Hundshübel Explained

Type:Village
Municipality:Stützengrün
Coordinates:50.5472°N 12.5739°W
State:Sachsen
District:Erzgebirgskreis
Elevation:559
Area:11.63
Population:1070
Stand:2011
Pop Ref:[1]
Postal Code:08328
Area Code:037462
Licence:ERZ
Year Of First Mention:1533

Hundshübel is a village in Erzgebirgskreis district of Saxony, forming a subdivision of the municipality of Stützengrün in the Ore Mountains. It is located north of Eibenstock Dam on federal highway B 169.

History

The village was first mentioned in writing as Hudesudell on the occasion of the sale of the Tettau noble family selling the surrounding lands to the House of Wettin in 1533. At this time, about ten farmer families were living there who originated from Eibenstock and went there to church. In 1563 there were 15 families, in 1563 already 22.[2] The first wooden church, mentioned in 1545, was replaced by new building in 1558 which was financed by donations. After this had become dilapidated in the 18th century, a new church was built from 1784 until 1788.

When Prince-elector John the Magnanimous took over the lordship of Schwarzenberg, Lutheranism which had hitherto only slowly gained acceptance spread quickly.

In 1817 the main occupations were farming and animal husbandry, the inhabitants also manufactured bobbin lace, which were sold on the trade fairs of Leipzig and Braunschweig, or worked in mining, as wood cutters and as waggoners. The work of the local wainwrights was commended, and trade in iron articles was strong.

From 1952 to 1990, Hundshübel was part of the Bezirk Karl-Marx-Stadt of East Germany. On 1 January 1999 Hundshübel joined the municipality of Stützengrün.[3]

Population

Year Inhabitants
1550/51 12 besessene Mann, 10 Häusler, 4 Inwohner (lodgers), 13½ Hufen
1764 51 besessene Mann, 40 Häusler, 3½ Hufen
1834 1163
1871 1371
1890 1340
Year Inhabitants
1910 1688
1925 1625
1939 1619
1946 1654
1950 1793
Year Inhabitants
1964 1662
1990 1310
1998 1251

Religion

The Lutheran parish of Hundshübel is part of the ecclesiastical district of Aue.[4] Initially the village was part of Eibenstock parish, from 1545 until 1769 it belonged to Bärenwalde church parish. From 1770 on Hundshübel has had an own pastor.[5]

The organisationally independent Landeskirchliche Gemeinschaft of Hundshübel is part of district Auerbach (Vogtland) of Landesverband Landeskirchlicher Gemeinschaften Sachsen.

Buildings and attractions

Infrastructure

Until 2010, federal highway B 169 passed through the village. It was re-routed north of the village towards Lichtenau to avoid possible contamination of Eibenstock dam in the area of Hundshübel auxiliary dam, and parts of the old route were closed to traffic.

Notable people

Bibliography

References

  1. Web site: Kleinräumiges Gemeindeblatt für Stützengrün. Statistisches Landesamt des Freistaates Sachsen. September 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20160309123055/https://www.statistik.sachsen.de/download/080_Zensus_2011_Gemeindeteile/GT_14521600.pdf. 2016-03-09. PDF; 0,23 MB.
  2. Hermann Löscher . Die bäuerliche Nachbesiedlung des Erzgebirges um 1500 . In: Blätter für deutsche Landesgeschichte . 91 . 1954 . 130–157 . (Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München)
  3. https://www.destatis.de/DE/Themen/Laender-Regionen/Regionales/Gemeindeverzeichnis/Namens-Grenz-Aenderung/1999.html Gebietsänderungen vom 01.01. bis 31.12.1999
  4. Web site: Kirchgemeinde Hundshübel.
  5. Web site: Kirchgemeinde Hundshübel - Geschichte.
  6. Web site: Das Nadlerhaus in Hundshübel . 2016-06-21.
  7. Web site: Das Rasurmuseum in Hundshübel . 2016-06-21.