Ullendorf

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ullendorf
Community Klipphausen
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 23 ″  N , 13 ° 29 ′ 13 ″  E
Height : 238 m above sea level NN
Residents : 325  (December 31, 2011)
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Incorporated into: Pigeon home
Postal code : 01665
Area code : 035245
map
Location of the Ullendorf district in Klipphausen
“Ullendorf” on a map from the 19th century

Ullendorf is a district of the municipality of Klipphausen in the district of Meißen , Saxony .

geography

Ullendorf is located in the Meißner highlands between Wilsdruff , Nossen and Meißen . The village is surrounded by the other districts belonging to Klipphausen, Taubenheim in the southwest and Kobitzsch in the west. The place Riemsdorf is north, Naustadt northeast and Röhrsdorf southeast of Ullendorf.

The Kesselbach begins in Ullendorf and is the orographically right tributary of the Kleine Triebisch and forms the border with the municipality of Bockwen-Polenz . The Taubenheim industrial park is located southwest of the Ullendorf location. The most important street in Ullendorf is Wilsdruffer Straße, currently State Road 177 and formerly Fernstraße 177 , which leads from the Wilsdruff motorway junction to Meißen. Bus lines 414 and 428 run by the Meißen transport company , which connect Ullendorf to local public transport , also run on this route . Taubenheimer Straße branches off from Wilsdruffer Straße in Ullendorf. The old Silberstraße runs along the eastern boundary of the district from Scharfenberg to Freiberg .

history

A document from 1186, in which Margrave Otto settled a dispute between his vassal Adelbert von Taubenheim and his subjects, mentions the village for the first time as "Everberrindorf". It is assumed that the author wrote the document and that the place was called "Elberendorf" at that time. The place name goes back to the locator name Alber . Over the centuries the place name changed, among other things, via the stations "Alberndorf", "Albirndorff", "Olberndorff", "Ulmendorf", "Ulbendorff" and "Uhlendorf" to the current spelling, which is documented in 1768.

The four-sided courtyards of the place are relatively far apart. Around the forest hoof village , the residents of which earned their income from agriculture, a 257 hectare forest hoof field extended. In the basic rule , the owner of the shared manors in Polenz and Taubenheim. Accordingly, the village was ecclesiastically divided and parish to Naustadt or Taubenheim. Today it belongs entirely to the Taubenheim parish.

For centuries, the administration of the place was the responsibility of the Meissen Hereditary Authority . In 1856 Ullendorf belonged to the Meißen court office and then joined the Meißen district administration , from which the district of the same name emerged. On the basis of the rural community order of 1838 , Ullendorf gained independence as a rural community . In 1937 Kobitzsch was incorporated. On July 1, 1950, Ullendorf was incorporated into Taubenheim, which in turn belonged to Triebischtal from the end of 2003 . With the incorporation of Triebischtal on July 1, 2012, Ullendorf became a part of the municipality of Klipphausen.

The Ullendorf-Röhrsdorf station, located on the narrow-gauge railway Wilsdruff-Gärtitz , served freight trains until it was closed in 1969. From around 1970, the LPG unit Sönitz built pig breeding stalls, which in 1977 offered space for around 5000 animals. Several buildings in the village are protected as cultural monuments (see list of cultural monuments in Taubenheim ).

Population development

year Residents
1551 14 possessed men , 2 cottagers , 16 residents
1764 13 possessed men, 2 gardeners, 4 cottagers
1834 144
1871 170
1890 180
1910 224
1925 216
1939 220
1946 320
1950 see Taubenheim

Web links

Commons : Ullendorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. wrm-gmbh.de  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.wrm-gmbh.de  
  2. a b Elbe valley and Lößhügelland near Meißen (= values ​​of our homeland . Volume 32). 1st edition. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1979, pp. 198f.
  3. ^ Ernst Eichler / Hans Walther : Historical book of place names of Saxony. 2, Berlin 2001, p. 532.
  4. 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