List of monuments in Coburg / T

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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

This part of the list of monuments in Coburg describes the listed objects of the following Coburger Platz:

Theater square

ensemble description photo
Theaterplatz 50 ° 15 ′ 35.17 ″  N , 10 ° 57 ′ 59.23 ″  E
The Ensemble Altstadt Coburg with suburbs, special area 13 Theaterplatz / Gemüsemarkt is bounded by Theaterplatz 1–11, Vegetable Market 1–5, Steinweg 4, 6, 8, 10, 16 (rear building), Oberer Bürglaß 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, Unterer Bürglaß 1, 3, 5, 7 and Schloßplatz 6.
Since 1875, the square west of the former court theater has been known as the theater square . The razing of the city wall and the filling in of the moat in 1815 had resulted in the building of the theater in 1840. In 2007 the theater square was converted into a bus rendezvous square, for which part of the Josias garden was sacrificed. The ensemble is bordered on the northeast side by the State Theater and the Josias Garden with the Bürglaß-Schlösschen . The adjacent vegetable market is characterized by a simple development. The bank building of the former Coburg Bank forms a striking conclusion on the western side .
MAN city bus of the SÜC at Theaterplatz.jpg
Street description photo
Theaterplatz o.Nr. At the northern end of the Theaterplatz there is a monument to the general Prince Friedrich Josias from 1911, which was designed by the Coburg sculptor August Sommer . In the 1950s, the memorial and base were moved to the north to the edge of the garden ( Josias garden ) belonging to the Bürglaß-Schlösschen and rotated slightly in the process. In the course of the redevelopment of the square in 2007, the monument and base were restored and re-erected at the original location. Coburg Prince Josias Monument.jpg
Theaterplatz o.Nr. The boundary stone with a Mohrenkopf and the year 1869 is embedded in a retaining wall. It was probably on the Eckardtsberg , on the boundary of Seidmannsdorf . Coburg-Theaterplatz-Grenzstein1.jpg
Theaterplatz o.Nr. The Mohrenkopf relief, around 1705, comes from the former Hahn River Bridge. It is embedded in a retaining wall. Coburg-Theaterplatz-Grenzstein2.jpg
( Theaterplatz 1 ) (The core of the three-storey corner house on Salzmarkt consists of a two-storey building with a basement, which was built before 1730. In 1844, the merchant Ernst Wilhelm Mevius was extensively converted into a classicist house. In 1905, a shop was installed on the ground floor for the master shoemaker Ernst In 1928 the shop was expanded and a second one was set up, and the roof was expanded in 1994. The gable roof house has a seven-axis facade on its eaves side at Theaterplatz, which has a three-axis central projection with a dwarf house and a flat triangular gable in the middle above the house entrance Windows are narrow and high. There is a cornice strip to visually separate the first and second floors.)
The building is no longer listed on October 30, 2013.
Coburg-Theaterplatz1.jpg
Theaterplatz 4a The four-storey corner house on Kleine Johannisgasse was built in 1732 in the late classical style for the secretary Johann Martin Sommer. In 1862, arched windows were installed on the ground floor and in 1871 the attic was extended. In 1875 the house entrance was rearranged from Kleine Johannisgasse to Theaterplatz and a corner shop was set up. In 1905, the corner shop was converted into a wine tavern for the purveyor to the court, Ludwig Oertel, which has been called the Künstlerklause since 1949. The representative hipped roof house has an eight-axis facade on Theaterplatz, which has a two-axis central projection with a three-axis dwarf house in the middle. Cornice strips exist above the ground floor and below the third floor. The three-storey corner bay window facing the Schlossplatz is extensively decorated, including on the parapets with depictions of Diana and Venus on the shell. Coburg-Theaterplatz4a.jpg
Theaterplatz 6 The core of the three-storey residential and guest house consists of a three-storey building from the 17th century with a basement. Neoclassical changes followed in 1794 and an extensive renovation in 1904 for master craftsman Heinrich Schnetter. Among other things, the house entrance portal was relocated and the ground floor was redesigned. In 1912 the ground floor was converted into a restaurant and the cellar was expanded. The six-axis eaves-sided house has a gable roof, which has a two-axis dwelling in the middle of the street front and a dormer on each side. The facade, a plastered half-timbered construction on the upper floors and massive on the ground floor. Coburg-Theaterplatz6.jpg
Theaterplatz 7 The core of the three-storey residential and guest house consists of a three-storey building with a basement, which was built before 1730. In 1911, August Eckardt carried out extensive renovations for the restorer Theobald Höhn. Among other things, the stairwell was relocated, the ground floor was completely redesigned and the attic was expanded. The eaves side house originally consisted of two houses that were united. The left half is characterized by four window axes and two dormer windows, the right part is three-axis and has a dwelling at the top. The facade, a plastered half-timbered construction on the upper floors and massive on the ground floor, is structured horizontally through the window arrangement and parapet cornices. Coburg-Theaterplatz7.jpg
Theaterplatz 10/11
Coburger Bank
The bank building was built in 1916 for the Coburg club based on plans by the Chemnitz architects Alfred Zapp and Erich Basarke . In keeping with a tradition in bank buildings, Ionic columns, six of which three-quarters the height of the building and arranged on high pedestals , characterize the neo-classicist hipped roof house. Above the columns is an attic floor with small windows. The final roof has a three-axis dormer with semicircular windows and a straight end. Coburg-Theaterplatz10.jpg

References and comments

  1. Picture from the unveiling of the monument in 1911