Bourgeois brewery Munich

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Company premises in Haidhausen, around 1891

The Aktiengesellschaft Bürgerliches Brauhaus München was a large Munich brewery .

The history of the Bürgerbräus goes back to two breweries in the historic old town of Munich. The brewery of Jörg Hafner in house Burgstrasse 16b is documented from 1490, in the neighboring house at Burgstrasse 16a there was another brewery, which was named Kempterbräu after Leonhard Kempter . Hafner's brewery was run by Martin Zenger from 1667 to 1703, and at the beginning of the 18th century his son united the two breweries under the name Zengerbräu . In 1840 the brewery was bought by Josef and Kreszentia Hierl, the brewery in the old town burned down in 1842.

A new brewery site was then laid out in Haidhausen , between Rosenheimer Strasse and Kellerstrasse. In 1851, the founder's son, Xaver Hierl, bought the Angerkloster's brewing rights and merged it with the family business. After Xaver Hierl's death in 1879, his widow Wally, with the support of her son-in-law, the building contractor Jakob Heilmann , turned the company into a stock corporation. and renamed the company. This is how the Zum bürgerlichen Bräuhaus brewery came into being .

On December 28, 1921 , the Bürgerliche Brauhaus merged retroactively to September 1, 1920 with the Aktienbrauerei zum Löwenbräu . At the time of the merger, it had a brewery, a barn malt house , four large taverns ( Bürgerbräukeller in Munich- Haidhausen , Bürgerbräu restaurant in the city center, Bürgerbräuterrassen in Pullach , Menterschwaige ). In 1931 the brewing business in Haidhausen was stopped.

literature

  • Wolfgang Behringer: Löwenbräu . From the beginnings of Munich brewing to the present day. Munich 1991.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Astrid Assel, Christian Huber: Munich and beer. Volk Verlag, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-937200-59-0 , page 160.
  2. ^ Dorle Gribl: Villa colonies in Munich and the surrounding area. Jakob Heilmann's influence on urban development. Buchendorfer Verlag, 1999, ISBN 3-934036-02-3 , page 19.
  3. ^ Astrid Assel, Christian Huber: Munich and beer. Volk Verlag, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-937200-59-0 , page 182.

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 '  N , 11 ° 36'  E