Half-timbered house on the mountains 11 (Radebeul)

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The half-timbered house Auf den Bergen 11 is a listed , former outbuilding of the Goldschmidtvilla (Auf den Bergen 9) in the Niederlößnitz district of the Saxon city of Radebeul . The current owners, a family of winegrowers, run the Jägerhof im Paradies farm there , named after the nearby former inn "Zum Jägerhof" and the Paradies vineyard above . The house and property are located in the Radebeuler Steinrück wine-growing area and in the Radebeul Historical Vineyard Landscape Monument , and also in the Lößnitz Landscape Protection Area . The vorbeiführende front of the house way on the mountains is part of the Saxon wine trail .

Half-timbered house on the mountains 11
Half-timbered house with extension. The Goldschmidtvilla is further to the left

description

The gable of the building faces the street. It is two-story, biaxial on the street side, the long side is five window axes long. The ground floor is massive, the upper floor consists of timber framework; it sits a covered with beaver tails gable roof . The roof is towed to the west (on the right of the street), underneath is a brick-walled annex from the 19th century that was uncovered in the 2010s.

The windows on the ground floor, which are surrounded by sandstone, have some folding shutters.

history

Gasthaus Jägerhof from the east (bottom left), top left the Goldschmidtvilla with the half-timbered house to the right between the trees; House Barnewitz in the center of the picture . The vineyard paradise is after the phylloxera disaster verbuscht (postcard from 1906).

In the 18th and 19th centuries, the Welzigberge were a series of vineyard properties directly to the office in the east of the corridor of Kötzschenbroda , now part of the Saxon town of Radebeul . As the mountains of ownership, they were under the authority of the Dresden-Neustadt District Administration . The half-timbered house built between 1710 and 1730 was also located in these vineyards as a farm building in the vineyard. A few hundred meters to the west stood the Haus Barnewitz winery (Auf den Bergen 15) , which was built around 1660 .

In 1803, as the electoral property of Friedrich August I, the region was under the administration of the Upper Elbe wine village of Loschwitz . At that time 55 people lived on the Welzigberge. In the middle of the 19th century, the extensive vineyard property at the foot of the Welzigberge with some older buildings, as well as the paradise above, belonged to the Counts of Hohenthal -Dölkau. It was the northern part of the formerly royal Eckberg , which also included the properties to the south on what was later to become Terrassenstrasse.

After the property had been in the possession of the family of the Berlin banker Joseph Goldschmidt as a summer residence since the end of the 19th century, after the phylloxera disaster in the Lößnitz , the latter had additional outbuildings built from 1892; 1894 originated there by the builder Carl Georg Semper place of a vineyard house a representative villa in the Swiss style , designed by Adolf Neumann, called Goldschmidt villa , and a park-like garden. The half-timbered house to the west was used as a servants' house with a bakery. After the "Aryanization" of the property and the end of the Second World War, it was the caretaker's building for the FDGB school in GDR times.

Around 1996 a winegrower bought the dilapidated half-timbered house and began to renovate the old walls. In 2016 he found an iron oven flap behind a walled-up opening and in the oven numerous documents from the Langemarck School, which was housed in the villa next door during the Second World War. The documents were supposed to be destroyed in the furnace at the end of the war. After the find, they will probably be offered to the Radebeul city archive .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 6 (Last list of monuments published by the city of Radebeul. The Lower Monument Protection Authority, which has been located in the district of Meißen since 2012, has not yet published a list of monuments for Radebeul.).
  2. a b New beauty for an old winegrower's house. The facade of the almost 300 year old Jägerhof on the east side of the Steinrücke has now been restored. In: sächsische.de of December 28, 2013, accessed on November 27, 2018.
  3. According to a map of the Radebeul city archive with additional information from Hans August Nienborg from 1710. In: Ingrid Zeidler: The development of viticulture in the area of ​​today's town of Radebeul in the 19th century. Polydruck, Radebeul 1985, p. 52.

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 56 ″  N , 13 ° 39 ′ 0 ″  E