Priesa

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Priesa
community Käbschütztal
Coordinates: 51 ° 10 '53 "  N , 13 ° 22' 38"  E
Residents : 23  (May 9, 2011)
Incorporation : November 1, 1935
Incorporated into: Kagen
Postal code : 01665
Area code : 035244
Priesa (Saxony)
Priesa

Location of Priesa in Saxony

Priesa is a district of the Saxon community Käbschützal in the district of Meißen .

geography

Priesa is located northwest of the district town of Meißen in the north of the municipality of Käbschützal. The place is about 200  m above sea level. NN and is around three kilometers from the Elbe . Priesa is halfway between Meißen and Lommatzsch and is about six kilometers away from both cities. In Priesa springing Pries Abach who at Schieritz (municipality Diera-Zehren ) in the Ketzerbach flows. Only a little later this drains into the Elbe at Zehren . The only paved road connection to Priesa is from Großkagen . Like all the villages in the surrounding area, Priesa itself is characterized by three-sided farms and surrounded by arable land. Three stables of these farms are designated as Käbschützal cultural monument .

Priesa forms its own district , which borders on Piskowitz in the north and Schieritz in the northeast. Seilitz and Pröda are neighboring to the east . Großkagen is located south of Priesa, and Wachtnitz borders the district in the west . The north-western neighboring town is Prositz . The places Piskowitz, Wachtnitz and Prositz belong to Lommatzsch, Seilitz and Schieritz are parts of Diera-Zehrens and Pröda, and Großkagen, like Priesa, are part of the municipality of Käbschützal.

history

The place is first mentioned in 1371 as Pryszer or Prisser . In 1428 the village is called Piser , later Brißa (1540) and Priessen (1555) appear as variants of the name. In the 16th century, Priesa belonged to the Meißen procuration office and was an official village, so the sovereign was also the landlord in Priesa. From the middle of the 19th century Priesa belonged to the Meißen office. The Saxon rural community order of 1838 gave the village independence as a rural community.

To the peasant hamlet Priesa a 112 extended in 1900 hectares large block and strip-floor , on which the inhabitants of the village of Agriculture pursued. Priesa also belonged to Meissen church, it was parish in the monastery of St. Afra in the 16th century and still belongs to the local parish today . Priesa lost its independence on November 1, 1935, when seven previously independent towns, including Priesa and the neighboring towns of Großkagen and Pröda, merged to form the new municipality of Kagen . After the Second World War , Kagen and Priesa became part of the Soviet occupation zone and later the GDR . In the district reform of 1952 , the places were incorporated into the Meißen district in the Dresden district , which had essentially emerged from the Meißen district administration (later Meißen district). The farmers in the village now went the way of agriculture in the GDR . On January 1, 1969, Kagen merged with Jahna to Jahna-Kagen , on March 1, 1974 this community was united with Löthain to Jahna-Löthain .

After reunification and reunification , Priesa became part of the newly founded Free State of Saxony . In the district reform of 1994 , the district of Meißen-Radebeul (from 1996 district of Meißen ) was formed from the old area of ​​the district of Meißen and parts of the district of Dresden-Land , to which Priesa belonged until 2008. Also in 1994, Krögis , Jahna-Löthain and Planitz-Deila united to form the new large municipality Käbschützal with 37 districts. Since August 1, 2008, this municipality has been part of the third district of Meißen, which was formed from the district of Meißen and the district of Riesa-Großenhain in the Saxony district reform in 2008 .

Development of the population

year population
1605 3 obsessed man
1764 3 possessed men, 2 cottagers
1834 57
1871 67
1890 60
1910 61
1925 56

Web links

  • Priesa in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Population, households, families as well as buildings and apartments on May 9, 2011 according to parts of the municipality. (PDF; 800 KB) In: Kleinräumiges Gemeindeblatt Census 2011. Statistisches Landesamt Sachsen , p. 5 , accessed on October 4, 2016 .
  2. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. City and district of Meißen. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  3. Municipalities 1994 and their changes since January 1, 1948 in the new federal states , Metzler-Poeschel publishing house, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , publisher: Federal Statistical Office
  4. ^ A b Priesa in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony