Nautschütz

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Nautschütz
City of Schkölen
Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 45 ″  N , 11 ° 52 ′ 54 ″  E
Height : 231 m
Incorporation : January 1, 1997
Postal code : 07619
Area code : 036694
Nautschütz (Thuringia)
Nautschütz

Location of Nautschütz in Thuringia

View of the place (oil painting by Erwin Spindler, 1916)
View of the place
(oil painting by Erwin Spindler , 1916)

Nautschütz with its districts Böhlitz , Pratschütz and Zschorgula is a district of the city of Schkölen in the Saale-Holzland district in Thuringia .

geography

Monument to Samuel Heinicke

Nautschütz is located east of Schkölen directly on the border with Saxony-Anhalt . The next village Goldschau is in Saxony-Anhalt. The L1372 from Schkölen to Osterfeld and to the junction of the federal motorway 9 connects the village with traffic. The somewhat hilly terrain on the edge of the arable farming area around Schkölen is overgrown with bushes or trees in the valleys of the streams and on small hills. Some sand and gravel pits interrupt the landscape.

history

Heinicke's birthplace

Nautschütz was first mentioned in a document in 1378.

The located in the forest of Nautschütz tumuli with Bronze Age burials are only in the Bronze Age has been created. Some graves were reburied by Slavs . Until the formation of the unified community, the villages of Böhlitz , Pratschütz and Zschorgula were a community association.

The founder of the school for the deaf and mute, Samuel Heinicke , was born here in 1727; a memorial on the main street and a plaque on the house where he was born remember him.

The place is still dominated by agriculture. The farmers also followed the east German way of agricultural policy and found new forms of ownership for cultivation after the fall of the Wall.

The Verein der Pferdefreunde Nautschütz eV promotes life in the country.

Personalities

Web links

Commons : Nautschütz  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wolfgang Kahl : First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual. 5th, improved and considerably enlarged edition. Rockstuhl, Bad Langensalza 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , p. 190.
  2. Michael Köhler: Pagan sanctuaries. Pre-Christian places of worship and suspected cult sites in Thuringia. Jenzig-Verlag Köhler, Jena 2007, ISBN 978-3-910141-85-8 , p. 205.