List of cultural monuments in Wendishbora

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The list of cultural monuments in Wendisch Bora contains the official list of monuments of the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony designated cultural monuments in Nossener district Wendisch Bora .

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 .

Wendishbora

image designation location Dating description ID
Wendischbora village church (church (including furnishings), with a war memorial in relief and Ernst Friedrich Siegel's grave slab on the outside wall of the church as well as the churchyard gate and morgue in the churchyard)
More pictures
Wendischbora village church (church (including furnishings), with a war memorial in relief and Ernst Friedrich Siegel's grave slab on the outside wall of the church, as well as the churchyard gate and morgue in the churchyard) Wendischbora
(map)
1833-1834 Simple hall building with ridge turrets over the west gable, evidence of church architecture from the first half of the 19th century, significant in terms of building history and local history as well as artistically.

Evangelical parish church. Hall building with roof turret, built uniformly in 1834. Plastered building with delicately structured arched windows and portals. The roof turret growing from the western gable front, merging into the octagon above the ridge, with a hood and slender onion.

Interior flat-covered, wooden gallery, in the west single-storey organ gallery. In the chancel on both sides patronage boxes from 1834, on the south side with the coat of arms of the owner of the local manor, Henriette von Feilitzsch, née. from Schönberg. Pulpit altar, 1834, with polygonal pulpit between Corinthian columns, modified in 1884. Cast iron baptismal font from 1834, large cast iron oven, end of the 19th century, organ front in rococo shapes. (Dehio Sachsen I, 1996)

Previous buildings: destroyed by the Swedes in 1637, rebuilt in 1649, modified in 1746, burned down in 1833 (together with the estate's brewery), grave slab Ernst Friedrich Siegel (d. 1875).

09267778
 


Waystone Wendischbora
(map)
3rd quarter of the 19th century Sandstone column with a shaft and a slightly wider head including a four-sided, roof-like end, with an inscription (Mahlitzsch still legible) and directional signs, significant in terms of traffic history. 09305398
 


Residential stable house (with two house numbers), barn and stable building of a three-sided courtyard Wendischbora 1; 1a
(card)
1st third of the 19th century Closed, half-timbered courtyard in a landscape-typical design, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house and stable building: half-timbered, solidly stocky
  • Barn: half-timbered
09267793
 


Rectory Wendischbora 12
(map)
around 1800 Originally part of a larger parsonage, building with a half-timbered upper floor, characteristic village property, as an example of rural architecture and folk architecture of its time, historically significant, also relevant to the local history. 09267882
 


Residential stable house (No. 22) and side building (No. 22a) of a three-sided courtyard Wendischbora 22; 22a
(card)
1st third of the 19th century Rural buildings with preserved half-timbered upper storeys that are important for the townscape and valuable in terms of settlement history.

Stable house, somewhat rebuilt, half-timbered, solidly stocky.

09267769
 


Residential stable house, two side buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard Wendischbora 25
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered ensemble of rural architecture and folk architecture from around 1800 that has been preserved as a closed structure, significant in terms of architectural history, and also a rarity from a local point of view.
  • Half-timbered, solidly stocky
  • Barn probably continuous half-timbering.
09267770
 


Residential stable house and barn of a farm Wendischbora 27
(map)
1st third of the 19th century Residential stable house, partly on the upper floor, half-timbered, half-timbered barn, authentically preserved rural buildings, as evidence of rural architecture and folk building methods of their time, significant in terms of building history and economic history.
  • Residential stable house: half-timbered, solidly stocky, half-timbered on one side
  • Barn: half-timbered.
09267771
 


Barn and side building of a farm Wendischbora 40
(map)
1st third of the 19th century Both buildings with half-timbered construction, authentically preserved peasant buildings, as evidence of rural architecture and folk architecture of their time, significant in terms of building history and economic history.

Barn: half-timbered, partly boarded up.

09267774
 


Side building, barn and attached shower of a farm Wendischbora 42
(map)
1st third of the 19th century Partly with half-timbered construction, authentically preserved peasant buildings, as evidence of rural architecture and folk building methods of their time, significant in terms of building history and economic history.
  • a farm building: half-timbered, solidly stocky
  • a farm building: half-timbered on the sides, bricked back
09267775
 


Barn and side building of a farm Wendischbora 48
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered barn, side building, upper floor half-timbered, authentically preserved rural buildings, as evidence of rural architecture and folk building methods of their time, significant in terms of building history and economic history. 09267776
 


Individual features of the totality of the Wendischbora manor: mansion with a supporting wall in front of the south, including stairs and gate entrance with two gate pillars at No. 57 (see also totality - Obj. 09303510)
More pictures
Individual features of the material entity Wendischbora manor: mansion with a supporting wall in front of the south, including stairs and gate entrance with two gate pillars at No. 57 (see also entity - Obj. 09303510) Wendischbora 55
(map)
1833, later extended (castle) Characteristic building in the typical forms of the Biedermeier period, with its simple facade, only structured by pilasters and a cornice, as well as the arched windows largely unadulterated evidence of late classicism and arched style of the 19th century, historically significant, as a building by the Dresden architect Woldemar Hermann , one of the most important Saxon architects of his time, artistically valuable, also of relevance to the local history.

After the old mansion burned down to the cellar in the spring of 1833, the then manor owner Heinrich Friedrich August von Röder had a new building built in its place from the summer of the same year. In April he had already commissioned Woldemar Hermann, known as Röder von Bomsdorff since 1821, with the construction. On a drawing by Hermann in the architect's diary, which has since been published, it appears as a rectangular two-story building with a flat hipped roof. This corresponds to today's main wing. In the year 1835 the woman General Henriette Ernestine bought. Baroness von Feilitzsch the manor. After her death in 1851, Baron Christian Heinrich von Wöhrmann (d. 1870) took it over. In his time, the gatehouse was built in 1856. It is reasonable to assume that on this occasion he also had the manor house extended by the rear wing. This was done in an adapted form. The retaining wall to the south of the manor house was built from quarry stone with sandstone stairs.

09267772
 


Material collection of manor Wendischbora, with the following individual monuments: mansion with a retaining wall in front of it with stairs and gate entrance with two gate pillars at No. 57 (Wendischbora 55, see individual monuments - Obj. 09267772), gatehouse (Wendischbora 59, see individual monument 09267773), residential and farm buildings (Wendischbora 56, see individual monuments 09267884) as well as stable building and inspector's house with three of the originally four cut linden trees (Wendischbora 61/62, see individual monuments 09267883), as well as parts of the whole: two outbuildings (Wendischbora 57 and 58), the orangery and the preserved parts of the Park (garden monument) and the manor meadow south of it Wendischbora 55; 56; 57; 58; 59; 61; 62
(card)
1833 and later Above all, the manor is important in terms of regional history, the buildings are architecturally valuable as evidence of their time, and the mansion built by the Dresden architect Woldemar Hermann is also of artistic importance.

In the park originally game reserve and fountain (not found, December 19, 2011), meanwhile Kindergarten Wendischbora, at the entrance coat of arms with swordtail, Wendischbora 57 (subject entirety part): above the entrance triangular gable with a relief of a putto, eaves design, gable roof, to the east crooked hip.

Structural assets: Buildings: mansion

Access: Entrances: Gate access with two pillars (on the eastern edge of the building at number 57), pillars made of sandstone, with heavily scratched central surfaces and each pillar attachment in the form of a cup with leafy tendrils. Path system: Still recognizable in the topography.

Horticultural structures: open terrace with retaining wall south of the manor house, retaining wall made of quarry stone masonry with cover plates made of sandstone, access through central sandstone stairs (decorative lions not from the construction period).

Water elements: small pond with a curved bank (unpaved) on the southern border of the garden monument.

Vegetation: Individual trees: Old trees, especially near the manor house, consisting of pedunculate oaks (Quercus robur), sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus), linden (Tilia spec.), Beech (Fagus sylvatica), copper beech (Fagus sylvatica 'Atropurpurea'), hornbeam (Carpinus betulus), horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum). In the western part of the park there are isolated groups of older trees, especially beeches and oaks.

Other protected assets: Soil relief: moving relief, sloping from north to south to the manor meadow and the bounding stream. Visual relationship: The visual relationship over the lower large pond (Flstk 190) to the mansion is to be emphasized, the lower pond is surrounded by poplar trees (Populus nigra 'Italica'), from the mansion there is also a view of the elongated, western adjoining meadow (so-called Hundswiese, Dresden Miles sheet 1800).

Monument value: local history, landscaping.

Note: The Krähenhütte listed on the Dresdner Meilenblatt (1800) and the equidistant map (1874) southeast of the manor house and the Nixtümpel to the south are no longer available today.

09303510
 


Individual features of the totality of the Wendischbora manor: residential and farm buildings of the manor (see also totality - Obj. 09303510) Wendischbora 56
(map)
18th century, remodeling 19th century Striking building with a sloping roof sloping to the north, vivid example of rural architecture and folk architecture of its time, significant in terms of building history, as part of the manor also of local history. 09267884
 


Individual monument of the property Wendischbora: gatehouse of the former manor (see property - Obj. 09303510)
More pictures
Individual monument of the property Wendischbora: gatehouse of the former manor (see property - Obj. 09303510) Wendischbora 59
(map)
re. 1856 Striking building of its time with a hipped roof, passage and a conspicuous coat of arms in the apex, significant in terms of building history, as part of the Wendischbora manor, also of local importance.

Vaulted caps and coats of arms in the gate, originally belonging to the castle, corner pilaster strips.

09267773
 


Individual features of the Wendischbora manor: stable building and inspector's house with three of the originally four cut linden trees (see entity - Obj. 09303510) Wendischbora 61; 62
(card)
18th century (farm building) As part of the Wendischbora manor, it is of local historical importance. 09267883
 

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