Falkenau

Falkenau
Falkenau
Falkenau
Coat of arms of Falkenau
Location of Falkenau
Map
Falkenau is located in Germany
Falkenau
Falkenau
Falkenau is located in Saxony
Falkenau
Falkenau
Coordinates: 50°51′19″N 13°6′57″E / 50.85528°N 13.11583°E / 50.85528; 13.11583
CountryGermany
StateSaxony
DistrictMittelsachsen
TownFlöha
Area
 • Total9.08 km2 (3.51 sq mi)
Elevation
321 m (1,053 ft)
Population
 (2006-12-31)
 • Total2,040
 • Density220/km2 (580/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
09557
Dialling codes03726
Vehicle registrationFG
WebsiteOrtschaft Falkenau

Falkenau is a village and a former municipality in the district of Mittelsachsen, in Saxony, Germany. On 1 October 2011, Falkenau joined the town of Flöha.[1]

Geography

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Location

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Located in the Ore Mountain Basin, the village of Falkenau stands on the shores of the river Flöha.

Falkenau and its sole district Hetzdorf is located north of Augustusburg, east of Flöha and west of Oederan.

History

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Until the middle of the 12th century, the region lay in the primeval forest known as the Miriquidi, which covered large parts of what is now southern Saxony and stretched across the ridge of the Ore Mountains to northern Bohemia.

Falkenau was first mentioned in 1378 in a tax register of the socalled "Castrum Schellenberg" district, but the first settlers probably arrived as early as the late 12th century in the course of the Medieval Ostsiedlung. The settlers founded the village as Waldhufendorf with 15 farms[2] arranged along both sides of the river. The oldest family names of these farmers were Richter (1546), Rudolph (1563), Ruttluff (1563), Schubert (1563), Kunz (1564), Teufel (1566), Wächtler (1567), Hartwig (1580), Förster (1583), Aßmann (1586), Ranfeld (1585), Becker (1585), Schnorr (1589), Naumann (1599), Fintzel (1593), and Barthel (1595).

Small ore mining endeavours were undertaken in the northern forests of Falkenau along the Zechengrundbach with a first phase during the late 16th century and a second one from 1674 till 1842.

Since the beginning of the 19th century and during the 20th century, the village was a small, but supraregional centre of the textile industry with business connections to major cities in Germany and Europe.

Population

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Falkenau had a population of around 140 people during the mid-16th century,[3] with only 20 more in 1688.[4]

Falkenau reached its highest peak of population in the year 1950 with a total of 2921 people. The population has slowly declined since then.


1980 - 1989

  • 1980
  • 1981
  • 1982: 2153
  • 1983: 2154
  • 1984: 2160
  • 1985: 2135
  • 1986: 2171
  • 1987: 2154
  • 1988: 2139
  • 1989: 2078

1990 - 1999

  • 1990: 2060
  • 1991: 2025
  • 1992: 2024
  • 1993: 2068
  • 1994: 2062
  • 1995: 2133
  • 1996: 2238
  • 1997: 2272
  • 1998: 2233
  • 1999: 2228

2000 - 2009

  • 2000: 2218
  • 2001: 2204
  • 2002: 2134
  • 2003: 2127
  • 2004: 2100
  • 2005: 2046
  • 2006: 2040
  • 2007: 2008
  • 2008: 1966
  • 2009: 1957

2010 - 2019

  • 2010: 1951
  • 6/2011: 1902
Source: Official Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony, Date: 30. Juni 2011

Languages

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Infrastructure

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Roads

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Falkenau is connected to the Bundestraße 173 (B173). Between Hof and Zwickau, the course of this road largely corresponds to the old Via Imperii. Further on to Dresden, it follows the historic Frankenstraße, which leads eastwards via Chemnitz, Oederan, and Freiberg, towards Upper Lusatia and on to Silesia.

Public transport

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The village has two small train stations and is connected by one bus line to Chemnitz. The upper station Falkenau (Sachs) Süd connects the village to Dresden, Chemnitz, and Freiberg (Dresden–Werdau railway). The lower station Falkenau (Sachs) HP connects to Chemnitz and Olbernhau (Pockau-Lengefeld–Neuhausen railway). Until 1968, the socalled Lößnitz Valley railway branched off to Großwaltersdorf in the neighbouring district of Hetzdorf.

Bridges

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  • Hetzdorfer Viaduct, a 43 metre high and 328 metre long former railway bridge built 1866-1868. It is now part of a hiking trail.

Culture and sights

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In 1722, the post office of Electoral Saxony erected on behalf of Augustus II the Strong a numbered milestone along the historic Frankenstraße. The quarter milestone rests on a low plinth and consists of a rectangular ca 1.7 metres high slab. It only bears the monogram ‘AR’, a post horn, the year of manufacture and, on the narrow side the odd row number "25".[5]

The school, built 1913, was designed by the Saxonian architect Curt Herfurth.

Sports

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Notable people

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Sons and daughters of Falkenau

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  • Karl Nendel (* 1933 in Falkenau; † 2019 in Frankfurt (Oder)), engineer in microelectronics

Active in Falkenau

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Bibliography

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In German

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  • Geographisches Institut, Arbeitsgruppe Heimatforschung (1977). Das mittlere Zschopaugebiet : Ergebnisse der heimatkundlichen Bestandsaufnahme in den Gebieten von Flöha - Augustusburg und Zschopau. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag. pp. 79–82.
  • H. Hänsch (2002). 625 Jahre Falkenau. Beiträge zur Geschichte. Falkenau i. Sa.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • H. Seifert (1938). Die Ortsgeschichte des Dorfes Falkenau in Sachsen. Flöha i. Sa.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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References

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  1. ^ Freie Presse Online: Falkenau: Zusammenschluss - Falkenau und Flöha ab 1. Oktober vereint.
  2. ^ H. Seifert (1938). Die Ortsgeschichte des Dorfes Falkenau in Sachsen. Flöha i. Sa, pp. 95-102.
  3. ^ A. Magnus (2024). Bevölkerung, in: Falkenauer Netz.
  4. ^ H. Seifert (1938). Die Ortsgeschichte des Dorfes Falkenau in Sachsen. Flöha i. Sa, p. 47.
  5. ^ Forschungsgruppe Kursächsische Postmeilensäulen (1989). Lexikon Kursächsische Postmeilensäulen. Berlin: transpress-Verlag, p. 211.
  6. ^ H. Seifert (1938). Die Ortsgeschichte des Dorfes Falkenau in Sachsen. Flöha i. Sa, p. 46, 119, 121, 127, 163, 178.
  7. ^ A. Magnus (2024). Abraham Kluge (gest. 1654), in: Falkenauer Netz, June 10, 2024.