Christiansdorf (Freiberg) Explained

Christiansdorf, historically spelt Christianesdorph in 1183 and Christianisdorf in 1185, was a forest settlement in the Duchy of Saxony (the present day German state of Saxony) that only existed for a few years, but is credited as being the first place in the Ore Mountains that silver ore was discovered. The little mining settlement in the March of Meissen and was a forerunner of the present town of Freiberg, which itself was founded in the 1160s. Christiansdorf was located on the so-called Schüppchenberg hill, where the cul-de-sac of Berggasse now is.

According to oral tradition and legend, the first ore - sterling silver - in the Freiberg Mining Field, and also in the whole Ore Mountains, was discovered on the fields of Christiansdorf by the Schüppchenberg around 1168.[1]

References

  1. Kleine Chronik von Freiberg als Führer durch Sachsens Berghauptstadt und Beitrag zur Heimatkunde, Heinrich Gerlach, 2nd fully revised edition, Gerlach'sche Buchdruckerei, 1897

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