Stadtsulza

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Rural community of Bad Sulza
Coordinates: 51 ° 5 ′ 13 ″  N , 11 ° 37 ′ 26 ″  E
Incorporation : 1907
Postal code : 99518
Area code : 036461
map
Location of the district in the rural community Bad Sulza
The town hall of Stadtsulza (today Bad Sulza)
The town hall of Stadtsulza (today Bad Sulza)

As a city Sulza the capital of was until the beginning of the 20th century Bad Sulza in the district Weimarer Land in Thuringia referred. The place belonged since the middle of the 15th century to the Ernestine Office Roßla , which in 1572 to Saxe-Weimar , 1603 to Saxe-Altenburg , 1672 again to Saxe-Weimar and 1741 to Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach . During the administrative reform of the Grand Duchy of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach, the place came to the administrative district Weimar II ( administrative district Apolda ) in 1850 .

The place name Stadtsulza was no longer used officially after it was merged with Dorfsulza and Bergsulza . Today the term Stadtmitte is more in circulation and is considered a district of Bad Sulza. The Oberneusulza settlement belongs to Stadtsulza .

The following information can be found on Stadtsulza:

  • Stadtsulza, officially now Badsulza, city in S.-Weimar, on the Ilm, (1910) with Bergsulza 3055 E., six salt water springs, salt water baths, graduation systems, building trade, carpentry school.
  • Sulza (Stadtsulza, Bad Sulza), city in Saxony-Weimar. Administrative district II (Apolda), on the Ilm, the junction of the state railway lines Bebra - Weißenfels and Straussfurt - Großheringen, has 2 Protestant churches, a boys' school, a technical center, a brine bath. (1906: 2800 spa guests), a children's sanatorium, a sanatorium, wool and felt goods manufacture and (1905) 2849 inhabitants. The Oberneusulza salt works belonging to Meiningen. Sulza received city rights in 1064. (...)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ortschronik on the website of the city of Bad Sulza. Queryed March 6, 2012.
  2. ^ Brockhaus, edition 1911 (digitized at Zeno.org).
  3. Sulza. In: Meyer's large conversation lexicon. Volume 19: Sternberg to Vector. 6th, completely revised and enlarged edition. New imprint. Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig et al. 1909, p. 200 . - Sulza received (only) market rights in 1064.

literature

  • Karl Beyer: Bad Sulza, its history and its healing springs . Friedrich Mauke, Jena 1861 ( digitized version ).