Pomnitz

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Pomnitz
Lanitz-Hassel-Tal municipality
Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 20 ″  N , 11 ° 41 ′ 39 ″  E
Residents : 101  (Dec 31, 2007)
Incorporated into: Niedermöllern
Postal code : 06628
Area code : 034463

Since July 1, 2009, Pomnitz has been part of the municipality of Lanitz-Hassel-Tal in the Burgenland district in Saxony-Anhalt . Until June 30th, 2009 Pomnitz belonged to the independent municipality Möllern .

geography

Pomnitz is located between Apolda and Naumburg (Saale) between the ridge of the Finns in the northwest and the Saale in the southeast. The place is in the valley of the Hasselbach.

history

The first documentary mention of the place comes from the year 1144. From the middle of the 13th century, the place gradually came into the possession of the Pforta monastery . In 1360/66 the Bishop of Naumburg renounced all rights to Obermöllern, Niedermöllern, Pomnitz and Roßbach in favor of the Pforta monastery. After the secularization of the Pforta Monastery in 1540, Pomnitz belonged to the Electoral Saxon Office of Pforta from 1543 to 1815 . The decisions of the Congress of Vienna the place in 1815 came to Prussia and in 1816 the county Naumburg in the administrative district of Merseburg of the Province of Saxony assigned to which he belonged until 1944th

The municipality of Möllern was created on July 1, 1950 through the merger of the previous municipalities of Obermöllern and Niedermöllern (with Pomnitz). Since the merger of the communities Möllern and Taugwitz on July 1, 2009, Pomnitz has been part of the new community Lanitz-Hassel-Tal.

traffic

The federal road 87 , which leads from Eckartsberga to Naumburg (Saale) , runs three kilometers south of the village .

religion

The parish of Möllern includes the parish villages of Niedermöllern and Pomnitz and the parish village of Obermöllern. The original Romanesque Pomnitz church from around 1050 and 1150 was consecrated to John the Evangelist. From this time only the font still exists. After the Thirty Years War and another fire in 1710, the dilapidated church was torn down. The small chapel-like St. John's Church was rebuilt in Pomnitz in 1719.

Individual evidence

  1. StBA: Area changes from January 2nd to December 31st, 2009
  2. Pomnitz on p. 180
  3. Small stories on Saxon-Thuringian history, Volume 2, p. 148ff.
  4. ^ History of Möllern
  5. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas , Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 34f.
  6. ^ Locations of the Prussian district of Naumburg in the municipal directory 1900
  7. ^ Möllern on genealogy.net
  8. ^ The parish of Möllern in the parish of Bad Kösen
  9. History of the Pomnitz Church

Web links

Commons : Pomnitz  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files