Aschbacherhof (manor house)

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Aschbacherhof
Portal lintel with the alliance coat of arms Flersheim (left) and storm spring from Oppenweiler (right)

Portal lintel with the alliance coat of arms Flersheim (left) and storm spring from Oppenweiler (right)

Data
place Trippstadt
Client Flersheimer
Architectural style Elongated single-storey building with hipped roof, Renaissance
Construction year 1566
Coordinates 49 ° 23 '36.8 "  N , 7 ° 45' 24"  E Coordinates: 49 ° 23 '36.8 "  N , 7 ° 45' 24"  E
Aschbacherhof (Rhineland-Palatinate)
Aschbacherhof

The Aschbacherhof is a castle-like mansion in the hamlet of the same name in the Kaiserslautern district ( Rhineland-Palatinate ).

geography

The hamlet of Aschbacherhof in the valley of the Aschbach is six kilometers north of the local community Trippstadt , to which it belongs. It is also six kilometers to the center of the city of Kaiserslautern in the north, from which the hamlet is separated by the south-eastern part of the Kaiserslautern Reich Forest . The ruins of the early Gothic St. Blasius Church with a striking church tower are located near the manor house .

investment

The mansion, an elongated, single-storey building with a crippled hipped roof , is built in the Renaissance style and shows three portals adorned with the family coat of arms of the Flersheim family . A door lintel bears the year 1566 and an alliance coat of arms Flersheim and Sturmfeder von Oppenweiler . Accordingly, it should go back to the couple Friedrich von Flersheim († 1575) and Amalia Sturmfeder von Oppenweiler. Friedrich von Flersheim was the nephew of the Speyer bishop Philipp von Flersheim . Another stone is inscribed with the inscription 1582.

history

Mentioned as early as 1215, the small village of Aschbach was initially owned by the Wilenstein lordship . A noble family resident in the village sold the property to the von Flersheim family in 1564. The family immediately started building a new representative mansion and completed the construction in 1566. During the Thirty Years War , the settlement was looted and set on fire, only the church ruins and the heavily damaged mansion remained. This was rebuilt, but only a small part of the original village was repopulated. It forms today's district . The hamlet and the manor house were bought in 1719 by the Palatinate Colonel Hunter Baron Ludwig Anton von Hacke (1682–1752). They remained in the possession of his family, who lived at Trippstadt Castle, until the end of the feudal period.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c General Directorate for Cultural Heritage Rhineland-Palatinate (ed.): Informational directory of cultural monuments - District of Kaiserslautern. Mainz 2019, p. 31 (PDF; 5.4 MB).
  2. ^ Genealogical website on Friedrich von Flersheim and Amalia Sturmfeder von Oppenweiler
  3. Local parish of Stelzenberg: Menu sequence Culture & Leisure> Churches> Church of St. Josef. Retrieved November 30, 2011 .