The location of some of the highways outlined above can be worked out even for prehistoric times. This is evinced,
inter alia, by archaeological finds (pottery, coins, even from Roman times, tools, weapons) from the
Bronze (ca. 1800-750 BC) and
Iron Age (750 BC - early AD). Even a few finds from the
Neolithic (
Stone Age ca 4500-1800 BC) show statistically significant associations with the above-described routes of the Kulmer Steig. In the Middle Ages, the route served as a trading and military road. According to tradition, the Kulmer Steig was used as early as 805 and 856 by armies advancing into Bohemia. The first records of such use, however, date to 1040, when Margrave
Eckhard II of Meissen with the Saxon army and a force under Archbishop
Bardo of Mainz advanced into Bohemia and intervened in the dispute between
Henry III and
Bretislaus I The eastward expansion of Henry I may also have followed this route, especially since he also credited with the establishment of
Dohna Castle in 930 (other sources identify
Otto I as founding it around 960, perhaps this is a misunderstanding with regard to the castle on the Robisch and the Reichsburg opposite on the Schlossberg). It is recorded that
Henry I founded
Meissen Castle in 929 and in the same year moved on to Bohemia. Other armies were moved down this route by
Wiprecht of Groitzsch in 1107 and Emperor
Lothair III in 1126. These transport routes also played an important role in the great wars of the Middle Ages. Armies in the
Thirty Years' War, the
Seven Years' War and during the
wars of liberation from Napoleonic occupation, particularly around the year 1813, used these routes for crossing the Ore Mountains and regularly brought death, misery and devastation to the region. With the introduction of road tolls in the 14th century and also the construction of post roads in the 18th century and modern roads since the early 19th century, the old road system described above, with its sunken roads shaped by centuries of heavy carts, disappeared. In the later Middle Ages, these trade routes increasingly concentrated on the post roads (e.g. the
Old and New Dresden to Teplitz Post Road) with their surveys and designations made by
Adam Friedrich Zürner in 1712/13 on behalf of the Saxon Elector
August the Strong. The modern road network emerged in the 19th and 20th century. It is based, as mentioned above, on the described routes of the Kulmer Steig (e.g.
Staatstraße 173 from Pirna to the border crossing at Bahratal;
Kreisstraße 8760 from Pirna to Herbergen;
Kreisstraße 8770 from Dohna via Köttewitz into the Seidewitz valley,
Staatstraße 176 from Pirna through the Seidewitz valley to
Liebstadt and on to Börnersdorf and Breitenau, and, of course, the
A 17 autobahn, which runs parallel to the Old Dresden to Teplitz Post Road, etc.). == See also ==