Encyclopedia > Chemnitzer Land

  Article Content

Chemnitzer Land

Statistics
State:Saxony
Adm. Region:Chemnitz
Capital:Glauchau[?]
Area:336 km²
Inhabitants:139,800 (2001)
pop. density:417 inh./km²
Car identification:GC
Website:landkreis-chemnitzer-land.de (http://www.landkreis-chemnitzer-land.de/)
Map

Chemnitzer Land is a district in Saxony, Germany. It is bounded by (from the north and clockwise) the district of Mittweida[?], the city of Chemnitz, the districts of Stollberg[?] and Zwickauer Land[?] and the state of Thuringia (district Altenburger Land).

Table of contents

History

The history of the region is largely influenced by the neighbouring cities of Chemnitz and Zwickau. In medieval times the town of Glauchau, today the capital of the district, was the centre of the county of Schönburg-Glauchau. The East German government attempted to turn the region in a huge industrial complex, which is the reason for the dense population.

The district was established in 1994 by merging the former districts of Glauchau and Hohenstein-Ernstthal.

Geography

Once a densely forested region, Chemnitzer Land now is a highly urbanised region with few green areas left. The Zwickauer Mulde river runs through the northernmost part of the district.

Coat of arms

The lion is the heraldic lion of Saxony. The red and white pattern is taken from the arms of the counts of Schönburg-Glauchau.

Towns and municipalities

  1. Glauchau[?]
  2. Hohenstein-Ernstthal[?]
  3. Lichtenstein[?]
  4. Limbach-Oberfrohna[?]
  5. Meerane[?]
  6. Oberlungwitz[?]
  7. Waldenburg[?]
    Municipalities
  1. Bernsdorf[?]
  2. Callenberg[?]
  3. Gersdorf[?]
  4. Niederfrohna[?]
  5. Oberwiera[?]
  6. Remse[?]
  7. Sankt Egidien[?]
  8. Schönberg[?]
 

External links

Official website (http://www.landkreis-chemnitzer-land.de) (German)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
David McReynolds

... exists today. In his political career, McReynolds ran for Congress (California) twice and for President twice. In 1958 he ran as a write-in SPA candidate and than ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 33.3 ms