Mehren (Käbschützal)

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community Käbschütztal
Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 13 ″  N , 13 ° 24 ′ 24 ″  E
Residents : 45  (May 9, 2011)
Incorporation : November 1, 1935
Incorporated into: Löthain
Postal code : 01665
Area code : 035244
Mehren (Saxony)
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Location of Mehren in Saxony

Mehren (1898)

Mehren is part of the Saxon community Käbschützal in the district of Meißen .

geography

Mehren is located west of the district town of Meißen at about 200 meters above sea ​​level on the Jahnabach . This brook has several spring arms a little west of the village, which then flow together north of the local development and form the Jahnabach. Mehren is located on Kreisstraße 8073, which connects Altmohlis with Löthain . There it ends at the federal highway 101 , which has a connection to the federal highway 14 further south at Nossen .

The district of Mehren borders in the north on Mohlis , in the northeast on Oberjahna , in the east on Kaschka , in the south on Löthain and in the southwest on Stroischen . The place Kaisitz joins in the northwest . All surrounding places belong to Käbschützal as districts.

history

The place was first mentioned in the year 1205 as in utroque Meran . In 1378 Mehren belonged to the Castrum Meißen in the margraviate of the same name Meißen . The basic rule exercised proportionately inheritance and education authority and the manor Niederjahna out. From the middle of the 16th century, the village was part of the Meissen hereditary office, later to the office and court office of the same name . The Saxon rural community order of 1838 gave Mehren the status of a rural community and became independent. From 1875 onwards, the place belongs to the administrative authority of Meissen .

To the round hamlet Mehren in 1900 a 158 extended hectares large block and strip-floor , on which the inhabitants of the village agriculture operated. In terms of church, Mehren was parish in the monastery of St. Afra and still belongs to the local parish today . The independence of the place ended on November 1, 1935 with the joint incorporation of Mehren, Löbschütz , Canitz , Pauschütz and Stroischen into Löthain. After the end of the Second World War , Mehren became part of the Soviet occupation zone and later the GDR . In the 1952 district reform , the country was reorganized. Löthain and its districts were added to the Meißen district in the Dresden district. Löthain merged with Jahna-Kagen on March 1st, 1974 to form the Jahna-Löthain community .

After reunification and reunification , Mehren became part of the newly founded Free State of Saxony and initially remained in the district of Meißen. In the district reform of 1994 , the district of Meißen-Radebeul (from 1996 district of Meißen ) was formed from the old area of ​​the district of Meißen and parts of the district of Dresden-Land , to which Mehren belonged until 2008. Also in 1994, Jahna-Löthain, Krögis and Planitz-Deila merged to form the new large community Käbschützal with 37 districts. Since August 1, 2008, this municipality has been part of the third district of Meißen, which was formed from the district of Meißen and the district of Riesa-Großenhain in the Saxony district reform in 2008 .

In Mehren there is a former kaolin mine with a mining museum, which, together with a residential stable house in the village, was included in the cultural monument list for the Kabschütz Valley .

Development of the population

year population
1551 5 possessed men , 12 residents
1764 5 possessed men, 4 cottagers
1834 79
1871 66
1890 63
1910 137
1925 122

literature

  • Elbe valley and Loess hill country near Meissen (= values ​​of our homeland . Volume 32). 1st edition. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1979, p. 162.

Web links

  • More in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Population, households, families as well as buildings and apartments on May 9, 2011 according to parts of the municipality. (PDF; 800 KB) In: Kleinräumiges Gemeindeblatt Census 2011. Statistisches Landesamt Sachsen , p. 5 , accessed on October 4, 2016 .
  2. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. City and district of Meißen. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  3. Municipalities 1994 and their changes since January 1, 1948 in the new federal states , Metzler-Poeschel publishing house, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , publisher: Federal Statistical Office
  4. a b Mehren in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony