Strehlen (Dresden)
Strehlen with Reick-Nordwest district and statistical district No. 76 of Dresden |
|
---|---|
Coordinates | 51 ° 1 '38 " N , 13 ° 45' 47" E |
height | 125 m above sea level NN |
surface | 2.35 km² |
Residents | 10,313 (Dec. 31, 2013) |
Population density | 4389 inhabitants / km² |
Incorporation | 1892 |
Post Code | 01219 |
prefix | 0351 |
Website | www.dresden.de |
Borough | Prohlis |
Transport links | |
Train | S1, S2 |
tram | 9, 11, 13 |
bus | 61, 63, 66, 75, 85 |
Strehlen is a district of Dresden in the Prohlis district in the southeast of the city. Strehlen borders on the inner-city suburban belt .
The main shopping street in Strehlen, Lockwitzer Strasse, is located on the edge of the town center . Together with Wasaplatz , this forms a district center with bank branches, retailers and restaurants in the southeast of Dresden.
Strehlen borders on the districts of Zschertnitz , Mockritz , Leubnitz-Neuostra , Reick , Gruna , Seevorstadt and Südvorstadt .
The district Strehlen almost completely includes the Strehlen district as well as parts of the (statistical) districts of Gruna, Seevorstadt-Ost / Großer Garten , Südvorstadt-Ost , Räcknitz / Zschertnitz and Leubnitz-Neuostra .
history
Strehlen was first mentioned in a document in 1288 as Strowelin , which means "place of Strowela". In 1307 the Altzella monastery acquired most of the village for its monastery courtyard in Leubnitz and in 1312 even half of the Strehlener Vorwerk . After the Reformation , the place came to the Leubnitzer Amt in 1550 as the property of the monastery courtyard, which was under the suzerainty of the Dresden council. As a result, many citizens of Dresden acquired fields and meadows in Strehlen. Due to the creation of the Great Garden , the village had to give up around 59 hectares of its area in 1676. For this purpose, the corridors of the Frankenberg desert went over to Strehlen.
Since the middle of the 19th century, the place developed into the home of the upper class, many of the Dresden villa buildings were built here , including some magnificent buildings on Parkstrasse and Wiener Strasse . At Wasaplatz there was a closed development in the style of the decades from 1870 to 1900. From 1860 a royal villa was built on the site of the former Rothen Haus , a forester's house with tavern, between Bahndamm, August-Bebel-Straße and Franz-Liszt-Straße and its own train station. The Dresden Luftgau Command was established in this area from 1935 to 1938 , later with a different use: between 1945 and 1952 it was the seat of the Saxon state government, then Friedrich Engels military academy , and after the reunification, the Bundeswehr muster station. The buildings south of August-Bebel-Strasse are increasingly being used by the TU Dresden . The horse-drawn tram ended at the Dorotheenhof inn in Strehlen . At the turn of the century, the impressionist Wilhelm Claudius (1854–1942), great-great-nephew of the poet Matthias Claudius, lived and worked at Residenzstrasse 20 (today August-Bebel-Strasse) .
In 1892 the place was incorporated into Dresden. The main reason for this was the frequent flooding in the Kaitzbach area , which made it necessary to build a flood channel to Lingnerallee. This was only possible for the community in cooperation with the city of Dresden.
To the south of the former village, closed housing estates were built between 1900 and 1930, which were later also designed as cooperative apartments using a more open structure. On both sides of Reicker Straße, a new building area was built on the former fields of large market gardens from 1980. The Otto-Dix-Center (ODC) shopping center has been located on Reicker Strasse since March 2001, surrounded by Otto-Dix- and Rudolf-Bergander-Ring .
The Strehlener street located in the neighboring district Südvorstadt.
Attractions
- historical center of Altstrehlen, one of the largest village squares in Dresden
- Villa Caspar-David-Friedrich-Strasse 3 , 1903–1904, Art Nouveau building by Heino Otto
- Christ Church , 1902–1905 in the late Art Nouveau style on the Strehlener Hill
- Strehlen settlement (post settlement) of the former Heimstättengesellschaft Sachsen (HGS) on Teplitzerstrasse and Dohnaer Strasse
- the building of the former 23rd middle school with an air raid shelter from the Second World War
- Palucca University of Dance Dresden on Basteiplatz
- Ernst Thälmann memorial on Strehlener Platz
literature
- The incorporation of Strehlen into Dresden. Albanus, Dresden 1884 ( digitized version )
Web links
- Splinter of history about Strehlen on www.hjhaupt.de
- Strehlen in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
- dresden.de: Statistics (PDF; 359 kB)
- Strehlen on Dresdner-Stadtteile.de
- Strehlen in the Stadtwiki Dresden
Individual evidence
- ↑ Car research instead of army trucks: TU Dresden is getting a new test center. Dresdner Latest News from October 1, 2013 (accessed February 21, 2014)
- ↑ Oskar Jähnichen (1833-1893) was the council of Strehlen for over 28 years until the reluctant incorporation ( Die Landgemeindeordnung des Kingdom of Saxony. 1839, p. 62 )