Middle Mountain Road (Radebeul)

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The Mittlere Bergstraße is an inner-city street of almost 2.2 kilometers in the Saxon city of Radebeul , located in the districts of Niederlößnitz , Naundorf and Zitzschewig . It borders on the neighboring town of Coswig (Saxony) , where it continues on Neucoswiger Straße and then Salzstraße.

Development

Some cultural monuments lie along the road and are therefore listed in the lists of cultural monuments in Radebeul-Niederlößnitz (M-Z) , Radebeul-Naundorf and Radebeul-Zitzschewig , some also with cross street addresses:

Large parts of the north side of the Mittlere Bergstrasse belong to the historical vineyard landscape of Radebeul ; between the east end of the Johannesfriedhof below and the west end of the Bischofsweg, the street and its south side are also part of the monument protection area, including the buildings there. The reason is that those areas with the bishop's press formerly belonged to the Hohenhaus in the possession of the Meißner bishops ( Bischoffsberg ).

In 2003, the residential building on Mittleren Bergstrasse 40 received the Audience Award of the Radebeul City Builder Award (category renovation). The garden at Mittleren Bergstrasse 18b received the Audience Award of the Builder Award of the City of Radebeul (category garden and green space design) in 2019.

Naming

The historic Berggasse was already mentioned as part of the Salzstrasse in the Kötzschenbrodaer Dorfrügen ( Thanneberger Rügen from 1497), also by Matthias Oeder (around 1600) in the maps of his first Electoral Saxony state survey .

In 1897 Naundorf and Zitzschewig were officially named Mittlere Bergstrasse ; when this also happened with the short Niederlößnitz piece on the Wackerbarth property remains to be clarified. This was part of the Wackerbarth bypass of what was then Friedrichstrasse , which is now called Am Jacobstein and was renamed around 1935.

Medium mountain roads in the Loessnitz villages

Today's Winzerstrasse in Niederlößnitz was called Mittlere Bergstrasse between 1880 and 1905. Today's Bennostraße in Oberlößnitz and Serkowitz was also called Mittlere Bergstraße between 1897 and 1903.

local residents

Christoph Vitzthum von Eckstädt and Friedrich I. Vitzthum von Eckstädt were owners of the Krapenberg winery . Other residents of this street can be found in the articles on Schloss Wackerbarth and Hohenhaus .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Barbara Bechter, Wiebke Fastenrath u. a. (Ed.): Handbook of German Art Monuments , Saxony I, Dresden District . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1996, ISBN 3-422-03043-3 , p. 730–739 (“Art monuments of special rank or exemplary importance”).
  2. Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 2004. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on May 23, 2010 .
  3. Manfred Richter: Am Jacobstein. In: Niederlößnitz from yesteryear. Retrieved January 24, 2015 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 10 ″  N , 13 ° 36 ′ 31 ″  E