Rose garden residence (Lana)

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Rose garden residence
Alliance coat of arms of Ferdinand Carl von Sagburg and his wife Maria Helena Campi von Heiligenberg on the outer facade

The Rosengarten residence is a protected architectural monument of the market town of Lana in South Tyrol . The property now houses the local town hall and a music school.

history

The original building was mentioned before 1600. According to a legend, the property got its name because King Laurin's rose garden once stood here. In the middle of the 17th century, the Lords of Sagburg acquired the residence . Ferdinand Karl von Sagburg, who was married to Maria Helena Campi von Heiligenberg, lived in Rosengarten in 1695 and brought the property into its present form. The house passed from the Sagburgers to the Lords of Schöpfer. In the 19th century the kk district court authority was rented there . On May 24th, 1823 the inventor Johann Kravogl was born in the house , whose father was registrar at the regional court in Lana at that time. A plaque on the outside wall reminds of this. Today Rosengarten is the local community center.

description

The baroque building was erected in 1693. An alliance coat of arms from 1695 is placed above the main portal . Inside there is a vaulted hall on the ground floor. The central hall on the first floor is decorated with a stucco ceiling , and several rooms have coffered ceilings .

Web links

Commons : Rosengarten (Lana)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Entry in the monument browser on the website of the South Tyrolean Monuments Office

Individual evidence

  1. The diocese of Trento in general and the four upper deaneries of the German part: Schlanders, Meran, Passeyer and Lana together with the pastoral care stations of the German communities on the Nonsberg in particular . In: The German portion of the Diocese of Trento . Topographically, historically, statistically and archaeologically described by several and published by the associations for Christian art and archeology in Bolzano and Meran. tape 1 . Verlag von A. Weger's Buchhandlung, Brixen 1866, p. 736 ( google.de [accessed on October 22, 2017]).
  2. The Sciliar . Vogelweider, 2006 ( google.de [accessed on October 22, 2017]).
  3. Thomas Bitterli-Waldvogel: South Tyrolean Castle Map . Ed .: South Tyrolean Castle Institute. Frasnelli-Keitsch Publishing Cooperative, Bozen 1995, ISBN 88-85176-12-7 , p. 51 .

Coordinates: 46 ° 36 '59 "  N , 11 ° 8' 39.9"  E