Dat ole Hus
Dat ole Hus ( Low German for: the old house) is a local history museum in the Bünzen district of the municipality of Aukrug in Schleswig-Holstein .
history
The museum is located in a cottage that was first built around 1700 and rebuilt in 1804 after a fire. In 1961, the married couple Edith and Werner Hauschildt set up a privately run folklore and open-air museum in the cottage and on the property. In 1970 the couple acquired a license for a museum café. Since then, you can drink coffee in the historically furnished rooms and eat cherry compote with cream and hot waffles, which are still prepared on old wood stoves.
After the municipality had initially acquired the property in 2011, a support association for the operation of the museum was founded in January 2016 after the lease agreement with the Hauschildt family ended as planned.
Building and exhibition
The Kate is a Niederdeutsches trade hall house with two projecting bretterverschaltem Pediment and back hipped thatched roof . In 1724 the hooves were first listed in the official accounts. The property had the right to run a pub and a distillery. It burned down in the great fire of Bünzen in 1803 and was rebuilt in 1804 in the same place and in the same shape. It consists of two apartments, both of which are equipped with a living room, wall beds, a bilegger , a kitchen with a buttress and a pantry as well as a stable in the hallway. Until the chimney was installed in 1907, the house was a smoke house , in which the smoke was drawn off through the hallway shared by both apartments.
As part of guided tours, the interior of the Olen Hus can be viewed , which gives a vivid impression of rural living culture from the 18th to the early 20th century. The tools that are exhibited in a stable, a shed and in the apiary come from the same period . The museum regularly shows small special exhibitions on various topics.
photos
Organizational matters
The museum is run by a museum association and is open all year round on Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
See also
Individual evidence
- ^ Aukrug municipality buys "Ole Hus" for one euro
- ↑ A breath of fresh air for "Dat Ole Hus"
- ↑ Kunst-Topographie Schleswig-Holstein, 5th edition 1982, page 623
- ↑ Georg Reimer: The story of the Aukrugs, 1978, page 421ff
- ^ The Ole Hus at the Schleswig-Holstein Museum Association
literature
- Georg Reimer : The History of the Aukrugs. Published by Heinrich Bünger. 3rd expanded edition. Verlag Möller Sons, Rendsburg 1978.
- Heinrich Asmus, Werner Hauschildt, Peter Höhne: Update of "The History of the Aukrugs" from 1978 and supplements, Aukrug 1995.
- Kai Fuhrmann: Dutch traces in Aukrug, in: Dat ole Hus - Folklore and Open Air Museum in the Aukrug Nature Park, Mitteilungen, Issue 1 / July 2006, Aukrug 2006 ( ISSN 1865-0422 )
- Kai Fuhrmann: Hungarian traces in Aukrug, in: Dat ole Hus - Folklore and Open Air Museum in the Aukrug Nature Park, Mitteilungen, Issue 2 / July 2007, Aukrug 2007 ( ISSN 1865-0422 )
- Kai Fuhrmann: Russian traces in Aukrug, in: Dat ole Hus - Folklore and Open Air Museum in the Aukrug Nature Park, Mitteilungen, Issue 3 / November 2008, Aukrug 2008 ( ISSN 1865-0422 )
- Kai Fuhrmann: Dat ole Hus - Searching for traces: history, classification, construction, in: Dat ole Hus - Folklore and Open Air Museum in the Aukrug Nature Park, Mitteilungen, Issue 4 / May 2009, Aukrug 2009 ( ISSN 1865-0422 )
Web links
Coordinates: 54 ° 4 '15.66 " N , 9 ° 47' 52.92" O