Central dissection

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Coordinates: 51 ° 11 ′ 1 ″  N , 9 ° 24 ′ 0 ″  E

Map: Hessen
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Central dissection
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Hesse

Mitteldissen is a desert in the south of the district of Dissen , a district of Gudensberg in the north Hessian Schwalm-Eder district . The field names "Mitteldisser Field" and "Mitteldisser meadows" reminiscent of the lost village.

Geographical location

The desert is located south of Dissen and northeast of the core town of Gudensberg at about 206  m altitude not far north of the district road K 7 from Gudensberg to Deute and west of the federal highway 254 . The small stream coming from the Sonneborn runs directly north of the former settlement.

history

The small settlement was first mentioned in 1303, as a citizen Homberger the 1269 founded Norbertine - Woman pin St. Georg in Homberg an interest from the tithe "in mediocri Tusen" prescribed. In the following years further sales of goods were announced in the district: In 1311 the Ahnaberg monastery sold its goods in the district of Mitteldissen to the St. Petri monastery in Fritzlar , in 1312 several Gudensberg citizens did the same and in 1345 Gudensberg citizens prescribed the Holy Cross Altar in the Gudensberg town church St. Margarethen a Valid from Wiesen zu Mitteldissen, which at that time was still called a village. The last mention of the place in 1436 concerns a Hufe zu Mitteldissen, which was awarded to the Hasungen Monastery as a state settlement . It is not known whether the place was still inhabited at that time. It is more likely, however, that the last inhabitants - like those of the neighboring Unseligendissen - moved to the so-called "freedom" of the town of Gudensberg, which was favored by the landgraves' settlement policy and only about 1 km to the west, founded as an independent town in 1356 were.

Footnotes

  1. The name of the place in written sources has changed several times over the years: "in mediocri Tusen" (1303), "villa minoris Thusen" (1311), "Myttelthuse" (1312), "Mytteln Thusen" (1345), "Mittelnthussin "," Mytteln Thusen "(1436) and" Mittelntusen "(1579).
  2. Worth knowing along the way of the Josef-Mertin-Weg: Wüstungen near Dissen

literature

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