List of monuments in Coburg

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List of monuments in Coburg :

Core city by street name: A  · B  · C  · E  · F  · G  · H  · J  · K  · L  · M  · N  · O  · P  · Q  · R  · S  · T  · U  · V  · W  · Z

Other districts: Beiersdorf  · Bertelsdorf  · Cortendorf  · Creidlitz  · Festungshof  · Ketschendorf  · Lützelbuch  · Neu- and Neershof  · Neuses  · Rögen  · Scheuerfeld  · Seidmannsdorf  · Desert maple

Coburg coat of arms
Districts of Coburg

The list of monuments in Coburg contains all the cultural monuments of the Upper Franconian city of Coburg and its incorporated districts. This list is based on the Bavarian Monument List , which was first created on the basis of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973 and has since been maintained and updated by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation . The following information does not replace the legally binding information from the monument protection authority.

According to the Bavarian Monument Protection Act, monuments are divided into architectural monuments and ground monuments , whereby the architectural monuments also include land monuments and garden monuments . Furthermore, monuments can be individual monuments or ensembles.

In addition to the monuments, there is a list of the architects and builders who are decisive for the historical cityscape of Coburg.

Details

Historically, the monument lists in Bavaria are based on ordinances from 1882, 1904 and 1908 and the Monument Protection Act that came into force in 1973. The basis of the list is the Bavarian Monument List , which was first drafted in 1978 by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation in accordance with the Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973 and has been continuously supplemented since then, as well as Volume IV.48 City of Coburg in the series Monuments in Bavaria published by the State Office in 2006 . This series is a contribution of the Free State of Bavaria to the Germany-wide monument topography project of the Federal Republic of Germany , in the context of which the inventory of all cultural monuments in Germany is to be recorded, assessed and presented.

In 2013, a total of 864 architectural monuments and 45 ground monuments were recorded in the list of monuments in the city of Coburg and its districts. These are individual objects with monument status and ensembles that are protected as a whole, even if many or all of the buildings in the ensemble are not in themselves a monument. The listed house Mühlgasse 1 was canceled in August 2008, Leopoldstraße 39 in December 2009, Weichengereuth 25 in April 2010, Judengasse 51 and Goethestraße 9 in 2012 and Zinkenwehr 20 in 2013.

Ensembles

An ensemble is a group of buildings that together represent a historical place, square and / or street scene. The list of monuments contains eight ensembles for Coburg, which as a whole are classified as worthy of preservation.

Ensemble old town Coburg

Marketplace
Palace Square
Ketschengasse
Steingasse
Spitalgasse
Judengasse

The largest ensemble is the old town with suburbs . The boundaries of the ensemble are largely determined by the former outer city fortifications and therefore roughly correspond to the medieval expansion of the city. However, it also includes the green belt, which was created in the 19th century in place of the moats, in the east including the buildings directly adjacent to the former moat.

The old town of Coburg is located on the southern foothills of the Thuringian Forest on the Itz , on a flood-free, western low terrace of the fortress mountain. A predecessor "Trufalistat", mentioned for the first time in 1075, can be found in this area. The core city has a clear, planned urban plan and developed on a north-south running trade route, the transition over the Itz to the north of today's old town. With an east-west running street of only local importance, the street cross that is so characteristic of the city's layout was created. This gives the regular four-door system with circular walling and the centrally located market as the main square and intersection of the street intersection a particular conciseness. The Bering is based on a wall at the beginning of the 13th century. However, by the end of that century the city had already outgrown the wall. Suburbs formed in front of each gate, in the south the Ketschenvorstadt, in the west the Judenvorstadt, in the north the Steinweg or Spitalvorstadt and in the east the Steintor and Stetzenbachvorstadt.

The Jewish gate and the hospital gate of the inner fortification belt and the outer quay gate of the southern suburban fortifications testify to the city fortifications, which were rebuilt and repaired until the 18th century; Even with their baroque hoods, these gates are impressive witnesses to the medieval city, which had developed lively as a religious, judicial center and as a trading center, as the minting law of 1265 points out. This is also illustrated by numerous bourgeois buildings, representative of the solid buildings that have been preserved is the sandstone block building at Markt 15 and the most important half-timbered house, the stately mint master's house of the 14th / 18th century. Century (Ketschengasse 7). Most of the town center's town houses not only preserve the medieval city structure, but are also essentially medieval buildings.

In the southeast of the core area is the church center of the city, a self-contained and secluded area around the parish church of St. Moriz , where a Benedictine provostry was located from 1256 until the Reformation . The dominating sacred building of St. Moriz, whose external appearance is mainly due to the construction work of the 14th-16th centuries. Century, also plays an important role in the city skyline.

Belonging to the Wettin family since 1353, Coburg became the focus of their rule. The introduction of the Reformation (1524 in St. Moriz) led to the dissolution of the Franciscan monastery (1525), which was converted into a city palace from 1544 under Duke Johann Ernst after the residence was moved from the fortress to the city . The monumental buildings, the city is still the stamp of a renaissance - royal capital loan, taken during the glorious reign of Duke Johann Casimir . The major stately Satteldachbauten, the government or law firm building on the market (1597/99), the school Casimirianum (1601/05) at St. Moritz, and the arsenal in Herrengasse (1616/21) are works of painter architect Peter Senge foliage . At the residence and the town hall , the era is reflected in a characteristic architectural motif: the round or octagonal corner bay on two floors, the " Coburg bay ", supported by a pillar . This oriel shape occurs not only in large public buildings, but also in z. B. also at the corner house Markt 6 .

In the middle of the 18th century, the city began to flourish again, which in turn, with its expansion as a residential city, had a decisive architectural impact on the city. Under Duke Franz Friedrich Anton and, above all, Dukes Ernst I and Ernst II , the city was converted into a 19th century residence. The most important building measures were the Ehrenburg and the ring of streets and facilities surrounding the old town. In place of the largely demolished city fortifications, a green belt was created that almost completely surrounds the city of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and creates a unique, uniform character with primarily Gothic-style edge buildings. Caused by the railway line opened in 1858 to the west of the old town, the city was expanded there in the 1860s. From the building area, although not according to a uniform plan, but gradually systematically laid out, Bahnhofstrasse and Mohrenstrasse penetrate the old town, while Löwenstrasse delimits the old town to the northeast (see Ensemble Bahnhofsvorstadt). The numerous buildings of the Wilhelminian style and Art Nouveau that were built in and around the city give the city a characteristic character outside of the ensemble as well.

The center of the four main axes is the strikingly large and almost square market, the shape of which was essentially determined by the city founder, but which was only systematized when the government building was built in the last years of the 16th century. The traffic gathers in it in a splendid way and with the streets crossing and converging here all quarters of the old town are opened up. The western and eastern wall of the square with its stately, mostly eaves-side town houses from different centuries, together with monumental buildings, the government building in the north and the town hall with neighboring house in the south, create a clear and representative design corresponding to its function in the urban fabric. The Spitalgasse leading from the northwest corner of the market in a slight bend to the Spitaltor is still the most important shopping street today. As a continuation beyond the gate, the Steinweg leads in a slight bend to the northwest to the valley low and, with its three-storey, eaves-side and simpler development, although dense and inner-city, still reveals the former suburb. Shortly after the confluence of the Oberer Bürglaß, where the Hahntor, which was demolished in 1803, stood, Heiligkreuzstrasse continues the suburban area.

The south-facing Ketschengasse begins as a representative, inner-city street between Markt and the Inner Ketschentor, which was demolished in 1791 (formerly at around 26 Ketschengasse). The outer area corresponds to the former Ketschenvorstadt and begins with a square, today's Albertsplatz. The core of the Ketschenvorstadt is the market-like area occupied by a fountain to the south, behind block no. 28-40. This tapering square in the south is closed by the Outer Ketschentor. In the south-east corner of the suburb, the Salvatorfriedhof with its Salvator Church, which was closed in 1856 and surrounded by the former suburb walling, extends .

The Steingasse , leading uphill from the market to the former stone gate, is lined with closely lined town houses, on the south side predominantly gable and on the north side on the eaves side. In the upper part, the town front of the Ehrenburg dominates the street. Then follows to the east the former suburb "Steintor", whose street, which rises steeply from the upper complex , is characterized by numerous dwelling houses . The street Hinterm Marstall creates a connection to Leopoldstraße, the former Stetzenbachvorstadt. The suburb, mentioned for the first time in 1618, which was not previously fortified, shows on the slightly curved street a changing development, mostly on the eaves side.

The from the market over the stone alley west to Jews bridge leading Jewish quarter begins with a downtown road section, which is highlighted by some representative, mostly three-storey town houses eaves. A number of examples of what was once a purely two-storey building have survived. According to its name, the Herrngasse, which extends from the northeast corner of the market, is lined with particularly outstanding buildings. By the middle of the 19th century, the Schlossplatz was built, a square in which that century created one of its most characteristic urban planning situations. To the south the neo-Gothic prospect of the Residenzschloss, opposite the former court theater . To the west, the town's town houses are hidden behind a backdrop of trees on Grafengasse. To the northwest, the square opens to the Theaterplatz . Since the Spitalhof was demolished in 1867, the resulting vegetable market has been attached to this square structure.

On the east side, too, the Schlossplatz continues beyond its borders via the monumentally designed arcades and the terrace that mediate into the courtyard garden . Here the distant view was created, which connects the city and the fortress, flanked by buildings that are more closely related, the Catholic church at the foot of the slope in the north and the stables and the riding hall in the south on gently sloping terrain. A horticultural rondel around the statue of Duke Ernst I, the creator of this complex, gives the square an informal reference system. The paramount role of the square is based on its significant artistic design and the fact that through it the city merges directly into the courtyard garden and thus connects it with the fortress. In addition, the Schlossplatz is part of the urban green belt.

This green belt was created after the dilapidated city wall was demolished and the city ditches were leveled or filled in. With the filling of the city moat in 1798 at the site of today's Ernstplatz, the measures under Duke Franz Friedrich Anton began, which were continued under Dukes Ernst I and Ernst II. The extensive green belt around the old town of Coburg consists of Ernstplatz, Albertsplatz, Casimirstraße, Unterer-, Oberer- and Wettiner-Anlage, Schloßplatz, Allee and Rittersteich. Due to the preferred use of neo-Gothic treasure trove, the green belt has a formative artistic design. The main neo-Gothic work in Coburg, the Ehrenburg, redesigned from 1809 to 1841 based on a facade design by Karl Friedrich Schinkel , is part and at the same time the earliest and most important example of this neo-Gothic promenade belt. Most of the buildings, however, originated in the third quarter of the 19th century, for example by Adolf Schuster, Julius Martinet and Wilhelm Streib .

The old town of Coburg, which suffered only minor losses during the Second World War, is a great, largely intact urban ensemble. The diverse visual relationships between the city and the fortress also have a unifying effect.

The ensemble is bordered by Wiesenstrasse 1, Heiligkreuzstrasse 28, 18/16, 14, Allee 1, 3, Rittersteich, Allee 5, 7, Untere Klinge 2, Obere Klinge 1, Festungsstrasse 1, Schloßplatz 4 (arcades), Park 1–4 (Hofgartenmauer), Leopoldstrasse 57, 48–16 (even numbers), Queckbrunngasse, Steintor 21, 20, Obere Realschulgasse 1–4, Glockenberg (footpath), Sturms stairs, Obere Anlage, Casimirstrasse, Ketschendorfer Strasse 2–8 (even numbers) , Schützenstraße 1, 2, Goethestraße, Ernstplatz, Viktoriastraße, footpath across the piped Hahn River, Mohrenstraße 22, 21, Badergasse 8, 11, Lohgraben, Gerbergasse 2, Schenkgasse 15, Bahnhofstraße 5, 10, Hintere Kreuzgasse 1–13 (odd numbers) , Gartenstrasse 4–1 and Wiesenstrasse 1. It is divided into the fourteen special areas Herrngasse , Judengasse , Ketschengasse , Kirchhof , Leopoldstrasse , Markt , Oberer Bürglaß , Schlossplatz , Spitalgasse , Steingasse , Steintor , Steinweg , Theaterplatz and Unterer Bürglaß .

Ensemble of villas in Alexandrinenstrasse / Marienberg

Alexandrinenstrasse

The villa district at the foot of the Glockenberg, directly adjoining the city's green belt to the south, shows three different development zones. The Alexandrinenstraße was created in 1841 in continuation of the Upper and Lower Promenade plant as to Ketschendorfer road. On its east side at the foot of the steeply rising Glockenberg, classifying villas in larger garden plots form a loose development that continued into Ketschendorfer Straße and ends in Villa Wunderlich (Ketschendorfer Straße 11). In the first years of the 20th century, an Art Nouveau villa colony was built in the former Sturmsgarten near the old town, mostly based on designs by Carl Otto Leheis in English-influenced historicizing forms. The street (Marienberg) leading up the mountain further south from Ketschendorfer Strasse is lined with dense, mostly late-historic houses of various shapes and forms from the time before the First World War.

Ensemble Bahnhofsvorstadt

Bahnhofstrasse
Löwenstrasse
Mohrenstrasse

The Bahnhofsvorstadt ensemble encompasses the expansion of the city to the northwest of the old town in the lowlands of the Itz , which was mainly built on from the middle of the 19th century. The Werra Railway , which opened in 1858 and runs past the old town to the west, created the prerequisites for city expansion, which, as usual in the 19th century, developed towards the train station , which is located in Coburg northwest of the old town center. The reason for the urban expansion of Coburg in the 19th century was the need for new building space for the construction of residential houses, including workers' houses (e.g. on Kreuzwehrstrasse), and factories. Despite the concerns about the flood-threatened and unhealthy river low on the Itz, the usual development was able to prevail, so that the largest historic district of Coburg was created here. Despite different approaches and designs, however, it was never possible to establish an overall plan for the city expansion. A short-term competition in 1864, the results of which were to be used to develop building standards, did not continue because of the low response.

Between the old town and the train station, a generous, straight road network was therefore gradually laid out, with which the area was systematized while leaving out the Itz river. Despite the gradual development, there is an almost right-angled grid system. The new urban development focus was the station with forecourt, on which two of the most important streets are aligned: On the one hand the Bahnhofstrasse, laid out as an avenue in 1861, which, aligned to the Rosenauschlösschen , in a west-east direction between the station and the northern gate area of ​​the old town (via the " Allee "further to Ehrenburg). On the other hand the Mohrenstrasse as a more direct connection from the old town to the train station. It leads from the Spitaltor in a north-westerly direction towards the train station, but after crossing the Itz it bends to the west into the right-angled street system of the train station district.

The Löwenstraße, which was only laid out in the 1890s in orientation to the course of the river and city wall, runs at right angles across Mohrenstraße. Some planned streets were never realized, such as the direct connection between Lossaustraße and Judengasse, the intersection of which on Löwenstraße was planned for urban planning (Löwenstraße 27 and 29).

The streets are characterized by upscale residential developments in the main streets (Bahnhofsplatz, Bahnhofstrasse, Mohrenstrasse, Löwenstrasse, Lossaustrasse, Kreuzwehrstrasse and Seifartshofstrasse). Villas and villa-like residential buildings with gardens and corresponding ancillary facilities, apartment and commercial buildings (especially in the area of ​​Mohrenstrasse near the city) but also the workers' residences in the northern area of ​​the Bahnhofsviertel (Kreuzwehrstrasse, Heuweg and Brückenstrasse). Manufacturing and warehouse buildings show not only the different functions of the new city quarter, but above all the rich variety of styles of historicism from the 1860s to the period around the Second World War, which can be read both in their chronological sequence and in their thematic gradation . The development of the urban expansion area has a rich variety of styles of historicism from the 1960s to the first decades of the 20th century, which can be read both in their chronological sequence and in their thematic gradation. The urban development achievement is enriched by visual connections: in the Bahnhofstrasse through the Rosenauer Ritterschlösschen and the train station, in the Mohrenstrasse through the fortress or a small relaxation bench. The closed effect of the historicist city expansion is primarily impaired by oversized administrative buildings and a multi-storey car park near the train station and a department store on Mohrenstrasse.

The ensemble is bordered by Lossaustraße 1, 6, 6a with the eastern track, Kanonenweg 50/52, Callenberger Straße 30-18 (even numbers), 19, Brückenstraße 12, 17-9 (odd numbers), Callenberger Straße 8, 4, 2 , Bahnhofstrasse 18, 14, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2, Heiligkreuzstrasse 15, Bahnhofstrasse 1, 3, 5, 7, 11, Seifartshofstrasse 3a – 25 (odd numbers), Mohrenstrasse 13, 15, 15a, 21– 33 (odd numbers), Steinweg 5, 1, Spitalgasse 29, Mohrenstrasse 38, 36, Webergasse 35, Mohrenstrasse 34–20 (even numbers), footpath over the piped Hahn River, Viktoriastrasse 9, Judengasse 41–45, 49, 51, Judenbrücke and eastern track body. It is divided into the three special areas Bahnhofstrasse , Löwenstrasse and Mohrenstrasse .

Ensemble Rosenauer Strasse

Rosenauer Strasse

The Rosenauer Straße leads northeast of the old town from the area of ​​the former Hahntor in a straight line past the Rittersteich with Rosenauschlößchen to Rosenau . It is lined here to the north by two-story neo-Gothic residential buildings from around 1870. These are connected to the east on the opposite side of the street historicist houses, whereby the late medieval knight pond, which with its green bank zones became part of the green belt around the old town in the 19th century, is bordered as a suburban area.

Ensemble of villa district fortress mountain

Fortress mountain

To the east of the old town and north of the Hofgarten, a green residential area has been built at the foot of the fortress mountain since the middle of the 19th century. First of all, monumental accents were set with the neo-Gothic Catholic parish church from 1855 and the rural hospital from 1860 to the east above the moat that was converted into an avenue. Since 1867, stately villas with a predominantly neo-Gothic design language have been built along the Hofgarten on Festungsstrasse. In the period that followed, up to the 1930s, the quarter was built on with villas of late classicism , historicism, youth, reform and home styles in different sizes and shapes. The characteristic villa quarter exemplifies the architectural diversity and the change in style within a few decades.

Ensemble of the Hahnweg craft settlement

Hahnweg

At the instigation of Duchess Alexandrine according to a uniform plan from 1893-95, a craftsman or workers' settlement of high cohesion from a long line of twin houses to the northwest along the S-shaped Hahnweg. The single-storey brick buildings with half-timbered elbows and gables are typical of small residential buildings at the turn of the century. In their even sequence they have a great urban impact. In the southern area, opposite two-storey tenement houses (No. 94, 98/100 and 108/110 by Otto Leheis) and a single-storey residential building with a bay tower (No. 96) complement the street area.

Ensemble Lutherstrasse

Lutherstrasse

The Lutherstraße is located in a city expansion area north of Altortes between Itz River, Lauterbach, and the branching off to the east line of Eisenach, which was built especially for the first two decades of the 20th century. The tree-lined Lutherstrasse, which is laid out in a straight line parallel to the railway, is characterized by mostly two-storey apartment buildings with a loft, which create a very closed street scene. The single or double houses show the style of the one part, etc. enriched nor the building structure by Oriel, gable, but on the other hand, by modest Bauzier to the reform tendencies of the late, reduced Historismus, home style responding.

Judenberg Ensemble

Judenberg

On the northern slope edge of the hollow path-like, curved uphill Judenberg- Strasse, a series of single and double houses was built in 1905 by Friedrich (Fritz) Christ according to a uniform plan. The eaves-standing brick buildings with knee-highs , multi-colored or with house integration, have central gables . They embody a widespread type of small houses, which are particularly effective here in terms of urban planning in a regular sequence. The row of houses is framed by mansard roof buildings ; at the lower end of a more structured variant of the given type, at the upper end of a two-storey apartment building (Judenberg 30/32).

Soil monuments

Various ground monuments are included in the list of monuments.

Core city

Excavation museum
Zwingermauer, second half of the 13th century

Generally the underground parts of the medieval core city with

  • the section of a wood-earth fortification from the Middle Ages in the area of ​​the market square (location)
  • the predecessor buildings of the high and late Middle Ages and the underground parts of the St. Moriz Church and the church cemetery, probably from the Carolingian-Ottonian period and the 13th to 15th centuries (location)
  • the underground parts and presumably high medieval predecessor findings of the former Franciscan monastery from the middle of the 13th century as well as underground parts of Ehrenburg Castle (location)
  • the settlement of the early Middle Ages and underground parts as well as findings and finds of the former farm buildings of Ehrenburg Castle from the 16th century, demolished in 1810/11 (location)
  • the underground parts of the former provost house of the 13th century of the St. Peter and Paul monastery , demolished from 1729. Foundation walls of the provost house, the building history and excavation documentation of the eastern churchyard next to the church of St. Moriz , medieval and early modern ceramics, play equipment, household items, jewelry and Coins are documented in the Kirchhof excavation museum. (Location)
  • the presumed predecessor buildings and underground parts of the city fortifications of the 13th century, some of which have been preserved above ground, of the medieval core city between the former provost and the Judentor (location)
  • the presumed predecessor buildings and presumable underground parts of the city fortifications of the 13th century between the former provost and the Judentor (location)
  • the underground parts of the late medieval Steintorvorstadt (location)
  • the underground parts of the late medieval Ketch suburb (location)
  • the underground parts of the city fortifications of the late medieval Ketschenvorstadt (location), some of which have been preserved above ground
  • the underground parts of the Church of St. Salvator (Lage)
  • the underground parts of the late medieval Jewish suburb (location)
  • the underground parts and previous structures of the Judenbrücke (location)
  • the underground parts of the late medieval Steinwegvorstadt (location)
  • the underground parts of the former city fortifications of the late medieval Steinwegvorstadt (location)
  • the underground parts and previous buildings of the Holy Cross Church (location)
  • the underground parts of the former infirmary chapels St. Nikolaus (location)

Outside the core city

  • Ditch work of prehistoric times (location)
  • Neolithic settlement (location)

Bertelsdorf

Callenberg

Tower hill in the Callenberger Forest
  • Previous findings and underground parts of Callenberg Castle from the Middle Ages and modern times (location)
  • Medieval predecessor buildings of the castle's farm yard (location)
  • A small tower hill in the form of a moated castle is suspected on the island of the Kropfweiher. Pottery from the high and late Middle Ages was found on the bank, near a courtyard desert. (Location)

Coburg Forest

  • On the Festungsberg underground parts of the medieval castle and the modern fortress with predecessor buildings since the high Middle Ages as well as settlements from the early Neolithic, the Urnfield, Hallstatt and early Latène times and high medieval body graves (location)
  • On the Fürwitz a hilltop settlement from the Latène period and fortifications, probably from the 10th century and the high Middle Ages (location)

Creidlitz

  • Open-air station of the Paleolithic and Mesolithic, located on the Hasenstein (location)
  • Settlement of prehistoric times, located at Hahnwiese (location)

Ketch Village

  • A medieval tower hill, probably a small, fortified ministerial seat with a diameter of seven meters was demolished in 1934 on Gustav-Hirschfeld-Ring (behind the clinic). Glazed and unglazed ceramics, stone rubble, animal bones and iron nails were found. (Location)

Lützelbuch

  • Archaeological findings and finds as well as underground parts of the former medieval and modern manor (location)
  • Neolithic settlement near the manor (location)

Neuhof and Neershof

  • Archaeological findings and finds as well as medieval predecessor buildings and underground parts of Neuhof Palace (location)

News

  • Predecessor buildings from the late Middle Ages and underground parts of the Church of St. Matthew (location)

Seidmannsdorf

Scheuerfeld

  • a settlement of prehistoric and early historical times on Marterweg (location)
  • a presumably open-air station from the Mesolithic and Neolithic settlement on Schmiedsgasse (location)
  • the medieval predecessor of the church built in 1832/34 (location)
  • a probably largely leveled tower hill from the Middle Ages as well as underground parts of the former early modern castle on Nikolaus-Zech-Straße (location)
  • the underground parts and predecessor buildings of the Eichhof , occupied since 1440, and underground parts of the Eichhof Castle (location)
  • an open-air station of the Mesolithic near Eichhof Castle (location)
  • a settlement of prehistoric times on Bayernstrasse (location)

Desert maple

  • Archaeological findings and finds as well as medieval predecessor buildings in the area of ​​the manor (location)
  • Oval moat from prehistoric times to the west of the manor (location)

Construction, architects and builders

  • Eduard Amend (* 1876 in Coburg; † 1935 ibid.), Master mason, master builder.
    Buildings: Hahnweg 104/106, Malmedystraße 2, extension Marienstraße 9, Pilgramsroth 7, 9, 12, 14, 16.
  • Carl Bauer (* 1878 in Neustadt near Coburg , † 1954 in Kronach ), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Callenberger Straße 4, together with Johannes Köhler: Callenberger Straße 5, Viktoriastraße 3, Weichengereuth 1, 2, 3 and Marschberg 1, 3, 5 (were demolished for the Frankenbrücke), renovation of Oberer Bürglaß 7.
  • Max von Berg, architect.
    Buildings: Eupenstrasse 48, interior of the Church of Our Lady , Chapel Weiherstrasse 9.
  • August Berger (* 1860 in Teichdorf ; † 1947 in Hildburghausen ), architect and building contractor.
    Buildings: Bahnhofstrasse 10/12 , Hintere Kreuzgasse 1, Hohe Strasse 28, Ketschengasse 22, 24, Kleine Johannisgasse 9, Mohrenstrasse 36, Nordlehne 1/3 ( Klingenburg ), Queckbrunngasse 11/12, Raststrasse 5 ( former Greif & Schlick bicycle factory ) , Sally-Ehrlich-Strasse 2, Seidmannsdorfer Strasse 1/3, 22, Weichengereuth 50 / 50a, Gut Birkenmoor residential building .
  • Arthur Bergmann (* 1883 in Chemnitz , † 1961 in Eisenach ), architect.
    Buildings: Adamiberg 1, Bahnhofstrasse 20, Bergstrasse 20, Hohe Strasse 19, facade Kleine Johannisgasse 8, together with Fritz Bergmann: Modification Mohrenstrasse 3, modification Mohrenstrasse 38.
  • Max Böhme (* 1870 in Zeitz ; † 1925 in Coburg), city architect.
    Buildings: Entrance building Alfred-Sauerteig-Anlage 1 ( Volksbad ), Bamberger Straße 2, together with Carl Kleemann: Gustav-Freytag-Weg 23, building and design Hinterer Glockenberg 3 / 3a / 3b / 4 / 4a ( cemetery ), Heilig-Kreuz -Schule, renovation Heiligkreuzstraße 28, increase Schillerplatz 3, Schleifanger 1 ( Heilig-Kreuz-Schule ), together with Heinecke: Spitalgasse 19 ( former department store ), Steinweg 5/7 ( bank building ), renovation Uferstraße 4 ( municipal utilities ), riverside facilities and Bridges on the Itz, reconstruction of the town hall (Markt 1), Kleiner Rosengarten, Plattenäcker and Himmelsacker waterworks.
  • Brockardt Coburg , master builder family (until 1945): Johann Martin Andreas Brockardt, Bernhard Brockardt, Sophie Brockardt, Ernst Brockardt, Paul Brockardt (government builder).
    Buildings: Albertsplatz 5 / 5a , Blumenstrasse 7, extension of Festungshof 1 ( Hotel Festungshof ), Festungsstrasse 9b ( former Institute Wilhelmshöhe ), Heiligkreuzstrasse 8, Hohe Strasse 12, 16, Hohe Strasse 30 , Hügelstrasse 2, renovation Judengasse 6, renovation Judengasse 31 , 33, 50, 56, Kanalstraße 3, Ketschendorfer Straße 5, Ketschengasse 43, Kleine Johannisgasse 8, Kleine Rosenau 7, Lossaustraße 5, Löwenstraße 17, 20, 22, 24, Metzgergasse 2, increase in Mohrenstraße 3, Mohrenstraße 4, 6, Mühldamm 6, 18, remodeling Mühlgasse 9, Nägleinsgasse 5, adding new floors to Neuer Weg 5, Obere Anlage 2, Obere Klinge 5, 5a, 5d, extension to Oberer Bürglaß 2/4 ( formerly Palais Kyrill ), Oberer Bürglaß 32, Sally-Ehrlich-Straße 10 ( Sally Ehrlich's former home ), Scharnhorststraße 2/4/6/8, Sonntagsanger 5 / 5a, 8, 9/10, 16 / 16a, Spitalgasse 4, 29, Steintor 4, Steinweg 30, 62, Untere Klinge extension 2, lower blade 10, Weichengereuth 12, 14.
  • Paul Brockardt (born January 8, 1882 in Coburg, † 1941 in Prague ), government architect.
    Buildings: Scharnhorststrasse 2-8 ( Brockardt Block ).
  • Friedrich (Fritz) Christ (* 1858 in Weitramsdorf ; † 1925), basket maker, building contractor, real estate agent.
    Buildings: Judenberg, Christenstrasse, Kasernenstrasse 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d.
  • Reinhard Claaßen (* 1886 in Norden (East Frisia) , † 1960 in Coburg), architect.
    Buildings: Reconstruction of Callenberg Castle, Elsässer Strasse 8, 9 ( formerly Herzogl. Administration ), 10, Vocational School Kanalstrasse, Lange Gasse 28, Steinweg 1, 3, Dr.-Martin-Luther-Kirche in Creidlitz, reconstruction Nicolaus-Zech-Strasse 2 ( Evangelical Lutheran parish church Scheuerfeld ).
  • August Eckardt (* 1877 in Rohrbach , † 1960 in Coburg), master bricklayer, master builder.
    Buildings: Ketschengasse 23, renovation Löwenstraße 15a, Löwenstraße 17a, 19 (construction management), Spitalgasse 30, Steinweg 21, 57, 60, Theaterplatz 7.
  • Bernhard Felber, probably from Chemnitz , master builder. Detectable in Coburg since 1868.
    Buildings: Goethestraße 5, 7, conversion Herrngasse 19, Melanchthonstraße 12, Rosenauer Straße 3, 5, 9, 11, Steinweg 20/22, conversion Unterer Bürglaß 5/7, Zinkenwehr 5, 7.
  • Vinzenz Fischer-Birnbaum (* 1798 in Hosterwitz ; † 1879 in Coburg), master builder, theater architect, honorary citizen of the city of Coburg in 1851.
    Buildings: Allee 1 ( former forester's house ), 2, Festungsstraße 1 ( St. Augustin Church ), renovation of Schloßplatz 5 / 5a / 5b ( formerly Palais Edinburgh , now IHK Coburg ), plans for Schloßplatz 6 ( formerly Herzogl. Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha'isches Hoftheater, now Landestheater Coburg ) and Hinterer Glockenberg 3 / 3a / 3b / 4 / 4a ( Cemetery ).
  • Friedrich Francke (* 1824 in Saalfeld , † 1855 in Coburg), master bricklayer, master builder.
    Buildings: Albertsplatz 6, Bahnhofstraße 2, 11, 22, 26, Große Johannisgasse 6, Heiligkreuzstraße 35, Lossaustraße 8, 9, 10, Löwenstraße 13, Seidmannsdorfer Stfraße 32 and the tomb in the cemetery (Hinterer Glockenberg).
  • Max Frommann (* 1860 in Coburg; † 1931 there), building officer.
    Buildings: Alexandrinenstrasse 14 ( Villa Löwenherz ), Hohe Strasse 4, facade Kasernenstrasse 14 ( formerly Glühlampenwerk Hellum ), Ketschendorfer Strasse 11 ( Villa Wunderlich ), Marienberg 3, shop fitting Unterer Bürglaß 6, together with his father Tobias Frommann: Weichengereuth 25, expansion Weir 5.
  • Tobias Frommann (* 1833 in Coburg; † 1883 there), master carpenter, industrialist (steam sawmill in Goethestrasse 6).
    Buildings: Alexandrinenstraße 11, conservatory Am Hofbräuhaus 2, conversion Bahnhofstrasse 4, remodeling fortress Straße 5, renewal pavilion School Lane 7, remodeling Heiligkreuzstraße 15, conversion Herrngasse 3, roof expansion posterior cruciate Gasse 3 ( Mansion ), facade Judengasse 6, remodeling Ketschengasse 28, conversion Ketschengasse 30 , Lange Gasse 23, extension Marienberg 3, conversion Mühlgasse 3, extension Oberer Bürglaß 7, conversion Seidmannsdorfer Straße 32, conversion Spitalgasse 12, facade Viktoriastraße 10, conversion top floor Webergasse 21, together with his son Max Frommann: Weichengereuth 25.
  • Paul Gehrlicher (* 1831 in Neustadt near Coburg, † 1873 in Coburg), master bricklayer,.
    Buildings: Adamiberg 8, Albertsplatz 1, 7 ( former Stadtknechtshaus ), Ernstplatz 1, 2, Festungsstraße 5, 6, Goethestraße 11, conversion of Ketschengasse 11, Kleine Rosengasse 7.
  • Karl Daniel Julius Girtanner (* 1819 in Schnepfenthal ; † 1908 in Coburg), ducal district architect.
    Buildings: together with Wilhelm Streib: Allee 7 ( former hospital ), Ernstplatz 5, Gaiser Straße 14 ( former school building ) in Lützelbuch. 1892 Technical acceptance of the Coburg – Bad Rodach railway line .
  • Reinhold Gräfe (* 1846 in Hainspitz , † 1903 in Coburg), master builder.
    Buildings: Rosenauer Straße 10, Viktoriastraße 14.
  • Carl Grams (* 1852 in Coburg; † 1922 there), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Callenberger Strasse 70, extension Falkeneggstrasse 12 ( servants' house Falkenegg Castle ), Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 47 ( school building ), Glender Strasse 2, Glockenberg 2a, shop fitting Herrngasse 9, Hohe Strasse 2, Löwenstrasse 18, Mohrenstrasse 21, 23, 25, 27.
  • Andreas Immler, master carpenter.
    Buildings: Gartenstraße 4 (for yourself), Gerbergasse 1, extension Steinweg 54.
  • Georg Kempf (* 1877 in Coburg; † 1944), ducal court architect.
    Buildings: Extension Albertsplatz 6, conversion Allee 2, facade Bahnhofstraße 5, Callenberger Straße 35, conversion Glockenberg 5 / 5a, Hahnweg 18, conversion Herrngasse 9, conversion Judengasse 4 ( former Hotel Thüringer Hof ), Kasernenstraße 14, extension Löwenstraße 29, extension Mohrenstrasse 4, Mohrenstrasse 5 / 5a, Neuer Weg 7, Rosenauer Strasse 4, 98, together with Carl Kleemann: Rosenauer Strasse 100 ( former Scheidmantel brewery ), Spitalgasse 29, Steinweg 20/22.
  • Gustav Keßler (* 1859 in Mühlhausen , † 1937 in Coburg), drawing teacher.
    Buildings: Goethestraße 13, Festungsstraße 9a, extension Festungsstraße 9b, Marienstraße 1, 3, 9, conversion Marschberg 2, 9, Mühldamm 1, conversion Obere Anlage 3.
  • Bernhard Kleemann (* 1845 in Coburg; † 1884 ibid), building inspector.
    Buildings: Ahorner Straße 7, Hohe Straße 12a, Neuer Weg 5, Weichengereuth 12, 12a, 15, Weinstraße.
  • Carl Kleemann (* 1856 in Coburg; † 1902 there), building officer.
    Buildings: front building at Alexandrinenstraße 11, renovation at Am Hofbräuhaus 2, expansion at Am Hofbräuhaus 3 ( former Braumeisterhaus ), plans for Bahnhofstraße 10/12, heightening at Bahnhofstraße 22, Ernstplatz 8, Festungsstraße 10a, together with Max Böhme: Gustav-Freytag-Weg 23, Gymnasiumsgasse 7, Herrngasse 13, Himmelsacker 63, Hintere Kreuzgasse 1, renovation Judengasse 1a, 18, Kasernenstrasse 13, 15, Ketschengasse 22, 24, renovation Kleine Johannisgasse 6, extension Kreuzwehrstraße 2, extension Lossaustraße 10, Löwenstraße 21/23, 25/27 , Mühlgasse 5, Pilgramsroth 5, Rosenauer Straße 2, together with Georg Kempf: Rosenauer Straße 100 ( former Scheidmantel Brewery ), Seidmannsdorfer Straße 5, renovation Seidmannsdorfer Straße 32, Seifartshofstraße 3b, Spitalgasse 3, Weichengereuth 11, Himmelsacker 63 ( Bismarck Tower ).
  • Johannes Köhler (* 1855 in Ketschendorf ; † 1925 in Coburg), teacher at the building trade school.
    Buildings: together with Carl Bauer: Callenberger Straße 5, 24, 26, 28, conversion Hambacher Weg 12 / 12a ( formerly porcelain and later wicker factory ), conversion at Hintere Kreuzgasse 13 ( formerly school ), Hohe Straße 43, Judengasse 5, Lossaustraße 4a, conversion Ketschengasse 39, Mohrenstraße 10, 29, 32, Obere Leopoldstraße 5, conversion Park 1 ( formerly Ducal Marienschule ), extension Parkstraße 2/4 ( Ketschendorf Castle ), Spitalgasse 29, Webergasse 35; Hambacher Weg 5 in Creidlitz.
  • Hermann Kühn (* 1839 in Saalfeld, † 1897 in Coburg), master bricklayer, master builder.
    Buildings: Alexandrinenstrasse 12, renovation Ernstplatz 6, Gemüsemarkt 1, Gerbergasse 1, Goethestrasse 13, Kanalstrasse 5, Löwenstrasse 12, 28, Mohrenstrasse 3, 12, 14, 16, 18, Rosenauer Strasse 23, Rosengasse 16, Seifartshofstrasse 25, Steingasse 16, Steinweg 31, lower blade extension 2.
  • Christoph Kürschner (* 1883 in Coburg; † 1954 there), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Hinterer Glockenberg 8g ( chapel ), Hinterer Glockenberg 10, Judengasse 24, facade Judengasse 36, renovation Judengasse 56, Kanonenweg 4, Rosenauer Straße 3, Untere Anlage 1.
  • Friedrich (Fritz) Kürschner (* 1847 in Coburg; † 1913 there), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Blumenstrasse 5, Judengasse 36 ( Gasthaus Weisses Roß ), renovation Judengasse 44, Karlstrasse 2, 4, Kleine Judengasse 3 (for yourself), Spitalgasse 28, Steinweg 58, Webergasse 21, Hohenlohebrücke as civil engineering contractor.
  • Carl Otto Leheis (* 1866 in Chrieschwitz ; † 1921 in Wüstendittersdorf ), master builder, in Coburg since 1892.
    Buildings: Adamistraße 2a, Alexandrinenstraße 1-3, Alexandrinenstraße 4 ( Sonnenhaus ), Bahnhofstraße 17 (for yourself), 36, Glockenberg 6a. Hahnweg 96, 98/100, 108/110, workshop building Hinterm Marstall 3, Kanonenweg 50, 52, Ketschendorfer Straße 5, expansion Ketschendorfer Straße 6, Lossaustraße 3a ( former Leh doll factory ), 15, Löwenstraße 15, Marienstraße 2, 4, 6 , 8, 9, Mohrenstraße 9a / b , Mohrenstraße 14a, Raststraße 2/4, Sally-Ehrlich-Straße 4/6, Seifartshofstraße 8, Viktoriastraße 9 ( former hotel ), Weichengereuth 6, 7 (demolished for the construction of the Frankenbrücke) .
  • Jacob Lindner (* 1810 in Coburg; † 1889 in Coburg), theater master, architect, ducal building inspector.
    Buildings: Bahnhofsplatz 2, stairway Glockenberg 5 / 5a, conversion Gymnasiumsgasse 5, conversion Steinweg 68, 70, other buildings: together with Wilhelm Streib: conversion of the city wall (decorative wall) in the avenue and lower enclosure, cemetery wall of the Salvatorfriedhof, Oberer Bürglaß 4 ( Bürglaßbrücke) ).
  • Julius Martinet (* 1829 in Mittenwald ; † 1899 in Coburg), architect, city planner.
    Buildings: Albertsplatz 1 ( Lutherschule ), Bahnhofstraße 18 ( formerly Augusten-Stift ), 24, draft for the war memorial Ernstplatz, reconstruction of Ernstplatz 12 ( witch tower ), wall and funeral hall Hinterer Glockenberg 3 / 3a / 3b / 4 / 4a ( cemetery ), Glockenberg 7 ( formerly Herzogl. Forestry and Domain Office ), Hohe Straße 30 , Löwenstraße 28 ( Rückertschule ), conversion of Markt 6 , Oberer Bürglaß 34/36 ( formerly Reichspost ), Pfarrgasse 2 ( formerly Vicariate House ), Rosengasse 12, Salzmarkt 3, Schlachthofstraße 1, Schützenstraße 1a / 2 ( Angerturnhallen ), Steinweg 4.
  • Christian Meyer (* 1876 in Neuses near Coburg ), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Bahnhofstrasse 25, 27, Callenberger Strasse 2, Blumenstrasse 19, 21, 23, 25, shop fitting Judengasse 17, Kalenderweg 2, 4, 6, 8a, Schleifweg 5, 6, 7.
  • Ferdinand Meyer, architect.
    Buildings: Laube Adamiberg 2, Callenberger Straße 69 (for yourself), Friedrich-Rückert-Straße 1, Friedrich-Rückert-Straße 8-10 ( gatehouse of the Mittelmühle ), Gustav-Freytag-Weg 18, together with Johann Michael Probst: Lossaustraße 4th
  • Georg Meyer (* 1834 in Coburg; † 1907 in Coburg), master bricklayer, teacher at the building trade school, building officer.
    Buildings: Conversion Goethestraße 11, Grafengasse 7, Gymnasiumsgasse 1, conversion Herrngasse 15, Judengasse 30, Ketschgasse 7 ( Münzmeisterhaus ), Ketschengasse 7b, Löwenstraße 29 (for yourself), conversion Markt 5 ( spring house ), Markt 7/8, conversion Markt 9, 11, Obere Anlage 1, Obere Klinge 5b, Park 1 ( formerly Herzogliche Marienschule ), Pfarrgasse 1, Steintor 2, Steinweg 24, 45, Untere Anlage 2, Untere Klinge 3, Webergasse 23, renovation Zinkenwehr 5.
  • Hans Münscher (* 1870 in Langenhain , † 1922 in Coburg), master builder, building contractor.
    Buildings: Blumenstrasse 5, Haußmannstrasse 1, Ketschendorfer Strasse 23, 48, 50, 52, Kreuzwehrstrasse 1a, Mohrenstrasse 38, Obere Leopoldstrasse 12, Seidmannsdorfer Strasse 19.
  • Johann Michael Probst (* 1854 Hahnmühle near Callenberg Castle ; † 1928 in Coburg), master mason.
    Buildings: Heiligkreuzstraße 28, Kreuzwehrstraße 2, together with Ferdinand Meyer: Lossaustraße 4, Löwenstraße 11, 16, Mohrenstraße 24, 28, 30, Mühlgasse 2, Federsgarten between Mohrenstraße and Mühlgasse, Seifartshofstraße 21 ( former boarding school ), Webergasse 31.
  • Christian Renner (* 1876 in Stöppach , † 1947 in Coburg), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Remodeling Gerbergasse 7, Hahnweg 44, Oberer Bürglaß 18, Pfarrgasse 1.
  • Martin Renner (* 1864 in Breitenau ; † 1926 in Coburg), master bricklayer.
    Buildings: Gartenstrasse 3, Kanonenweg 13, Mohrenstrasse 31, 33, Oberer Bürglaß 20, Spitalgasse 28, Steintor 1.
  • Max Roth (* 1880; † 1932 in Coburg), master bricklayer, master builder, engineer.
    Buildings: Conversion Mohrenstrasse 1, Mohrenstrasse 1a, Steinweg 18, Webergasse 26.
  • Georg Konrad Rothbart (* 1817 in Roth ; † 1896 in Coburg), painter and master builder.
    Buildings: Veste Coburg: inner courtyard and Luther chapel, Burgschänke, gate tower, stone bridge to the main gate, Schloßplatz 3 ( former riding hall, now studio stage of the State Theater ), reconstruction of Callenberg Castle (lower castle), Am Hofbräuhaus 1 / 1a / 3 ( formerly. Hofbrauhaus ), Glockenberg 3/4, crypt chapel Hinterer Glockenberg 3 / 3a / 3b / 4 / 4a ( cemetery ), Festungsstraße 1 ( St. Augustin , Fürstengruft), Neustadter Straße 34/36 ( manor Gut Neudörfles ), conversion of Schloßplatz 5 / 5a / 5b ( formerly Palais Edinburgh, now IHK Coburg ), renovation Neuhofer Straße 8a / 10 ( Schloss Neuhof ), Parkstraße 2/4 ( Schloss Ketschendorf ), Parkstraße 7, Allee 5 ( former boarding school ), Kürengrund 80 ( Ernstfarm ).
  • Hans Rothbart (* 1846 in Coburg; † 1904 ibid), architect.
    Buildings: Albertsplatz 5 / 5a , Bergstraße 4, Casimirstraße 11, Ernstplatz 1, Festungsstraße 2a, 4, Glockenberg 8, Goethestraße 13 (partially), Judengasse 43, 45, Lossaustraße 16 (for yourself), Mohrenstraße 15a, Mühlgasse 12, Obere Klinge 1 / 1b / 1c ( formerly Villa Anker, later the administrative building of the rural hospital ), Rosenauer Straße 15, conversion of Schloßplatz 5 / 5a / 5b ( formerly Palais Edinburgh, now IHK Coburg ), Sonntagsanger 16, Steinweg 21, Untere Klinge 2, Webergasse 32, Weichengereuth 26.
  • Paul Schaarschmidt (* 1874 in Lengenfeld (Saxony) , † 1955 in Coburg), architect, builder.
    Buildings: Adamiberg 1 ( Dreyers-Villa ), Adamistraße 6b-6d, Ahorner Straße 6, conversion of Bahnhofsplatz 2 ( formerly Hotel Reichsgraf ), Bahnhofstraße 15 ( Villa Sophie ), conversion of Ernstplatz 12 ( Hexenturm ), conversion of Festungsstraße 5, Gartenstraße 1, Hohe Straße 35, Judengasse 54 , Ketschendorfer Straße 44, renovation Mohrenstraße 23, Obere Klinge 9 ( formerly Villa Ida ), Probstgrund 14a, Rosenauer Straße 27 ( formerly Escora bodice factory ), Seifartshofstraße 6, Spitalgasse 16, Steinweg 33, Mohrenbrücke and Theaterplatz 10/11 (as a building contractor).
  • Adolf Schuster, Belgian court architect.
    Buildings: Ernstplatz 1, 2 ( former American Consulate General ), 3, Metzgergasse 14.
  • August Sommer (* 1839 in Coburg; † 1921 there), sculptor.
    Buildings: Figure for Herzog-Alfred-Brunnen ( Hofgarten ), reliefs for Atelier Friedrich Lütkemeyer (Mohrenweg), bronze statue of Prince von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld (Theaterplatz).
  • Friedrich Streib (* 1781 in Bruchsal , † 1852 in Coburg), court architect.
    Buildings: Ketschendorfer Straße 8, conversion Nicolaus-Zech-Straße 2 ( Evangelical Lutheran parish church Scheuerfeld ), rectory (Seidmannsdorfer Straße 277) in Seidmannsdorf.
  • Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Streib (* 1822 in Coburg; † 1888 there), court architect.
    Buildings: together with Julius Girtanner: Allee 7 ( formerly hospital ), Am Hofbräuhaus 2 (for himself). Falkeneggstrasse 10/12 / 12a ( Falkenegg Castle ), Goethestrasse 1, Herrngasse 5, Ketschengasse 8, Ketschengasse 54, Evang.-Luth. Parish church Nikolaus-Zech-Straße 2, Spitalgasse 12 (demolished), reconstruction of lower plant 2 ( bear tower, so-called old tower ), lower plant 3, lower Realschulstraße 2 ( former secondary school, today Gymnasium Ernestinum ), together with Jacob Lindner: Zinnenmauer in the avenue, courtyard garden , Eckardtsturm , cemetery (Hinterer Glockenberg), base for monument Ernst I. on the Schloßplatz .
  • Johann Strobel (* 1873 in Lützelbuch ; † 1961 in Coburg), architect and builder.
    Buildings: Ahorner Strasse 2, renovation at Bahnhofstrasse 24, Casimirstrasse 6, Glockenberg 7a, extension at Lutherstrasse 22, Rosengasse 8, Steinweg 34, as well as working on the new construction of the train station on Lossaustrasse.
  • Richard Teufel (* 1897 in Coburg; † 1958 there), architect, art historian.
    Buildings: Conversion and extension Alexandrinenstraße 8, conversion Löwenstraße 12, Rummental 30, Steingasse 11.
  • Carl Wetter (* 1847 in Siptenfelde , † 1922 in Coburg), master builder.
    Buildings: Allee 4a, expansion of Gerbergasse 6, Kreuzwehrstrasse 9, 11, 13, 13a, 15, Raststrasse 6/8, renovation of Zinkenwehr 5.
  • Carl Wetter & Reinhold Gräfe, construction business.
    Buildings: Bahnhofstraße 6 ( Bahnhofsapotheke ), Heiligkreuzstraße 2, Lohgraben 16, Seifartshofstraße 34, Steinweg 27, 57, conversion of Unterer Bürglaß 12.

See also

literature

  • Denis André Chevalley: Upper Franconia . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (=  Monuments in Bavaria . Volume IV ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52395-3 .
  • Peter Morsbach, Otto Titz: City of Coburg (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume IV.48 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-87490-590-X .
  • Wolfgang Bleiweis, Stefan Goldschmidt, Bernd Schmitt: Railway in the Coburg country . Resch-Druck, Coburg 1996, ISBN 3-9802748-4-5 (chapters "Coburg Pbf", "Coburg Gbf", "Bahnbetriebswerk").
  • Stefan Nöth (Ed.): Coburg 1056-2006 . Wikomm-Verlag, Stegaurach 2006, ISBN 3-86652-082-4 (A foray through 950 years of city and country history).
  • RF Ludloff: Coburg anno 1629 . U. Roßteutscher publishing house, Coburg 1905 (truth and poetry).
  • Dr. Hanns Thormann: Growing and becoming . Verlag Coburger Tageblatt, Coburg 1956 (Coburg city and country in nine centuries).
  • Dr. Rudolf Brückner: The Coburg Veste . Verlag A. Roßteutscher, Coburg 1924 (chapter "Old Coburg Buildings").
  • Walter Schneider: Coburg . Gronenberg-Verlag, Gummersbach 1980, ISBN 3-88265-055-9 (A look into the past).
  • Werner A. Widmann, Dr. Hellmut Worch: This is Coburg . Heinrich Seewald-Verlag, Stuttgart 1983, ISBN 3-512-00663-9 .
  • Renate Reuther: Villas in Coburg . Veste-Verlag Roßteuscher, Coburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-925431-31-9 .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Act on the Protection and Care of Monuments (Monument Protection Act - DSchG) (PDF; 143 kB).
  2. Morsbach / Titz p. XI.
  3. Morsbach / Titz S. CXXIX – CXXXIV.
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w List of monuments for Coburg (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation

Remarks

  1. This list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. The latter can be viewed on the Internet as a PDF using the link given under web links and is also mapped in the Bavarian Monument Atlas . Even these representations, although they are updated daily by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation , do not always and everywhere reflect the current status. Therefore, the presence or absence of an object in this list or in the Bavarian Monument Atlas does not guarantee that it is currently a registered monument or not. The Bavarian List of Monuments is also an information directory. The monument property - and thus the legal protection - is defined in Art. 1 of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act (BayDSchG) and does not depend on the mapping in the monument atlas or the entry in the Bavarian monument list. Objects that are not listed in the Bavarian Monument List can also be monuments if they meet the criteria according to Art. 1 BayDSchG. Early involvement of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation according to Art. 6 BayDSchG is therefore necessary in all projects.

Web links

Commons : Monuments in Coburg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
This version was added to the selection of informative lists and portals on July 14, 2010 .