Dreimäderlhaus (Vienna)

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Southeast view of the "Dreimäderlhaus"

The so-called Dreimäderlhaus is located at the address Schreyvogelgasse 10 in the first Viennese district of Inner City . The town house built in the 18th or 19th century is a typical example from the end of Josephine classicism and is a listed building.

location

The community center is located on the corner of Schreyvogelgasse / Mölker Steig , elevated on the ramp to the Mölker Bastei , which was part of the former Vienna city fortifications . On the northwest side of the Dreimäderlhaus, at the corner of Mölker Bastei 8 / Schreyvogelgasse 16, is the Pasqualati House , named after the client, where Ludwig van Beethoven spent most of his stay in Vienna.

description

The house was built in 1803 or in the 3rd quarter of the 18th century in the Josephine style , also known as Josephine Baroque or Josephine Classicism , and renovated in 1950.

The two-storey building with a T-shaped floor plan consists of a main wing, parallel to Schreyvogelgasse, and a side wing, parallel to Mölker Steig. In contrast to the main wing, the facade of the side wing has no decoration. In the main wing, on the other hand, pilaster strips emphasize the vertical structure of the building. The windows are suspected and richly decorated in plait style on the upper floor. The basket arch portal with inclined pillars has a segmented gable with a shell and a vase. The gable facade has a volute-framed , trapezoidal gable with an ox's eye, as well as a painted medallion picture depicting the Holy Trinity .

In the house there is a branch of the Ludwig Reiter shoe manufacture .

Surname

The name Dreimäderlhaus goes back to the legend that the composer Franz Schubert is said to have had a romance with the three daughters of the glazier Franz Tschöll, Hannerl, Hederl and Heiderl, who lived here. In fact, the house has no connection with the composer, because the story is based on the novel Schwammerl by Rudolf Hans Bartsch . This novel served as a template for the Singspiel Das Dreimäderlhaus and for the two feature films: Das Dreimäderlhaus (1918) and Das Dreimäderlhaus (1958) .

literature

  • Renate Wagner-Rieger : The Viennese town house of the baroque and classicism. Vienna: Hollinek 1957 (Österreichische Heimat, 20), p. 76
  • Felix Czeike : Vienna. Art and culture lexicon. City guide and manual. Munich: Süddeutscher Verlag 1976, p. 148 f.

Web links

Commons : Dreimäderlhaus  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Dreimäderlhaus in the Vienna History Wiki of the City of Vienna
  2. AEIOU-Musik-Kolleg : Das Drei Mäderl Haus ; accessed on Sep. 26 2016
  3. Lt. Dehio 3rd V. 18th century, most other sources such as Felix Czeike give 1803.

Coordinates: 48 ° 12 ′ 44 ″  N , 16 ° 21 ′ 45.2 ″  E