Sohland an der Spree

Sohland an der Spree

Coat of arms
Sohland an der Spree

Coordinates: 51°2′50″N 14°25′42″E / 51.04722°N 14.42833°E / 51.04722; 14.42833Coordinates: 51°2′50″N 14°25′42″E / 51.04722°N 14.42833°E / 51.04722; 14.42833
Country Germany
State Saxony
District Bautzen
Government
  Mayor Matthias Pilz (CDU)
Area
  Total 37.27 km2 (14.39 sq mi)
Population (2014-12-31)[1]
  Total 6,864
  Density 180/km2 (480/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 02686–02689
Dialling codes 035936
Vehicle registration BZ
Website www.sohland.de
Townscape of Sohland with Church

Sohland an der Spree (Sorbian: Załom) is a municipality in the district of Bautzen in Saxony in Germany near the border to the Czech Republic in a region called Lusatia. The river Spree flows right through the village. Together with some smaller villages (Wehrsdorf, Taubenheim) it constitutes one of the biggest villages or communities with about 7,700 inhabitants. The most typical monument of the village is the "Himmelsbrücke" (heavens bridge), it is said that the bridge will break when someone tells a lie while standing on it.

Sights

In all three villages of the community one will find a Lutheran church. In Wehrsdorf a baroque-style church was built in 1724, in Taubenheim is another from the 16th century (maybe one of the oldest Lutheran churches in Germany) and in Sohland a church whose oldest parts date from the 13th century. All these churches have a beautifully cultivated cemetery nearby.

The region of Upper Lusatia, where Sohland can be found is famous because of its special half timbered houses which mix up the franconian and the Slavic style of wooden houses, they are build up like "a house in a house". Many of these special buildings still stand there, most of them date from between 1870 and 1890. In Sohland there is also an old type of these houses which is several hundred years old. Today it is a small museum (Heimatmuseum) of the rural culture of the region.

Economic structure

Even though the economic situation in the whole of Eastern Germany and especially in the region of Upper Lusatia is not that good, Sohland is quite successful in economic things, at least in comparison with other towns and villages of the region. The infrastructure is not bad, there is direct access to the B-96 (Federal-road (smaller than a motorway)) and the village has a railway station. For some years now Sohland has had direct access to the Czech Republic by car (but no trucks allowed).

Because of the beauty of the village and enough free space to build up new houses many young families come to live here. There are also some new projects for renters and older people. This way the community was able to minimize the loss of inhabitants over the last fifteen years, even though eastern Saxony lost many of its people because of a high rate of unemployment and a negative birth-death-ratio. But maybe the emigration will come to a halt in the next years because of the extremely low number of new born children.

There are also some industrial firms in the village, they produce:

There are also some logistical firms and a lot of service firms too. One of the hopeful new industrial foundations of the last years is a small enterprise which produces fuels on the basis of agricultural goods.

Education

All three villages still have a "Grundschule" (class 1 to 4), a mixed Haupt-/Mittelschule (comparable with a lower High school) can be found in the midst (Gerhard-Hauptmann- Schule). For further education pupils have to go to Wilthen, where it is possible to visit a Gymnasium (comparable with an upper High school). Most schools that existed before 1990 were closed in the last 15 years because of economic reasons and the now lower number of pupils.

Twin cities

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, June 24, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.