Sageritz

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Sageritz
community Glaubitz
Coordinates: 51 ° 19 ′ 7 ″  N , 13 ° 22 ′ 51 ″  E
Area : 2.98 km²
Incorporation : 1923
Incorporated into: Glaubitz
Postal code : 01612
Area code : 035265
Sageritz (Saxony)
Sageritz

Location of Sageritz in Saxony

Sageritz is a district of the Saxon community Glaubitz in the district of Meißen, on the right side of the Elbe .

geography

The village of Sageritz has the shape of an extended manor round. the corridor originally consisted of manor blocks and tubs. Sageritz is completely fused with Glaubitz and is not mentioned on older maps like that of Oeder. Sageritz is mentioned frequently in later maps.

history

Sageritz means "behind the mountain". Sageritz was already inhabited in prehistoric times, which is proven by found cremation graves. The village itself was mentioned for the first time on November 15, 1539, but the farming village of Sageritz had probably existed for a long time. In Sageritz there is a small, early medieval rampart with a moat, but it is barely recognizable today (Wiesenweg - Großenhainer Straße halfway on the left). In 1552 the manor Glaubitz exercised the manorial rule over Sageritz. It remained that way with small interruptions until the 19th century. According to a report from 1575/1576, Hans von Truchseß was the feudal lord in 1575 and the pastor was Hieronymus Hildebrand. This pastor received 24 from Glaubitz, 12 from Radewitz, 26 from Sageritz, 22 from Ninchritz and 7 from Grödel in Sprengenbroten. In 1601 Dietrich von Truchseß is said to have acquired Sageritz at Glaubitz. In 1624 Sageritz has 25 inhabitants, women, children and servants are not included in this number. In 1639 the village came temporarily into the possession of Balthasar von Köckeritz on Bobersen and Promnitz , after which it was returned to the Glaubitz manor. In the Thirty Years War , Sageritz was almost completely destroyed and depopulated. 1661 of 23 homesteads, 20 were destroyed. In 1701 15 taxpayers lived in Sageritz. Among them were three threshers, a bricklayer and a blacksmith. Due to the poor soil conditions, there were several crop failures in the 16th century (1719, 1724, 1726–1728). When lust camp Zeithain 1730 the headquarters in Radewitz was. A tent city was built between Sageritz, Glaubitz and Radewitz. Sageritz received compensation of 53 thalers, 3 groschen and 4.5 pfennigs for the damage he suffered. In 1738, 18 landlords (house owners) lived in the village. From 1696 the newly settled town was administered by the Grossenhain Office, from 1856 by the Grossenhain Court Office and from 1875 by the Grossenhain Office . In terms of church and school, Sageritz has always belonged to Glaubitz and in 1781 the Sageritzers had to pay hoof bread as payment to the school teacher. It is known about the village tavern that there was a dispute between the landlord Perl and the landlord in 1787 over the authorization to host, host and play music . In 1823 Sageritz had 5 Hufen land. In 1840 the place had 30 fireplaces and 167 inhabitants. The associated land is 120 acres. The inhabitants are divided into 14 wealthy, 16 homeowners, including a baker, a saddler, a weaver, a shoemaker, nine masons and four carpenters. There is also an inn, a windmill and the stately bushmill, a water mill. The Buschmühle was a lease mill in 1630 and paid 8 bushels of grain and 2 Sch. Stone meal of dominion. Later the mill becomes hereditary. On October 24, 1749, the ship's miller Georg Meißner bought 400 thalers and 4 bushels of grain annually as hereditary interest, in 1754 Ernest Rehfeld from Ragewitz for 450 thalers. The mill has one gear and five pairs of millet pounders. In 1802 the Buschmüller Knüpfer built a new windmill because it had been dismantled in 1730. In 1816 Knüpfer was still the owner of the mill. Buschmühle buildings are located on the grounds of the forest pool. The mill pond was transformed into a forest pool in 1948. The windmill is now used for residential purposes. In 1778 the manor owner, JG Perl, left a fallow piece of land which it was said that hardly a shrub could find food on its dead sand, the long mountain, for some farmers to settle free of charge. The resulting colony of Langenberg was initially part of Glaubitz. On November 18, 1818, the village of Langenberg became an independent municipality. In 1840 49 children from Sageritz attended the school in Glaubitz: 30 boys and 19 girls. Since 1924 Sageritz has been absorbed in Glaubitz and was called Glaubitz B.

Population development

Glaubitz photo library. Dutch mill
Population development
year Residents
1552 15 possessed men , 6 residents
1764 15 possessed men , 4 cottagers, 5 hooves 14 bushels each
1834 474
1871 292
1890 262
1924 Glaubitz

literature

  • Georg Pilk : Historical news about Glaubitz b. Riesa: 1275-1910 . Collected from archival sources and edited with drawings by Max Eckard; Richard Naumann, self-published by the Rittergutsbibliothek, Theodor Bienert (Ed.): Glaubitz 1910.
  • Saxony's church gallery. 7th volume. The Grossenhain, Radeberg and Bischofswerda inspections . Dresden 1841. Pages 116–121 ( online ), accessed on March 21, 2016
  • Historical-topographical description of the administrative authority in Großenhain. Sageritz. Otto Mörtzsch, Ed. Saxon State Association. Homeland security. Dresden 1935. Pages 76–77 ( online ), accessed on March 22, 2016

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Sageritz in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  2. 725 years Glaubitz - a historical review . In: 725 Years Glaubitz 1271-1996 Festschrift . 1996, p. 8 . , Riesa.
  3. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Grossenhain district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  4. With the incorporation of Sageritz into Glaubitz in 1924, only official population figures were collected for the entire community.