Semmelsberg

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Semmelsberg
Community Klipphausen
Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 20 ″  N , 13 ° 26 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 170 m above sea level NN
Residents : 223  (December 31, 2011)
Incorporation : April 1, 1939
Incorporated into: Garsebach
Postal code : 01665
Area code : 035245
map
Location of the Semmelsberg district in Klipphausen
Former sign for the entrance to Semmelsberg
Former Manor Oberpolenz. Manor house courtyard side, condition 2008

Semmelsberg is a district of the municipality of Klipphausen in the district of Meißen , Saxony . It is located in the north of the municipality and consists of Ober- and Niedersemmelsberg. In Niedersemmelsberg the small one flows into the large one Triebisch . Neighboring towns are Polenz , Kettewitz , Robschütz and Garsebach .

history

The village was first mentioned in 1551 when it was about “Dye people yhm Semelsgrund”. The incorporation to Garsebach took place on April 1, 1939, as part of Garsebach it came to the municipality of Triebischtal in 1994 . With the incorporation of Triebischtal on July 1, 2012, Semmelsberg became a part of the municipality of Klipphausen. Several buildings in the village are protected as cultural monuments (see list of cultural monuments in Semmelsberg ).

Price kermühle

Price kermühle

The mill is located on the outskirts on the Kleine Triebisch and was first mentioned in 1548 as a new mulen in a feudal letter from Elector Moritz for Magnus von Bernstein, owner of the Polenz manor . Since the place name is derived from the term semel (= fine wheat flour), a reference to this mill is very likely. In addition to the Preiskermühle, there was another watermill in the village with today's basic mill. With the division of the Polenz manor in 1588 into Niederpolenz and Upper Poland, the mill came as an accessory to the Niederpolenz manor. 1589 it is in the oldest map of the region by Matthias Oeder as Thomas v. Amber garbage (named after the owner of the manor). In 1723 the mill was sold to Hans Freymann for 350 guilders. A year scratched into the sill of the main building still reminds of this sale.

In 1789 Johann Gottlob Preisker from Sachsdorf bought the mill for 2000 guilders, which is why it got its name, which is still used today. In 1843, the family acquired the Preisker series Schank the community Semmelberg and taught at the mill one a tavern. In 1889 the grinding operation ended and the Preiskermühle finally became an excursion restaurant. The previous overshot water wheel was replaced by a Francis turbine in 1922 . The structural condition of the mill farm led to the cessation of the restaurant business in 1985. In 2003, private owners bought the mill and began gradually renovating the buildings. The mill has been inhabited again since 2004 and is used as a workshop for furniture restoration. On certain occasions, etc. a. On the annual mill day , the Preiskermühle can be visited.

Not far from the Preiskermühle was the stop of the same name on the narrow-gauge railway Wilsdruff – Meißen-Triebischtal, which opened on October 1, 1909 . In 1966 the traffic was stopped, the former railway line is now used as a cycle path.

Web links

Commons : Semmelsberg  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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).
  2. Website of the German Milling Society , accessed on June 8, 2015