Raisin Village

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Raisin Village
District of the state capital Dresden
Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 13 ″  N , 13 ° 57 ′ 30 ″  E
Height : 240 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 01328
Area code : 0351

Rosinendörfchen is a district in the east of the Saxon capital Dresden .

geography

Raisin Village is in the Eschdorf district . With this it is part of the statistical district of Schönfeld / Schullwitz and thus belongs to the village of Schönfeld-Weißig . The small district essentially consists of almost ten built-up plots, which are surrounded by predominantly agricultural terrain. Rosinendörfchen is the easternmost part of Dresden and is even further east than the old town of Pirna . The area of ​​Dresden's neighboring municipality of Dürrröhrsdorf-Dittersbach begins just 1 kilometer east of the village .

The Rosinendörfchen is located along the residential street of the same name to the east of the actual locality of Eschdorf an der Wiesenmulde of a left tributary of the Schullwitzbach . Immediately south of the state road 161 leads from Eschdorf via Dittersbach and Hohnstein to Bad Schandau .

history

population
year Residents
1871 29
1890 25th

There were two mills in Eschdorf . While the Obermühle, the birthplace of industrialist Gottlieb Traugott Bienert in the 19th century and later owned by him, still exists as a building today, the importance of the Niedermühle declined in the late 17th century, so that it was finally demolished. The parcel on which she had stood was parceled out in 1708 and then built on. The new owners were four gardeners and one cottage owner . In 1748 the settlement was mentioned under the name "Vierhäuser". Its current name “Rosinendörfchen” could have been erroneously derived from the inscription “Roßindorff” on a map from 1753, so the place name would be a prescription for the nearby Rossendorf . A little later the place is called "Rosinendörffel", so "Little Rossendorf". In 1781 the place appears on a Saxon mile sheet as "raisin villages or: Vierhäuser", in 1821/22 as "raisins villages". As recently as 1875, both place names were indicated on a map with “Rosinendörfchen (Vierhäuser)”; temporarily the place was also called “Kleineschdorf”. Formerly part of the former rural community of Eschdorf, Rosinendörfchen shares its history, including its incorporation into Dresden on January 1, 1999.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Rosinendörfchen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  2. Eschdorf. District of Rosinendörfchen. In: Dresdner-Stadtteile.de. Retrieved January 6, 2015 .