Hainewalde

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Hainewalde
The old castle gate lodge
The old castle gate lodge
Coat of arms Location
Coat of arms of Hainewalde
Hainewalde (Germany)
Hainewalde
Administration
Country Flag of Germany Germany
State Saxony
Admin. region Dresden
District Löbau-Zittau
Municipal assoc. Großschönau-Waltersdorf
Mayor Jürgen Walter
Basic statistics
Area 12.96 km² (5 sq mi)
Elevation 322 m  (1056 ft)
Population 1,812  (30/04/2005)
 - Density 140 /km² (362 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate ZI
Postal code 02779
Area code 035841
Website www.hainewalde.de
Location of Hainewalde within Löbau-Zittau district
Map

Coordinates: 50°54′20″N 14°42′00″E / 50.90556, 14.7

Hainewalde is a village in Germany on the river Mandau, in the Bundesland (Federal State) of Saxony and the district Löbau-Zittau, historically belonging to the region Lusatia. The village is part of the administrative partnership Großschönau-Waltersdorf.

Contents

[edit] Geography and transportation

The community Hainewalde is approximatively 10 km apart from Zittau in the foreland of the Lusatian Mountains. The federal highway 96 passes Hainewalde in the north, the Czech border is approximatively 15 km west of it. The railroad Zittau-Varnsdorf has a station in Hainewalde.

[edit] History

Hainewalde was first documentary mentioned in 1272. It is believed that the name is derived from the founder one founder called "Hener", "Heno", "Hening" or "Heinrich". Settlers of the German feudal east-expansion established Hainewalde as a so called "Waldhufendorf", by stubbing the forest along the river Mandau.

In 1392 the today's old castle, in these times gate lodge, was build as manor.

By the treaty of Prague (1636) Upper Lusatia, and therefore Hainewalde, came under the power of Saxony, which resulted constraints on independence and the freedom of religion. This brought some Bohemian exule around 1650, which increased the local population.

From 1749 to 1753, a new castle was built by the Prussian chamberlain von Canitz.

Till 1927 Hainewalde was the residence of the old Saxon noble family Kanitz-Kyaw. As a result of the excessive debts of the nobleman, the castle, its ground and forest were sold on on 12 March 1927.

Since 1928, the castle was under the authority of the neighbouring community of Großschönau. On 26 March 1933 it was occupied by the Nazi-German stormtroopers from Dresden, which set up a provisional concentration camp for political prisoners. The first prisoners arrived on 28 March 1933. On 10 August 1933 the KZ Hainewalde was closed and served as "Wehrertüchtigungslager" till the end of World War II. Until 1972 it was primarily used as residential house and remained empty since that. A private association founded in 2000 is now working on its preservation.

[edit] Main sights

  • Umgebindehaeuser (typical Lusatian half-timbered houses)
  • Church, built in 1705-1711
  • The Wasserschloss, built under rule of the family von Nositz, was located north of the terraces of the new castle. The only remain of the old water castle, which was demolished in 1780, is the gate lodge with his west-side Renaissance-portal.
  • Schloss (New Castle), constructed in 1750-1753, along with its Baroque gardens, under the rule of the Kanitz-Kyaw family. It was renovated in 1883, the Baroque elements on the outside façade removed and replaced by "Italian"-style sgraffito.
  • The Baroque crypt of the family Kanitz-Kyaw, in the cemetery (1715).
  • Mountain Breiteberg with look-out, restaurant and "Querxhöhle"

[edit] People

  • Gottlob Friedrich Seligmann, Lutheran theologian
  • Karl August Wünsche, German Christian Hebraist, born 1839

[edit] External links