Traupitz

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Half-timbered houses on Traupitzer Dorfstrasse (2014)

Traupitz has been part of the village of Könderitz , which belongs to the municipality of Elsteraue in the Burgenland district of the state of Saxony-Anhalt , since 1950 .

Geographical location

Traupitz is not far from the state border between Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony , between Groitzsch and Zeitz , not far from the White Elster . The Rietzschke flows through the town and flows into the Schwennigke.

Agriculture has been practiced on the fertile soils around Traupitz for centuries. Very large fields and meadows dominate this area, which is characterized by the flat landscapes that are predominant in the North German Plain . Here the plain gradually changes to the low mountain range threshold, which can be recognized by the slight hills in the area.

The L 193 runs through the town as Traupitzer Straße.

history

The second syllable of the name of the district -itz is a place name ending with Slavic origin. In the area there are other places of Slavic origin with Wadewitz etc.

Traupitz was subordinate to several masters. Part of the village belonged to the Zeitz office in the former diocese of Naumburg , from which the Naumburg-Zeitz bishopric emerged . In 1657 Traupitz came to the secondary school principality of Saxony-Zeitz , to which it belonged until its dissolution in 1718. Then it fell back to the Electorate of Saxony , which was converted into a kingdom in 1806. Through the resolutions of the Congress of Vienna , Traupitz came to the newly formed Duchy of Saxony in the Kingdom of Prussia and was integrated into the administrative district of Merseburg . The Zeitz district was responsible for the local administration .

The previously independent municipality of Traupitz became a district of the municipality of Könderitz on July 1, 1950 .

Traupitz was parish in Auligk . The Oberhof Auligk there was also subject to part of Traupitz, while another part to the Etzoldshain manor and another part of Traupitz to the Wuiz manor.

literature

  • Johann Paul Christian Philipp: History of the Naumburg and Zeitz Monastery , 1800, p. 333.

Individual evidence

  1. Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states , Metzler-Poeschel publishing house, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , publisher: Federal Statistical Office
  2. ^ Johann Paul Christian Philipp: History of the Naumburg and Zeitz Monastery , 1800, p. 333.

Web links

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′  N , 12 ° 13 ′  E