Aschenbrennermarter Hunting Lodge

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The Aschenbrennermarter hunting lodge , also known as the "hunting lodge", is a country-style hunting lodge colony belonging to the Princes of Thurn and Taxis in the Altenthann community in the Upper Palatinate district of Regensburg in Bavaria .

Prince Albert and Princess Margarete von Thurn and Taxis, 1899.

history

The place Aschenbrennermarter is mentioned for the first time before 1840 and was originally a forestry settlement. At the time of the formation of the community (1818) it was not mentioned.

The hunting lodge in country style was from 1893 to 1899, designed by Max Schultze for Prince Albert I von Thurn und Taxis built. The castle is located in the completely fenced, 2800 hectare Princely Thiergarten between Hammermühle , Altenthann, Donaustauf and Brennberg , a local recreation area with wild deer, wild boar, lynx, beavers, otters, black storks and other animals. It was created in 1813 as a hunting forest for the Princes of Thurn and Taxis .

At the hunting lodge Aschenbrennermarter, the Bavarian Prime Minister Franz Josef Strauss collapsed on October 1st, 1988 while hunting deer near Johannes von Thurn und Taxis and died a few days later, on October 3rd, 1988, in the Regensburg hospital of the Merciful Brothers .

Monument protection

The entire complex is under monument protection , both the “hunting lodge” (file no. D-3-75-114-10) and the forestry settlement (file no. D-3-75-114-20). The building description of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation reads:

"Jagdhütte (file no. D-3-75-114-10):

multi-part hunting lodge colony in country house style, 1893–99, probably based on plans by Max Schultze for Prince Albert I of Thurn and Taxis; with equipment; so-called hut, two-storey and stilted gable roof building on a natural stone base, with roof overhang, staircases, shot and shingle, 1893; Chapel, hall building with hipped gable roof on natural stone plinth with shingling and laminated roof turrets with onion hood, 1894/95, 1897 connected to the hut by an elevated and closed corridor; Cavalier building, single-storey saddle roof building with a dwelling, boarded knee floor, shingling and corner veranda, 1894/85; Bowling alley building, one to two-storey structured saddle roof building on natural stone base, with corner pavilions, mid-roofs, bay windows and shingled superstructure, 1894/95; Dining room building, single-storey, shingled gable roof building with corner pavilions and roofs, 1897; Prinzenbau, two-storey, angular, shingled gable roof building with boarded knee floor, flat bay window and balcony, 1899; Kitchen building, single-storey, boarded-up and shingled gable roof with a diaphragm and knee floor, 1893, extension 1898; Wooden shed, single-storey and boarded post construction with gable roof, 1890; Ice house, single-storey and boarded frame construction with pent roof extension, 1902, including the former ice cellar from 1895; Transformer station, single-storey saddle roof construction with shingling, 1900; Wurzgarten, around 1900; Hunting stone, relief stone on a natural stone base, around 1900. "

“Forestry settlement, later part of the prince. thurn und taxisschen hunting lodge (file no. D-3-75-114-20):

Forester's house, single-storey half-hipped roof building with eaves overhanging roof, before 1861; former carriage shed, single-storey saddle roof building with shingle roofing, boarded up stand construction on stone plinth, 1903, 1922 conversion to a garage; former stable building with apartments, single-storey saddle roof construction with two-storey dwarf gable projections, roof overhang, shingling and profiled wooden cornice, 1896, 1961 conversion to a garage hall; Washing and baking house, saddle roof building with a narrower extension, 1886; Residential house, formerly old stable building, single-storey saddle roof construction, before 1900, attached wooden shed, 1903; Residential building with cowshed, single-storey boarded timber frame construction with saddle roof, stable in parts, around 1896; wooden shed, boarded frame construction with saddle roof, 1885; Canteen, one-storey boarded frame construction on a natural stone base, with a gable roof, knee stick and pent roof extension, before 1898. "

literature

  • Sixtus Lampl: Monuments in Bavaria - ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments: Volume III. Upper Palatinate. Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (Ed.), Munich 1985

Individual evidence

  1. Diethard Schmid: Altbayern row I issue 66: Regensburg II. The district court Haidau-Pfatter and the Palatinate-Neuburg rule Heilsberg-Wiesent. Munich, 2014, from the series: Commission for Bavarian State History (Ed.): Historischer Atlas von Bayern , ISBN 978-3-7696-6558-1 , p. 612.
  2. ^ Altenthann, Tourism, Princely Thiergarten
  3. Dirk Walter: Drama after a visit to the Wiesn: It is 30 years since Franz Josef Strauss died. In: Merkur.de. September 30, 2018, accessed October 3, 2018 .
  4. List of monuments for Altenthann (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation

Coordinates: 49 ° 3 '46.3 "  N , 12 ° 17' 49.5"  E