Distant view (Kellinghusen)

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Coordinates: 53 ° 56 ′ 30.6 "  N , 9 ° 42 ′ 44.6"  E

Fernsicht Manor, seen from the Stör, 1905
map from 1893

Fernsicht is the name of a villa and an estate on the outskirts of Kellinghusen .

location

The Fernsicht estate is located on the southern outskirts of Kellinghusen, on the right and west of the Stör River and east of the flyover of Breitenburger Strasse (Landesstrasse 123) over federal road 206 .

history

Fernsicht was owned by the Itzehoe monastery until the first half of the 19th century and belonged to the village of Grönhude, which was partly on a sturgeon island that was made land-proof through dykes. In Grönhude distance vision was the only "monastic in Störthal located hooves with handsome buildings".

The Hamburg merchant Camille Vidal acquired the estate around 1845 as a residence for his family with eight children. As recently as 1852 Fernsicht was described as the “beautiful country estate” of Vidal, located “on an island of the sturgeon”. The exact circumstances of the origin of the main building in the 19th century are unclear. The "Fernsichter Thonwaaren Fabriken", founded by Vidal in 1847, produced yellow bricks, pipes, tiled stoves and ceramic house and garden decorations in Kellinghusen until 1903 from the clay deposits mined in Overndorf.

Vidal, who in addition to Fernsicht also owned Gut Marienhof near Kellinghusen, sold both goods to August Jauch from Hamburg in 1870 , who initially managed them as a landowner.

In 1881 the family of the ophthalmologist Julius Mannhardt moved into the Fernsicht estate. The only personal meeting between his friend Theodor Storm and Detlev von Liliencron took place in his house .

Von Liliencron took up the post of parish bailiff of Kellinghusen in October 1883 and in the same year published his first volume of poems, Adjudantenritt , of which he sent a copy to Theodor Storm , whom he admired . He then wrote to von Liliencron, who was 27 years his junior:

"I am convinced that you are a poet by nature, even if the certain expression cannot be ascribed to many of the individual things."

Both met in May 1884 on a distance view. Von Liliencron wrote to Storm on June 13, 1884:

“Your last valid word to me from a distance: 'You have found the point - but more cautiously' will still be an unspeakably dear word to me in the hour of my death. It was the first time that I saw a real poet! "

In 1885 Mannhardt sold the house and moved to Lübeck.

Fernsicht House, Vladivostok, photo 2013

After that, the Hamburg merchant Gustav Kunst (1836–1905) lived in the estate, who had made fortunes with the trading company Kunst und Albers in the far east of Russia. From the late 1880s onwards, art preferred to spend the winter months in southern countries and only spent a few months of the year in the distance. He was able to use the location to avoid Hamburg during the cholera epidemic of 1892 and to travel by train to Berlin via Neumünster. A large house built by Kunst and Albers in Vladivostok in 1893 with a distant view of the Russky Island was also called "Haus Fernsicht".

From 1902 the pharmacist Fritz Hartmann can be identified as the landowner, who died in 1907.

Later the administrative officer George von Schröder acquired Fernsicht. There he married his second wife Emily geb. Merck. From 1920, Schröder had a brick-style cavalier house built in 1922 by the Hamburg architect Eugen Fink and the manor house was converted into a villa by 1923. Large terraces, bay windows and the entrance portal with a relief of the coat of arms and the family motto "VINCET VERITAS" ("Truth will win.") Of the Schröder family were added. In 1949, their son Georg Jasper von Schröder (1913–1999) and Andrea von Klot-Heydenfeld (born 1925) married in a distance. In 1955 they acquired Hof Sielbek, part of the Bundhorst estate in Stolpe , which Georg Jasper managed as a farmer for several years.

Fernsicht was then used as a retirement and nursing home for several decades and for this purpose an additional guest house was built in 1965, which is connected to the Kavaliershaus. In a modification of Fink's design, the villa and the cavalier's house were also connected by an additional low-rise building with a roof terrace. The residents of the retirement home included the singer and dancer Tilly Denter (1882–1968) as well as the writers Max Vandrey (born 1909) and Walther Hans Kist. After the retirement home is no longer in use, the complex will be empty.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Johannes von Schröder, Hermann Biernatzki: Topography of the Duchies of Holstein and Lauenburg, the Principality of Lübeck and the area of ​​the free and Hanseatic cities of Hamburg and Lübeck. A - H, Volume 1 , Fränkel, 1855, p. 435
  2. ^ Peter Friedrich Ludwig Hoffmann: The Hamburg Tourist , Gaßmann, 1852, p. 196
  3. Giesela Thietje-Räther: A park based on the English model was created from a former clay mining area , Norddeutsche Rundschau , July 22, 2011
  4. Announcement No. 45, Royal District Court Kellinghusen, Schleswig-Holsteinische advertisements, Official Part , 38th piece, Glückstadt September 19, 1870, p. 484, digitized
  5. ^ Theodor Storm and Detlev von Liliencron, November 30, 1883, in: Peter Goldammer (Ed.): Theodor Storm Briefe , Volume 2, Structure, 1972
  6. quoted from: Karl Ernst Laage: Three Liliencron letters to Storm, in: Schriften der Theodor Storm Gesellschaft , No. 15, Heide 1966, pp. 33–39, here p. 34
  7. ^ Reports of the German Pharmaceutical Society , Volume 12, Berlin 1902, p. 120
  8. Apotheker-Zeitung , Volume 22, Berlin 1907, p. 607
  9. Buildings by Arch. BDA Dr.-Ing. Eugen Fink - Hamburg, in: Der Baumeister , XXIV. Volume, August 1926, Issue 8, pp. 169–179, online reprint ; to Hof Fernsicht pp. 171–173
  10. ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , CA Starke, 1978, p. 415
  11. ^ Theresia Künstler: The history of the Sielbek court , March 1, 2015
  12. Hamburger Abendblatt, April 29, 1966, [1]
  13. ^ Tilly Denter died , Hamburger Abendblatt , February 6, 1968
  14. Walther Kist in the Low German Bibliography and Biography (PBuB)
  15. Giesela Thietje-Räther: New life wanted for dream home , Norddeutsche Rundschau , May 22, 2014

Lothar Deeg: Art & Albers Vladivostok. The history of a German trading company in the Russian Far East (1864–1924) , clear text, Essen 1996:

  1. p. 133
  2. p. 122
  3. p. 110