Nassau, Saxony

50.76194444444413.542222222222646Koordinaten: 50 ° 45 ' 43 "N, 13 ° 32' 32" E

Location of Nassau in Saxony

Nassau is a district of the Saxon town of Mrs. Stone in the district of Central Saxony.

  • 2.1 Local History
  • 2.2 Population development
  • 2.3 Place names forms

Geography

Location

Nassau is one of the longest Waldhufen villages of Saxony and is located about 4 kilometers south of Mrs. Stone in the Eastern Ore Mountains. Through Nassau leads the county road 7738, which in the eastern end of the village on the main road 171 Schmiedeberg - begins Selva and State Road 208 Obernaundorf - Bienenmuhle leads at the western end of town. There also starts the S 209 by Weissenborn.

Neighboring towns

History

History

The first documented local form of the name dates from 1449 when Nassaw. 1551 exercised the lordship of the manor woman stone. In the church were 1555 Rechenberg and Holzhau, from 1752 Green Schoenberg eingepfarrt. In 1647 the place to Waldhufen hallway with his district Bienenmuhle to the Official Mrs. Stein was duly. The district Bienenmuhle was assigned from 1858 Rechenberg and has since formed the Frauensteiner neighboring Rechenberg- Bienenmuhle. From 1856 to 1875 Nassau was belonging to the court office woman stone, then to Amtshauptmannschaft Dippoldiswalde. In 1900 the total area of ​​the local district was 2,157 hectares. To the electricity grid Nassau in 1914 was connected.

For the victims of the First World War, a memorial was erected in 1921 at the church. From 1,353 inhabitants in 1925 1349 people were Lutheran, and three Catholic and a non-denominational. In 1929 a town hall was built, a new school building was followed by 1937. This building replaced the three existing school buildings on the site. In the course of the GDR district reform in 1952 was assigned to the Nassau county fire Erbisdorf which continued to exist as a county fire Erbisdorf after the turn and went to the district Freiberg on 1 August 1994.

March 1, 1994 Nassau was annexed by Mrs. Stone.

Population Development

1 with Bienenmuhle

Place-name forms

After the first mention as Nassaw 1449, the names of the variants ZCU Wet in 1463, Nassa be called in 1512 and Nassau in 1695. The currently valid name was first mentioned in 1875.

Attractions

  • Church Nassau, with the final finish combined organ by Gottfried Silbermann
  • Historical center
  • Steiger Memorial
  • Lookout Röthenhübel
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