Liebertwolkwitz | |
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Quarter of Leipzig | |
![]() Liebertwolkwitz: The council offices (Rathaus)
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Coordinates: 51°16′58″N 12°27′50″E / 51.28278°N 12.46389°ECoordinates: 51°16′58″N 12°27′50″E / 51.28278°N 12.46389°E | |
Country | Germany |
State | Saxony |
City | Leipzig |
Borough | Liebertwolkwitz |
Area | |
• Total | 9.26 km2 (3.58 sq mi) |
Elevation | 163 m (535 ft) |
Population (2014-12-31) | |
• Total | 5,240 |
• Density | 570/km2 (1,500/sq mi) |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
Postal codes | 04288 |
Vehicle registration | L |
Liebertwolkwitz is a district of Leipzig on the city's south side. It contains the Galgenberg , the highest elevation in the Leipzig area. It was established in or before 1040.
Before the local government boundary reform in 1999, it was an administratively independent municipality.
The first surviving record of the place, then identified as "Niwolkesthorp", dates from 1040. It is likely to have originated in the 7th or 8th century, however, as a Slavic settlement.
Fire destroyed the Romanesque church in 1575. It was replaced with a rectangular structure which featured a stout tower at its west end. In 1702 this tower was rebuilt in the Baroque style, which left it taller and more ornate.
, part of the higher ground within the territory of Liebertwolkwitz, is of particular historical significance. It was from here, in October 1813 as fighting reached its climax, that the Austrian Emperor, the Russian Czar and the Prussian King oversaw their armies against Napoleon in the four-day Battle of Leipzig. Casualties were high on both sides, but the coalition of the three emperors won, turning the tide of the Great War (as it was known to the English at the time) decisively against the French. One victim of the battle was a church organ which had been built back in 1725 by Zacharias Hildebrandt, a contemporary and friend of Bach.
Two days before the climax, the so-called in open countryside to the south of the town took place. The Prussian Dragoon Lieutenant Guido von der Lippe attacked the French Marshal Murat who was poorly protected, but was nevertheless able to get away from von Lippe who was diverted by a French equerry who himself was killed while Murat fled. The skirmish was immortalised much later in a painting by Richard Knötel.