Dehio Linz 2009

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dehio-Handbuch - Oberösterreich –Linz appeared in 2009 as the 2nd volume of a Dehio series on Upper Austria started by the Federal Monuments Office .

The Dehio for the area of ​​Upper Austria north of the Danube , the Mühlviertel , was published as the first volume in 2003. Linz , the third largest city in Austria after Vienna and Graz , suggested its own Dehio. Linz has a diverse collection of monuments, in addition to the late medieval and early modern old town with impressive sacred buildings, there are Wilhelminian city expansion areas up to large industrial areas and settlement areas from the 1940s.

Emergence

Survey work began in the late 1990s. However, the work was interrupted from 2004 to 2008 due to the legal amendment to Section 2 of the Monument Protection Act. Since 1923, the entire public property has been under monument protection, now the responsible editor Ulrike Knall-Brskovsky has been withdrawn from the Dehio project because the protection status of § 2 had to be confirmed for each property in a separate administrative procedure.

The diocesan art consultants, first Conrad Lienhardt, later Hubert Nitsch, and the diocesan building authority director Wolfgang Schaffer are named for the research. Furthermore called Bernhard Prokisch from Linz Castle Museum , Günther Walch as manager of the St. Barbara Cemetery and Wilhelm Remes from Collegium Aloisianum . On the part of the State Conservate, the director Wilfried Lipp and the employees Susanne Heilingbrunner and Klaus Kohout were involved.

In addition to the research in buildings that are otherwise not easily accessible to the public, the objects of the armed forces , the ÖSWAG , the Linz chemical industry , the Voestalpine and the tobacco factory are mentioned in particular .

Mention

  • Dehio Handbook - Upper Austria - Volume II - Linz. Edited by Beate Auer, Brigitta Fragner, Ulrike Knall-Brskovsky, Paul Mahringer. Contributions by Johannes Dandler, Heinz Gruber, Willibald Katzinger , Gerd Pichler, Marianne Pollak, Eckart Vancsa. Berger Verlag, Horn / Vienna 2009, ISBN 978-3-85028-483-7 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Foreword by Andreas Lehne , Vienna in August 2009, p. IX.