Map) 19th century Corridor or district stone, significance in terms of surveying history.

Granite, inscription: Municipality of Dobra

08956986
 
Dreiseithof Hauptstrasse 8
(map)
around 1938 Part of a settlement from the 1930s, in the local style with half-timbered elements, historically important.

Residential stable house: one-storey plastered building with ornamental framework in the gable and jamb, box lift, original window sizes, saddle roof, barn: solid on a granite base, partly boarded up with wooden construction, side building: wooden construction boarded up horizontally.

08957019
 
Dreiseithof Hauptstrasse 11
(map)
around 1938 Part of a settlement from the 1930s, in the local style with half-timbered elements, historically important.

old address at Alte Poststrasse 20; 20a; 20b

  • Residential stable house: single-storey plastered building with decorative framework in the gable and jamb, box elevator, original window sizes, with shutters, gable roof, extended extension with gable and decorative framework
  • Barn: solid on a granite base, partly wooden construction boarded up
  • Side building: wooden structure boarded horizontally.
08957020
 
Tauscha village church
More pictures
Tauscha village church At the pond
(map)
1650 simple baroque hall church with ridge turret, altar by KÄNDER, importance in terms of architectural and local history.
  • Evangelical parish church. Simple hall church with turret, built in 1650 using older components. The building on an almost square floor plan. The retracted choir with a straight end is flanked by a prayer room north and south of the sacristy. The exterior without jewelry. Small porch from 1746. The harmonious interior is also simple. Choir and hall with a flat beamed ceiling, separated from each other by a round triumphal arch. On the south and west side gallery from 1746. Version of the gallery parapet like that of the octagonal pulpit on the north side of the church. Altar dated and signed: Work by Johann Joachim Kändler from 1745. Simple structure: The altarpiece, Resurrection of Christ, flanked on each side by a corner post. These are provided with an angel's head at their upper end, with a curved entablature and urn as a conclusion. The center is crowned by a halo. To the side of it two carved figures, the personifications of faith and love, with a cross or heart in their hand, framed in white. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)
  • War memorial at the church: tabernacle-like extension made of red granite, with roofing, inside Iron Cross, 1914–1918, inscription: "Faithful to death they sacrificed themselves for their homeland", oak leaves
08957011
 
Waystone Tauscha extension , main street
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

chafed granite block, inscription: Königsbrück, Radeburg, Tauscha

08956983
 
Residential stable house Dorfstrasse 17
(map)
1st half of the 19th century one of the few half-timbered buildings in the area, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable, wall-opening ratio intact, boarded back

08957018
 
Individual features of the totality of the manor Tauscha: former manor house of a manor with five linden trees, enclosure with three gates as well as a linden room and a pair of linden trees (see also object entirety document Obj.
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Individual features of the totality of the manor Tauscha: former manor house of a manor with five linden trees, enclosure with three gates as well as a linden room and a pair of linden trees (see also object entirety document Obj. 09306728) Unter den Linden 1
(map)
in the core probably around 1650, heavily overformed stately, massive plastered building with a very high hipped roof, of local historical importance.

Despite the simplifications made around 1975, the stately mansion of the former manor Tauscha, Unter den Linden 1, Thiendorf, OT Tauscha, has a towering and impressive half-hipped roof over two floors. As far as is known, the building, which looks simple today, was built in the second half of the 17th century, and its core may be even older. Renaissance gables are said to have adorned it until well after 1700. These can be seen on sheet 269 of the Ur-Öder from 1586–1634. The courtyard side dwelling was added around 1790 under the house owner and secret finance councilor Carl Friedrich Freiherr von Rochow. The old room layout was largely retained. The hallway shows a remarkable groin vault. The living room to the left (south) of it is enlivened by a beautiful baroque stucco ceiling with tendrils, bands and round ornamental fields in the corners. The former dining room on the upper floor also has a comparable ceiling. In the second quarter of the 19th century, the then owner, Ernst Friedrich Carl August von Boße, postmaster in Königsbrück, ceded patrimonial jurisdiction to the state. In 1908 the sewing machine manufacturer Walter Naumann acquired the manor. During the Nazi era it came into the possession of the Reich Resettlement Society. In order to guarantee the protection of the important manor house, its provisional securing was ordered on the basis of the Saxon Home Protection Act of 1938 and the building was entered in the state monument list A a little later. It has been a simple house since it was sold.

The monumental property of the Tauscha mansion results from its architectural and local significance. It is a valuable historical testimony both as a former aristocratic residence and with its characteristic structural forms, especially the design of the interior, which documents the architectural development over two, if not three centuries. Next to the church, the distinctive building illustrates the history of the place and its former patron saints and other owners like no other building in the settlement. (LfD / 2017)

Manor house, today apartments. Stately building in simple Renaissance forms. Two-storey with an extremely steep hipped roof. Unevenly distributed windows, four-axis gable. The exterior has changed significantly (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996).

Stately two-storey solid plastered building with plastered structure, tooth cut, dwarf house, bat dormers, reduced external structure ?, parts of the original quarry stone enclosure preserved, gate pillars with egg motifs, apsidal extension on the back of the building, very high crooked hip roof.

08957017
 


Material entity of the manor Tauscha with the following individual monuments: former manor house of a manor with five head linden trees, enclosure with three gates as well as a linden room and a pair of linden trees (see also individual monument document obj. 08957017), plus the former manor gardens as an entity part Unter den Linden 1
(map)
in the core probably around 1650, heavily overformed Material entity of the manor Tauscha with the following individual monuments: former manor house of a manor with five head linden trees, enclosure with three gates as well as a linden room and a pair of linden trees (see also individual monument document obj. 08957017), plus the former manor gardens as an entity part 09306728
 


Thiendorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Transformer house
Transformer house Kamenzer Strasse
(map)
around 1915 Testimony to the electrification of the place, of significance in terms of technology history.

Plastered building on a square floor plan, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, slab-like tower-like structure, tent roof, beaver tail covering.

08956685
 


Gasthof Thiendorf (inn (no.10) with side building (no.10a))
Gasthof Thiendorf (inn (no.10) with side building (no.10a)) Kamenzer Strasse 10; 10a
(card)
re. 1688 In a location that defines the townscape, with a magnificent baroque entrance portal, significant in terms of local history.

Inn: massive, broad plastered building, two-storey, wall-opening ratio intact, portal with the inscription “Zum Treuen Freund / MDCLXXXIIX”, mighty hipped roof, side building: massive plastered building with saddle roof.

08956684
 


Saxon postal mile pillars (totality): Post mile pillar
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Saxon postal mile pillars (totality): Post mile pillar Kamenzer Straße 25 (before)
(map)
re. 1722 Copy of a quarter milestone, of importance in terms of traffic history.

A replica of the quarter milestone number 53 from 1722 is located in Thiendorf on the former postal route Leipzig - Breslau in the course of the Via Regia. The stone was probably removed at the beginning of the 20th century as it is not mentioned in research reports at the time. In 1980, a remnant piece, which could no longer be restored, was discovered in a bank reinforcement in neighboring Schönfeld, which is now in the Trebsen castle. The copy was made in 1986 at the current location. In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began to erect 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 and full mile 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 the history of traffic as part of the nationally significant postal system. (LfD / 2013)

Sandstone cube, bush hammered, top, inscription: AR 1722

08956695
 


Kienmühle (mill (with technical equipment) as well as residential house, stable building, barn and side building of a mill property)
Kienmühle (mill (with technical equipment) as well as residential house, stable building, barn and side building of a mill property) Kienmühle 1
(map)
after 1927 Mühlenhof ensemble, largely preserved in its original state, of significance in terms of the history of technology.

First mentioned around 1350, owned by the Noack family since 1900, the half-timbered mill was completely destroyed by fire in 1926, immediate rebuilding as a grain mill with bakery, the building structure and interior furnishings are preserved in their original condition from this time and are functional, until 1990 still partially in operation.

  • Turbine-operated water mill with equipment and residential building: two-storey plastered building with a rich roof landscape, double beaver tail covering, partly crown covering, partly original windows with metal sprouting in the mill area, colored accentuation of the windows
  • Stable: massive plastered building, jamb, sandstone walls
  • Barn: massive plastered building, jamb, segment arched door, gable roof.
08956673
 


Stable house of a farm To the large pond 2
(map)
Early 19th century Half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, striking in the townscape, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, gable partly boarded up, partly half-timbered, half-hipped roof.

08956686
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard To the large pond 7
(map)
Early 19th century Typical of the time and landscape, upper floor half-timbered house plastered, part of the old local structure, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Residential house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable plastered, partly original windows, saddle roof
  • Barn: massive plastered building, two large, straight gate entrances, original arched windows between the gates.
08956688
 


Residential house, stable extension, side building / pull-out house, (double barn), gate and enclosure of a three-sided courtyard Zum Großteich 12
(map)
Late 19th century, around 1900 Side building as an old half-timbered house, residential building, massive plastered building from the Wilhelminian era, of exemplary importance for the rural architecture of its time, part of the old local structure, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, tailcoat roof, gable half-timbered plastered
  • Residential building: massive plastered building, profiled window frames, crooked hip roof
  • Stable and barn: massive plastered building, gable roof.
08956687
 


Residential house with enclosure To the Brethren Congregation 10
(map)
around 1890 Residential house of the former Brethren, largely preserved in its original form, clinker brick building from the Gründerzeit, significance of local history.

Two-storey building with a multi-part floor plan, polygonal base, above it a yellow clinker brick building with a risalit-like porch on the right-hand side, decorative frieze made of quatrefoil motifs, window sills with consoles, curtain arch motif, rich roof landscape, partly plain tile covering, partly original fence.

08956691
 


Residential house with enclosure To the Brethren Congregation 14
(map)
around 1890 Residential house of the former Brethren, largely preserved in its original form, clinker brick building with corner towers, of local historical importance.

Two-storey clinker brick building on a polygon base, two corner towers with octagonal half-hip roofs, horizontal red brick structure, slate roof, original fence.

08956693
 


Residential house with enclosure Brethren Congregation 15
(map)
around 1890 Residential house of the former Brethren, largely preserved in its original form, clinker brick building with corner towers, of local historical importance.

Two-storey clinker building on a base made of polygonal masonry, red gemstones, at the corners emphasized by towers with Welschen hoods and lanterns, original door and windows, window sills with consoles, ornamental frieze, vine tendrils, original weather house, original fence.

08956690
 


Residential building To the Brethren Congregation 16
(map)
around 1890 Residential house of the former Brethren, largely preserved in its original form, clinker brick building with volute gable, historical significance.

Two-storey clinker building on a polygon base, horizontal structure through red brick, two-axis central projectile with a gable structure and two arched windows, on the upper floor windows with triangular roofing, decorative ribbon with vegetal ornamentation, window sills with consoles, beaver tail crown covering.

08956692
 


Residential house with enclosure To the Brethren Congregation 29
(map)
around 1890 Residential house of the former Brethren, largely preserved in its original form, clinker brick building from the Gründerzeit, significance of local history.

Two-storey brick building on a polygon base, red brick structure, rich roof landscape, beaver tail covering.

08956694
 

Welxande

image designation location Dating description ID
Landmark (Map) 19th century Corridor or district stone, significant in terms of surveying history.

Natural stone, inscription: Municipality of Sacka, recorded as a boundary stone in Sacka, but is in the district of Welxande, hence today the district of Welxande.

08956696
 
Side building of a three-sided courtyard MTS 7 road
(map)
Mid 19th century Upper floor half-timbered partially boarded up, the only surviving half-timbered construction in the village, of architectural significance.

Ground floor quarry stone, solid, upper floor half-timbered, partly boarded up, segmental arched entrance, gable roof, partly beaver tail, partly slate covering.

08956658
 

Würschnitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Landmark
Landmark Wing 3
(card)
19th century Corridor or district stone, significance in terms of surveying history.

gray granite, half sunk in the earth

08957004
 


Würschnitz village church
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Würschnitz village church Ottendorfer Strasse
(map)
1st half of the 18th century simple hall church with roof turret, significance in terms of local and architectural history.

Evangelical parish church. Small 3/8 closed hall church from the 1st half of the 18th century, probably built using a previous building. Gable roof, ridge turrets in the west. Arched windows, in the north addition of sacristy and prayer room. Flat ceiling inside, decorated with delicate stucco lines. Galleries on the west and north sides of the hall. The elaborate altar from 1660/70. Two columns flank a semicircular closed landscape, in front of which a plastic wooden crucifix is ​​built. On the side and in the crown of the altar there are figures of angels with the tools of the Passion. In the predella there are two closed semicircular panels with allegories. The entire altar is painted white and marbled red. Lively work. - Baptismal font around 1600. The cupa is round, with ornamentation of fittings, the foot, which swells downwards, stands on a laurel wreath, careful work. - Organ from 1870, probably by Nagel. (Dehio Sachsen I, p. 861)

08957006
 


Moving house
Moving house Ottendorfer Strasse 5
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the old local structure, location in the center of the village characterizes the image, of architectural and social historical importance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, gable roof.

08957021
 


Würschnitzer School (Former School)
Würschnitzer School (Former School) Ottendorfer Strasse 9
(map)
re. 1906 Wilhelminian style building with volute gable, importance of local history.

Polygon base, dwarf house, two-storey solid plastered building, volute-like gable structure on the front, cast stone walls on both storeys, segmented arched windows with keystones on the ground floor, original front door, hipped roof.

08957008
 


Rectory
Rectory Ottendorfer Strasse 10
(map)
re. 1817 Upper floor half-timbered, with arched portal, architectural and local historical importance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, timber-framed to the rear, the gable timber-framed, one boarded-up, gable roof, beaver tail covering.

08957005
 


Residential building Ottendorfer Strasse 18
(map)
re. 1669 Stately half-timbered building, rare and ancient half-timbered construction (with St. Andrew's cross), part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

House is labeled "CMAO1669 DHD6. MaJ. ", Massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with St. Andrew's crosses, a massive gable, a half-timbered gable, partly boarded, gable roof, beaver tail covering, (forms farm with number 20)

08957007
 


Quarry stone wall Ottendorfer Strasse 31
(map)
19th century At the entrance to the town, it shapes the townscape, relic of the old property boundary, of local history.

Quarry stone wall plastered, approx. 50 m long

08957003
 


Waystone
Waystone Radeburger Strasse 11 (in front)
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

gray granite stele, inscription, Radeburg, Medingen, possibly Wegestein on the street, Flstk. 278.

08957009
 

Zschorna

image designation location Dating description ID
Waystone Zschornaer Strasse
(map)
19th century traffic-historical importance.

Sandstone stele, lower third scratched, weathered inscription in the upper part.

08957015
 
Individual monument belonging to the Zschorna Castle and Park b.  Radeburg: Castle (see also collective document - Obj. 09303809)
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Individual monument belonging to the Zschorna Castle and Park b. Radeburg: Castle (see also collective document - Obj. 09303809) To the pond economy 1
(map)
1537 old castle in the style of the renaissance, architectural and local significance.

Lock. A stately building with a rectangular floor plan, allegedly built in 1537 on older remains. A two-arched bridge over the moat, flanked by two stately old linden trees, provides access. Main building on three floors. Rebuilt in 1853 by Karl Moritz Haenel and the three-storey building with an ornamental gable added to the northwest. 1909 Changes probably by Bernhard Schreiber. Pierce the hipped roof on the southeast side of the stair tower facing the park with a lantern. The entrance area is vaulted with cells, with deep cells in the hallway and flat ones in the room to the right. On the right, a barrel-vaulted hall. The sturdy arched masonry of considerable thickness. In the basement some loopholes and barrel vaulted rooms, etc. a. the kitchen. An arched door with rough profile penetrations as access. In front of the castle, a chapel-like building, probably at the beginning of the 19th century (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996) stately, multi-tier, multi-storey plastered building with a two-storey extension, corner grooves, partly profiled window walls, gable-like roof houses, steep hipped roof with bat dormers, inside some cell vaults, see also Dehio Sachsen I, p. 830

08957013
 
Unity of the Zschorna Castle and Park b.  Radeburg, with the following individual monument: Castle (No. 1, see Obj. 08957013) and Park (garden monument) and with the following totality part: Ancillary buildings (No. 3 and 5)
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Unity of the Zschorna Castle and Park b. Radeburg, with the following individual monument: Castle (No. 1, see Obj. 08957013) and Park (garden monument) and with the following totality part: Ancillary buildings (No. 3 and 5) To pond management 1; 3; 5
(card)
1537 (castle) old castle in the Renaissance style, beautiful park, architectural and local historical importance.

Stately, multi-tier, multi-storey plastered building with a two-storey extension, corner grooves, partly profiled window frames, gable-like roof house, steep hipped roof with bat dormers, inside partly cell vaults, see also Dehio Sachsen I, p. 830

The creation of the park can be traced back to the last renovation of the castle at the turn of the century. The approximately 11 hectare area of ​​the park is primarily characterized by the two ponds, the larger fishing pond with an elongated island and the small nettle pond. In addition to the visually perceptible park axis between the castle with moat bridge and fishing pond with island, the larger part of the park is characterized by sparse old trees, dominating among them: pedunculate oak, winter linden, hornbeam and norway maple. Coniferous trees have grown back wild. Due to the use of the property as a central pioneer camp, the current appearance of the park is disturbed, especially because of the numerous buildings (wood-paneled bungalows and massive communal facilities and multi-purpose buildings) as well as the original line of sight from the palace through the "interposed" open-air stage, but not so substantially in its historical existence and character impaired, that the monument properties would have been lost.

09303809
 
Zschorna Manor To pond management 4; 4a
(card)
19th century Belonging to Zschorna Castle, Wilhelminian style building, of local history.

Residential building: plastered quarry stone building on a right-angled floor plan, polygon base, two storeys, segmental arched windows on the ground floor, partly original windows with winter windows, on the upper floor rectangular windows with plastering, gable-shaped loft on the street side, plain tile roofing, ancillary building: single-storey quarry stone building, sandstone window walls, gable roof,

08957014
 

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Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Thiendorf  - Collection of pictures