Niederarnsdorf

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Niederarnsdorf
community Nobitz
Coordinates: 50 ° 55 ′ 47 ″  N , 12 ° 32 ′ 31 ″  E
Height : 229 m above sea level NN
Residents : 60  (2012)
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Incorporated into: Brick home
Postal code : 04603
Area code : 034494
map
Location of Niederarnsdorf in the unified municipality of Nobitz
Typical Altenburg four-sided courtyard

Niederarnsdorf is a district of Nobitz in the Altenburger Land district in Thuringia . The place was incorporated into Ziegelheim on July 1, 1950 , with which it came to the Nobitz community on July 6, 2018. Due to its historical affiliation to the Ziegelheim estate , Niederarnsdorf belonged to Saxony until 1952 .

geography

Location and traffic

The corridor of Niederarnsdorf is located in Altenburg's most overcast hill country south of the Leinawald . The federal highway 180 touches the area. With the district roads 202 and 203 the community is opened up to traffic. The historical affiliation and state border to Saxony is only visible today in the affiliation of the place to the parish of Ziegelheim in the church district of Glauchau-Rochlitz of the Evangelical Lutheran regional church of Saxony .

Neighboring places

Grove of Honor Nirkendorf
Neighboring communities Uhlmannsdorf
Oberarnsdorf Brick home

history

Location of the Saxon lordship of Ziegelheim in the south of the Altenburger Land

The village was first mentioned in a document between 1181 and 1214. In contrast to the neighboring town of Oberarnsdorf, which was administered by the Altenburg district office in the Duchy of Saxony-Altenburg , Niederarnsdorf was in the north of the Ziegelheim manor , which was owned by the Lords of Schönburg as a Saxon fief . In terms of the church, Niederarnsdorf has always been part of Ziegelheim. After 1813, the Ziegelheim patrimonial court was administered by the Schönburg Justice Office in Remse . The relationship between the Kingdom of Saxony and the House of Schönburg was reorganized in 1835. The Schönburg-Waldenburg areas, which were under Saxon feudal rule, such as the Remse rule and the Ziegelheim manor, were placed under the administration of the Zwickau Royal Saxon Office . On September 25, 1856, the judicial powers of the Ziegelheim manor, as well as those of the Remse manor, were ceded to the Saxon state. Niederarnsdorf was administered by the Remse court office until the administration in the Kingdom of Saxony was reorganized in 1875 . From 1875, the places of the former lordship of Ziegelheim belonged to the Zwickau administration . After an administrative reform was carried out in the area of ​​the Schönburg recession in 1878, they came with the entire former judicial district of Remse in 1880 to the newly founded Saxon governorate of Glauchau . Niederarnsdorf belonged to the Free State of Saxony from 1918.

In contrast to the three places Frohnsdorf , Heiersdorf and Gähsnitz / Jesenitz of the former lordship of Ziegelheim, which were divided between Saxony and Thuringia until 1928, the completely Saxon Niederarnsdorf remained after the exchange of territories and the border adjustment between the Free State of Saxony and the state in 1928 Thuringia untouched.

On July 1, 1950, it was incorporated into Ziegelheim . During the second district reform in the GDR in 1952, the existing states were dissolved and the districts were redesigned. Thus, the previously Saxon communities of Ziegelheim and Gähsnitz came to the district of Leipzig with the Altenburg district , which was detached from its area historically belonging to Thuringia . As a district of the municipality of Ziegelheim, Niederarnsdorf has belonged to the Thuringian district of Altenburg since 1990, which was added to the district of Altenburger Land in 1994. In 2012, 60 people lived in the district. On July 6, 2018, the municipality of Ziegelheim was incorporated into Nobitz, making Niederarnsdorf part of the municipality of Nobitz.

Web links

Commons : Niederarnsdorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Representation of the Waldenburg region with the parish of Ziegelheim on the website of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony
  2. ^ Wolfgang Kahl: First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual. Rockstuhl Verlag, Bad Langensalza, 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , p. 198
  3. Historical table sheet from 1874 with the political situation around Ziegelheim
  4. The Ziegelheim manor in the “Monograph on the princely and counts house Schönburg”, p. 51
  5. ^ Components of the Remse Justice Office in the "Handbuch der Geographie", p. 410
  6. ^ The Schönburg rule of Waldenburg in the archive of the Free State of Saxony
  7. Incorporation of the Remse rule with the Tirschheim and Ziegelheim dinghies in the Zwickau district directorate, “Handbook of the royal Saxon legislation of January 28th and 30th, 1835”, p. 132
  8. ^ The Ziegelheim court as part of the Zwickau office in the book "Geography for all Stands, p. 635"
  9. Ziegelheim in the "Handbuch der Geographie", p. 149
  10. ^ The Zwickau Office in the Archives of the Free State of Saxony
  11. The Glauchau administrative authority in the municipal register 1900
  12. ^ Map with the exchange areas between Saxony and Thuringia in 1928
  13. ^ Niederarnsdorf on gov.genealogy.net
  14. Thuringian Law and Ordinance Gazette No. 7 2018 of July 5, 2018 , accessed on July 6, 2018