Beer streak

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The location of the Bierspündergang (marked in red) on a city map from 1910

The Bierspündergang was a Lübeck living aisle .

location

The beer run was in Ellerbrook behind the houses on the western side of the street. His front house was the building Ellerbrook 6 (before 1884: Ellerbrook 221 MMQ. ); the corridor itself was at number 10 (before 1884: Ellerbrook 223 MMQ. ).

history

The origin of the beer streak cannot be clearly traced back. As early as 1361, small houses in Ellerbrook called stalls were mentioned in sales documents, which were considered to be the actual houses, and the mentions continued over the following centuries. However, it is not clear whether it was about the as yet nameless Bierspündergang; the existence of several corridors, which were built over over time and thus disappeared, is likely.

It was not until 1560 that it was possible to clearly identify the beer brewer, as there was only one single course in Ellerbrook. In 1676 the corridor was owned by the mayor Bernhard Diedrich Brauer ; at that time it consisted of 9 gangways.

In the 18th century the corridor had additional entrances in houses 14 and 16, which were later closed with doors; they pointed out that the beer beer course was probably created by merging several originally separate courses. This was also evident in the unusual facility: the beer pint walk was not straight, but U-shaped, which was unique in Lübeck.

Although the front building was number 10, some of the stalls had belonged to number 8 since time immemorial (before 1884: Ellerbrook 222 MMQ. ). Since 1808 at the latest , beer pundits have resided in this house, i.e. carters who only transported beer kegs. It was from them that the gang, which until then had no own name, was given the name Bierspündergang .

Most recently, the beer tour included 16 stalls. During the bombing of 1942 , it was completely destroyed along with a large part of the historic buildings on Ellerbrook. When it was rebuilt in the late 1950s, a new road was laid out where the Bierspündergang was located to connect Ellerbrook and Böttcherstraße , which was named Bierspünderstraße .

photos

swell

  • Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff-Leinburg : Lübeck at the time of our grandparents , Volume IV. Charles Coleman Publishing House, Lübeck 1938
  • Rainer Andresen: Lübeck. The old cityscape. Volume 2: History of the residential corridors. Volume 1: Aegidienstraße to Engelswisch. Verlag Neue Rundschau, Lübeck 1981
  • Lutz Wilde : Bomber against Lübeck. A documentation of the destruction in Lübeck's old town during the air raid in March 1942. Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 1999, ISBN 3-7950-1235-X