Marksiedlitz
Marksiedlitz
community Glaubitz
Coordinates: 51 ° 20 ′ 27 ″ N , 13 ° 23 ′ 16 ″ E
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Height : | 97 m above sea level NN | |
Area : | 76 ha | |
Residents : | 34 (Jan 21, 2016) | |
Population density : | 45 inhabitants / km² | |
Incorporation : | July 1, 1950 | |
Incorporated into: | Radewitz | |
Postal code : | 01612 | |
Area code : | 035265 | |
Location of Marksiedlitz in Saxony |
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View of the entrance to Marksiedlitz
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Marksiedlitz is a district of the Saxon community of Glaubitz in the district of Meißen, on the right side of the Elbe .
geography
Marksiedlitz is characterized by agriculture and consists of several large farms. The line village with corridors is 76 hectares in size. The Elsterwerda-Grödel-Raft Canal runs through the village. Marksiedlitz is about 1 km north of Radewitz and 2 km north-west of Glaubitz, which can be reached via the county road 8573, as is Streumen, 2 km north-east . 9 km west of Marksiedlitz you can reach the city of Riesa via the federal highways 101 and 169 . The center of Großenhain is located about 13 km to the east and can be reached via the 101 federal road running through Glaubitz .
history
Marksiedlitz (Siedlitz) was mentioned for the first time in 1233. The place name was changed several times, for example Marksiedlitz was called Sydeliz in 1234, Sedlewitz in 1333, Siedelitz in 1534 , which was previously a village , Sidlitz in 1559 , Mark Siedelicz in 1753 , and Siedelicz in 1791 . On August 30, 1233, the bishop of the diocese of Naumburg confirmed his possession to the Riesa monastery, which also included the large village of Siedlitz with 24 Hufen land. In the following time the lords of Kiucz, the Meissen cathedral monastery and again the Riesa monastery were the owners. In 1534 Merten von Miltitz sold his estates in Naunhof and others, in return he got the Riesa monastery and possessions, including the Siedlitz desert. For unknown reasons, the place became deserted in the middle of the 16th century. In 1562 von Pflugk had free hare hunting on his part of the village of Siedlitz. From 1559 the Zabeltitz manor was the landlord of the desert and the land belonging to it was divided among the Zabeltitz, Glaubitz and Streumen manors, which caused a lot of controversy. The surrounding landlords and farmers from Streumen, Glaubitz and Zabeltitz often fought over the land of the desert place . The repopulation of the village that was now called Marksiedlitz began in 1748. Two farmers, the owners of half a Hufe of land that belonged to the Zabeltitz manor, Christian Hoyer and Hans Georg Hermann, begin to cultivate the Mark again. In 1751, the Glaubitz manor filed a lawsuit against the development, reclamation and sale of farms. In 1752 two barns were completed and the village of Streumen was parish off. Before it became deserted, Siedlitz was parish off to Streumen. In addition to his own, Hermann had knocked down two more pieces that year and made them into fields. From 1762 the newly settled town was administered by the Grossenhain Office, from 1856 by the Grossenhain Court Office and from 1875 by the Grossenhain Office . In 1808 Marksiedlitz was four hooves tall and was divided into twelve estates but had only nine owners, as one farmer had bought two estates and another two. In 1840 the village consisted of 9 estates and had about 40 inhabitants. In 1890 the village had 47 inhabitants. In 1898 there lived in Marksiedlitz an innkeeper who ran the Gasthof Marksiedlitz, five landowners, a business owner, a migrant and a bricklayer. There were ten house numbers. Saxons came after the Second World War in the Soviet zone of occupation and later the GDR . On July 1, 1950, Marksiedlitz was incorporated into Radewitz. After the territorial reform in 1952 , Marksiedlitz was assigned to the Riesa district in the Dresden district . 1973 Marksiedlitz was incorporated into Glaubitz. After the German reunification , the place came to the re-established Free State of Saxony. The following regional reforms in Saxony assigned Marksiedlitz to the district of Riesa-Großenhain in 1994 and to the district of Meißen in 2008 .
Population development
year | Residents | year | Residents |
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1764 | 2 possessed men , 4 hooves 24 bushels each | 1933 | 52 |
1834 | 40 | 1939 | 45 |
1871 | 54 | 1946 | 77 |
1890 | 47 | 1950 | → Radewitz |
1910 | 48 | 1973 | → Glaubitz |
1925 | 60 | 2011 | 28 |
literature
- Saxony's church gallery. Volume 7: The Grossenhain, Radeberg and Bischofswerda inspections . Dresden 1841, p. 79 (online) , accessed on March 14, 2016
- Georg Pilk : Historical news about Glaubitz b. Riesa: 1275-1910 . Collected from archival sources and edited with drawings by Max Eckard; Richard Naumann. Self-published by the Rittergutsbibliothek, Theodor Bienert (Ed.): Glaubitz 1910.
Web links
- Marksiedlitz in the digital historical place directory of Saxony
- Website of the community of Glaubitz
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Marksiedlitz in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
- ↑ The entire of the unchanged Augsp. Confeßion dedicated priesthood in the Electorate of Saxony and those incorporated, also in some neighboring countries ... / completed by Karl Gottlob Dietmann . tape 1 . Sigismund Ehrenfried, Leipzig / Dresden 1752, p. 675 ( online [accessed March 15, 2016]).
- ^ Association for computer genealogy: Historical address books: Entries for the Marksiedlitz near Grossenhain / Sa. ( online [accessed March 15, 2016]).
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Grossenhain district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ With the incorporation of Marksiedlitz into Radewitz in 1950, only official population figures were collected for the entire community.