Soppen (Käbschützal)

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Sopps
community Käbschütztal
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 20 ″  N , 13 ° 22 ′ 10 ″  E
Residents : 46  (May 9, 2011)
Incorporation : November 1, 1935
Incorporated into: Krögis
Postal code : 01665
Area code : 035244
Soppen (Saxony)
Sopps

Location of Soppen in Saxony

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

geography

The place Soppen is located about ten kilometers southwest of the district town of Meißen and is one of the southernmost districts of Käbschützal. It is located at around 200  m above sea level. NN on the federal highway 101 , which connects Meissen with the next largest city Nossen . Soppen is about halfway between the two cities. At Nossen, the federal highway connects to the federal highway 14 . The Höllbach rises a little south of the town center and flows into the Schrebitzer Bach near Mauna . This drains over the Käbschützer Bach and the Ketzerbach into the Elbe . Road connections exist to the neighboring towns on the one hand via the federal road and on the other hand via a municipal road to Wuhnitz . The landscape of Soppen is in the Lommatzscher care and is mainly surrounded by arable land.

Soppen forms a district that borders Barnitz in the north . Krögis joins in the northeast, and Miltitz is to the east of the village . The district of Wuhsen borders in the south , and Wunschwitz is the southern neighbor of Soppens. To the southwest, Katzenberg is neighboring, while Schrebitz and Nössige are to the west and northwest of Soppen, respectively. Katzenberg, Wuhnitz, Wuhsen and Wunschwitz belong to the city of Nossen, Schrebitz is part of the municipality of Ketzerbachtal . Miltitz belongs to the municipality of Klipphausen ; Like Soppen, Barnitz, Krögis and Nössige are part of the Käbschützal community.

history

The village was first mentioned in 1254 as Schopun . Later names passed down are Zoppun (1334) and Soups (1378). In 1428 Soppen appears for the first time as the name of the place. At that time the place was administered from Meißen Castle, from the 16th to the 18th century it was partly part of the Nossen office and the Meissen hereditary office . From 1843, the affiliation to Meißen is indicated throughout. Soppen was an official village, seat of a hereditary court and the capital of the Supanie Soppen , which could stand for a court district. The Richtergut is still preserved today and is on the Saxon list of cultural monuments along with five other objects . The Saxon rural community order of 1838 gave the place independence as a rural community.

Soppen is a square village , which in 1900 surrounded a 208- hectare strip- like strip of land . The many farms still standing in the village testify to the agricultural activity in these areas. Ecclesiastically belonged to the neighboring Soppen Krögis, it was the parish in the local church and is still part of the Krögiser parish . Of 108 inhabitants in 1925, 102 were Protestant Lutheran and six were Catholic . Soppen lost its independence on November 1, 1935, when eight formerly independent rural communities, including Soppen and the neighboring town of Nössige, were incorporated into Krögis. After the Second World War , Krögis mit Soppen 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 .

After reunification and reunification , Soppen became part of the newly founded Free State of Saxony . In the district reform in 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 Dresden-Land district, to which Soppen 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
1551 11 possessed men , 21 residents
1764 12 possessed man
1834 90
1871 118
1890 116
1910 129
1925 108

literature

  • Elbe valley and Loess hill country near Meissen (= values ​​of our homeland . Volume 32). 1st edition. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1979, p. 183.

Web links

Commons : Soppen  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Soppen 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. Soppen in the Repertorium Saxonicum
  3. ^ Walter Schlesinger: Central German contributions to the German constitutional history of the Middle Ages . Göttingen 1961 ( online )
  4. ^ 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).
  5. a b Soppen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  6. 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