Rudersdorf (Buttstädt)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rudersdorf
Rural community of Buttstädt
Rudersdorf coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 19 ″  N , 11 ° 27 ′ 27 ″  E
Height : 200 m
Area : 7.8 km²
Residents : 328  (December 31, 2017)
Population density : 42 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st January 2019
Postal code : 99628
Area code : 036373
Village church

Rudersdorf is a district of the rural community Buttstädt in the district of Sömmerda in Thuringia .

geography

Rudersdorf is located in the eastern part of the Thuringian Basin between Ettersberg and Finne.

history

The place was first mentioned in a document in the Hersfeld list of goods in 805 . In 1214 the Großvargula taverns owned property and fiefdoms of the Fulda Abbey and the Landgrave of Thuringia in Rudersdorf. In 1323 the Lords of Rastenberg gave the Pforta monastery the patronage rights in the place. Rudersdorf came as part of the northern Landgraviate of Thuringia when Leipzig was partitioned in 1485 to the Albertines and has belonged to the Albertine Electorate of Saxony since the Wittenberg surrender in 1547 . Until the beginning of the 19th century, Rudersdorf lay in a southern branch of the Electoral Saxon district of Eckartsberga , which protruded into the Duchy of Saxony-Weimar . As a result of the effects of the Congress of Vienna , Rudersdorf came to the Grand Duchy of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach along with other southern locations of the Eckartsberga district in 1815, and in 1817 it became part of the Buttstädt district, which opened in the Apolda administrative district of the Saxon-Weimar-Eisenach district in 1850 . In 1920 the place came to the state of Thuringia.

During the time of National Socialism , the stone-setter and farmer Otto Seizpfand from Rudersdorf was arrested on May 21, 1935 for his political activities and locked in the Ichtershausen penal institution , now a juvenile penal institution , for two years . After his release on July 11, 1937, he was under constant surveillance because, according to the authorities, "after serving his sentence, he is certainly not yet completely cured of his communist ideas".

During the Second World War , more than 250 women and men from Poland , Ukraine and Russia had to do forced labor in agriculture .

On January 1, 2019, the Rudersdorf community was merged with the other communities of the Buttstädt administrative community to form the Buttstädt rural community.

Population development

  • 1994: 368
  • 1995: 371
  • 1996: 373
  • 1997: 377
  • 1998: 375
  • 1999: 365
  • 2000: 365
  • 2001: 364
  • 2002: 378
  • 2003: 374
  • 2004: 369
  • 2005: 376
  • 2006: 390
  • 2007: 369
  • 2008: 357
  • 2009: 337
  • 2010: 340
  • 2011: 342
  • 2012: 338
  • 2013: 336
  • 2014: 328
  • 2015: 323
  • 2016: 334
  • 2017: 328

Data source: Thuringian State Office for Statistics

politics

Municipal council

The local council from Rudersdorf consists of four members of a free electoral group (status: local election on June 1, 2019).

mayor

The honorary mayor Dirk Schauroth was elected on July 1, 2018.

coat of arms

Blazon : “ Divided obliquely from silver to red ; above a hoe with a black handle, silver eye and blue leaf, below a silver tree stump with a three-leaved shoot growing on the left. "

Parish partnership

Culture and sights

The Protestant church has a slate-roofed tower and a tile-roofed nave.

societies

  • Rudersdorf fair club
  • Fire Brigade Association Rudersdorf e. V.
  • Childcare and youth welfare e. V.
  • Senior Citizens' Association V.
  • Sports club SV 97 e. V.

Personalities

Web links

Commons : Rudersdorf (Thuringia)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Wilfried Warsitzka: The Thuringian Landgrave. Bussert & Stadeler, Jena 2004, ISBN 3-932906-22-5 , p. 202.
  2. Thuringian Association of the Persecuted of the Nazi Regime - Association of Antifascists and Study Group of German Resistance 1933–1945 (Ed.): Local history guide to sites of resistance and persecution 1933–1945. Volume 8: Thuringia. VAS - Verlag für Akademische Schriften, Frankfurt am Main 2003, ISBN 3-88864-343-0 , p. 274.