Zurglburg residence

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Zurglburg residence

The Zurglburg residence is a protected architectural monument of the market town of Lana in South Tyrol .

history

In 1657 Hildebrand von Parth, who was married to Maria Schmid de Fabris, the daughter of Lana Christoph Schmid's caretaker, freed the Zurglburg court from the rulership of the Rott monastery in Swabia . From then on a residence , it also bore the name Zurglburg as a predicate. Around 1670 his heir, Helena von Parth-Ampossegg, married Martin Gruber and brought the property to the Gruber family. The latter was raised to the nobility in 1677 with the predicate "von und zu Zurglburg". In 1694 the house was built from scratch, and Ms. Helena Parthin von Ampossegg had the "right to peer and justice". On March 8, 1761, the later Franciscan and theological writer Philibert Gruber von Zurglburg , who worked as a teacher of rhetoric at the Franciscan high school in Bozen , was born in the property . In 1779, Joseph Bartholome von Gruber appears as the owner of the Zurglburg court.

description

The building has four corner oriel turrets. Inside there is a central hall and side rooms on the second floor, which are furnished with rich stucco ceilings from the end of the 17th century.

Web links

Commons : Zurglburg (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. Josef Weingartner : The art monuments of South Tyrol: Bd. 1. T. The burgrave office. 2. T. Vintschgau . E. Hözel, 1930 ( google.de [accessed October 22, 2017]).
  2. ^ Archives for Austrian History . From the Imperial and Royal Court and State Printing Office, 1911 ( google.de [accessed October 25, 2017]).
  3. Constantin von Wurzbach : Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich: containing the life sketches of the memorable people who lived in the imperial state and its crown lands from 1750 to 1850. Füger - Gsellhofer . Zamarski, 1859 ( google.de [accessed October 22, 2017]).
  4. ^ Bavarian Academy of Sciences Historical Commission: General German biography: Gruber-Hassencamp . Duncker & Humblot, 1968 ( google.de [accessed October 22, 2017]).
  5. ^ Archives for Austrian History . From the Imperial and Royal Court and State Printing Office, 1911 ( google.de [accessed October 25, 2017]).

Coordinates: 46 ° 36 ′ 51.9 ″  N , 11 ° 9 ′ 13.7 ″  E