Product Code Database
Example Keywords: mario kart -wi-fi $21-199
   » » Wiki: Colditz
Tag Wiki 'Colditz'.
Tag

Colditz () is a small town in the district of Leipzig, in , . It is best known for , the site of the POW camp for officers in World War II.


Geography
Colditz is situated in the , southeast of the city of . The town centre is located on the banks of river, south of its confluence with the . The municipality had a population of 8,374 in 2020.

The town Colditz consists of Colditz proper and the Ortsteile (divisions) Bockwitz, Collmen, Commichau, Erlbach, Erlln, Hausdorf, Hohnbach, Kaltenborn, Koltzschen, , Leisenau, Maaschwitz, Meuselwitz, Möseln, Podelwitz, Raschütz, Schönbach, Sermuth, Skoplau, Tanndorf, Terpitzsch, Zollwitz, Zschadraß, Zschetzsch and Zschirla. Ortsteile, Stadt Colditz, accessed 12 October 2021.


History
The first record of a on the Mulde river, called Cholidistcha, dates to the year 1046, when Emperor Henry III dedicated it to his consort Agnes of Poitou. The name is possibly of origin.

In 1083, Henry's son and successor Henry IV recommended that his follower Count Wiprecht of Groitzsch build a castle on the cliff above the river. From 1158, under the rule of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, the fortress became the residence of the noble , a dynasty of in the Imperial territory. In the 12th century, merchant houses were built around a marketplace below the castle and St. Nicholas' Church was built. In 1265, the Colditz citizens were granted town privileges by the ruler.

In 1243, the former Imperial estates were pledged to the Wettin margrave Henry III of Meissen. His grandson, Margrave Frederick I of Meissen occupied Colditz Castle in 1309. The whole lordship was finally incorporated into the Margravate of Meissen by 1404. Merged into the Electorate of Saxony from 1423, Colditz was held by Elector Ernest upon the 1485 Treaty of Leipzig.

In 1504, the local baker accidentally set Colditz on fire, and the city hall, church, castle and a large part of the town went up in flames. In 1506, reconstruction began and new buildings were raised around the rear castle courtyard. After the defeat of Elector John Frederick I of Saxony in the of 1546–47, the town passed to his cousin Maurice. His descendants continued to rebuild Colditz Castle as a hunting lodge. From 1602 to 1622, it served as the residence of Dowager Electress Sophie, widow of Elector Christian I.

In the 17th century, the cloth and linen manufacture developed. In the 18th century, clay from the Colditz area started to be used in the Meissen porcelain factory that was established in 1710 by Elector Augustus the Strong. In 1804 a ceramics factory was established in Colditz by Thomsberger & Hermann.

In the era, Colditz Castle was temporarily used as a concentration camp by the and as a Reichsarbeitsdienst camp. During the Second World War, the town did not suffer any damage. In 1940, the town became the headquarters of the German military district for personnel guarding an POW camp for officers, when Oflag IV-C was established in the castle. It became widely known after the war, for both its notable inmates ( Prominente), such as or George Lascelles, and several escape attempts.

On 14April 1945, the U.S. Army entered the town and freed the prisoners. However, under agreements signed at the , the Americans withdrew and were replaced by occupation forces late in June 1945. As a result, Colditz and the entire state of Saxony became part of . In 1958, the publicly owned porcelain factory was established. It produced a major part of the dishes used by , as evident by the manufacturer's logo "cp". Both the porcelain and chamotte industries went into decline after 1990.

Since German reunification in 1990, efforts have been made to increase visits by tourists. The castle was restored and has become a much visited museum. Visiting Colditz Castle The great flood of August 2002 as well as the flood of 2013 caused some damage to the old town, but it has since been restored.


Sights
  • St. Nicholas Church – Originally built in the middle of the 12th century.
  • Old Marketplace – Markt, the houses at #13 and #21 were built around 1600.
  • Lower Market #3 – Untermarkt 3 – a Gothic house with steep gabled roof with date 1564.
  • Johann David Köhler house – the grandfather of information science and a grandfather of library science was born here 16 January 1684.


Transport
The nearest airports are Leipzig-Altenburg Airport (26 km) and Leipzig/Halle Airport (52 km). Traffic on the section of the Glauchau-Großbothen railway line, which ran through Colditz, ceased in 2000. Public transport is provided by buses, with services to , , , , and , as well as to several villages in the vicinity. 2016 map of bus services in the area


Wartime dramatisations
The story of the wartime prisoners at was documented by in his books The Colditz Story and The Latter Days At Colditz, and the former was used as the basis for a 1955 film directed by . In the early 1970s the BBC broadcast a series, Colditz, created by and , with Reid as technical advisor. In 1973 the TV comedy series The Two Ronnies shot a sketch "Colditz" featuring in the role of the new detainee and as camp commandant. Beginning in 1973 a board game Escape from Colditz was marketed by , followed by a computer game in 1991.


Notable people

From the city
  • Johann David Köhler (1684–1755), historian and numismatic
  • (1876–1948), psychiatrist and one of the men responsible for the medical murders during the Nazi era, executed for crimes against humanity
  • Ernst Bergmann (1881–1945), professor of philosophy and pedagogy and proponent of a new German national religion.
  • (1904–1995), mechanical engineer and university lecturer
  • Jürgen Schumann (1940–1977), pilot of the , victim of the Red Army Faction
  • (born 1961), bishop of the diocese of Saratov in Russia


Others related to the city
  • Christian Führer (1943–2014), priest in Colditz from 1968 to 1980, an initiator of the peaceful revolution in the GDR as pastor of the Nikolaikirche in Leipzig
  • Ernest, Elector of Saxony (1441–1486), died on 26 August 1486 near Colditz, when he fell from his horse on a ride

  • Michael Booker, Collecting Colditz and Its Secrets, page 32.
  • Eric J. Narveson, Prison Citadel, pp. 36–37.
  • , Colditz: The Full Story, pp. 124, 259–263.
  • Georg Martin Schädlich, Tales from Colditz Castle, pp. 4–6, 27, 61, 63, 91–101.


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time