Andreas Schröder (carpenter)

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Marktstrasse 15
Bockstrasse 11

Andreas Schröder (born January 14 or January 22, 1628 in Quedlinburger Neustadt ; † April 6, 1677 ibid) was a German carpenter. He created several surviving today and the UNESCO World Heritage Site belonging timbered houses in Quedlinburg .

Life

On September 24, 1650, Schröder married Salome , "Wulf Götzens filia", in the old town of Quedlinburg , probably the daughter of master carpenter Wulf Götze .

Andreas Schröder is known as the master builder for 20 buildings in Quedlinburg, which were built between 1656 and 1672. He is believed to be the master builder for a building in Halberstadt . The houses he built are mostly representative buildings with three floors and ten containers . The infills were made with bricks. As decorations, he used pyramid beam heads , flat ship throats on the sleepers and parapets. Parapet struts are used as structural elements. Between 1662 and 1685 he used the half-timbered figure of the half man . Andrew's crosses and diamond crosses are the exception, but they appear in abundance in the Halberstadt building.

After his death, his widow dissolved his company through bankruptcy proceedings .

buildings

The following buildings by Schröder are known:

In addition, the construction of the house at Hohe Straße 25 by Andreas Schröder in 1672 is suspected.

literature

  • Hans-Hartmut Schauer, The urban monument Quedlinburg and its half-timbered buildings , Verlag für Bauwesen Berlin 1990, ISBN 3-345-00233-7 , pages 70, 73, 84 f.

Individual evidence

  1. Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 149
  2. Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 149