Feldnerhof

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The Feldnerhof on the Schuppach was a building in Schwäbisch Hall . It was destroyed in a city fire in 1728. Other names for the structure were Veldtner Tower , Platzturm and Haspelsches Haus .

history

According to Gradmann , the Feldnerhof was also known as the "Platzturm" and burned down in 1728. The walls were demolished in 1834. As Gradmann reports, the structure consisted of “[…] small masonry like the walls of the Berler-Hof, without any humpbacks at the corners”. Gradmann locates the building at the later location of a "Kunz Brewery" in Schuppachgasse.

Rudolph Moser believes that the town of Schwäbisch Hall will likely emerge from a safety system for the saltworks. In addition to the main castle, there were several four-story towers with a square floor plan, each with sides of about 30 feet. The "Veldtner-Thurm" - Moser does not speak of "Hof" - stood in the Schuppach and was one of the "seven castles" of the city. It was later also referred to as Haspel's house.

Location considerations

Parts of the cellar of the Neue Straße 25 property in Schwäbisch Hall probably date from the 13th century. In the 17th century, Michel Würth and later his son Hans Michel Würth ran the restaurant at the edge, which had also had a brewery since 1658. This was housed in an old vault. In 1666 Hans Michel Würth was overindebted and the property passed to the blacksmith and butcher Hans Peter Haspel, to whom the further name of the property mentioned by Moser can be traced back. This had to leave the area because of counterfeiting; his son continued to run the inn. Later it passed from the ownership of the eponymous family Haspel into other hands before it fell victim to the town fire of 1728.

Then, under the aegis of master chimney sweep Georg Ludwig Kunzmann, a new building was built, which was called the "Dreikönig". Former neighboring properties were added to the previous property. Gradmann's brewery designation could most likely be traced back to this Georg Ludwig Kunzmann, because his successors all had names that had nothing to do with the syllable "Kunz". However, Kunzmann was already bankrupt in 1731 and the inn and brewery passed into other hands. The brewery was relocated to a new building at Sulengasse 1 in 1832, where it remained until 1974.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Eugen Gradmann : The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 67 ( archive.org ).
  2. Rudolph Moser: Description of the Oberamt Hall. Cotta, Stuttgart et al. 1847, p. 144.
  3. ^ Neue Straße 25 in the building directory of the city of Schwäbisch Hall
  4. Dreikönig Inn in the city's primary cadastre

Coordinates: 49 ° 6 ′ 46.6 ″  N , 9 ° 44 ′ 3.5 ″  E