Auerberg outdoor seating

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Aubergstrasse 1 in Linz

The Auerberg outdoor seating was at the foot of the Pöstlingberg in Linz (Aubergstrasse 1 and 2).

history

Originally the so-called "Parzhof" stood here (Parthshoff, first mentioned in a document in 1458 when the Linz citizen Anton Pechrär sold his estate, called am Parz, to Hanns von Starhemberg ). In 1564 the Parzhof came to Hanns Georg Auer (1533–1583) from Herrenkirchen and Gunzing (Gundzing) through marriage with the widow Appolonia Topler. He played an important role as counsel and lawyer for the provincial governing body in Upper Austria. Under the name of Auerperg, the Parzhof was elevated to a noble seat on September 29, 1596 by a privilege granted by Emperor Rudolf II .

The Auer von Herrenkirchen are originally recorded in Lower Bavaria and Swabia, from 1400 they owned the Gunzing estate near Aidenbach and named their family after it. Gunzing was given to them in 1501 by the Counts of Ortenburg as a knight-man fief. The son of Hanns Georg Auer, Georg Wolff (1576–1620), married to Barbara von Ho (c) hberg, was also an Upper Austrian district administrator and owned the Auerberg and another house (Hauptplatz 16) in Linz. However, because of her Protestant religion, his widow felt compelled to sell her property in Linz in 1631 ( Auerberg headquarters including castle keep, aristocratic freedom and Reissgejaidt ) to Count Heinrich Wilhelm von Starhemberg.

In 1676 Auberg was leased and in 1689 the master brewer Krakowitzer bought the patio and built his brewery there. This lasted until 1809. In 1809 the house had to be demolished and in 1810 it was rebuilt.

In 1851 Auberg came to Urfahr administratively and was released for settlement and housing development after the First World War . In the inter-war period (between 1926 and 1936), further housing projects were implemented there (e.g. through “construction form” or “German house”) following the older construction at the foot of the mountain. In the upper area, social housing and individual villas were added to the Auberg after the Second World War . In the place of the former patio there is now a residential building.

Aubergstrasse and Parzhofstrasse in Linz-Urfahr are a reminder of the past of the previously existing outdoor seating area.

literature

  • Norbert Grabherr : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria. A guide for castle hikers and friends of home. 3rd edition . Oberösterreichischer Landesverlag, Linz 1976, ISBN 3-85214-157-5 .
  • Georg Grüll : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria . tape 1 : Mühlviertel. Birken-Verlag, Vienna 1962.
  • Erich Trinks: The Auerberg outdoor seating area up to the transition to the Starhemberg in 1631 . In: Yearbook of the City of Linz , 1950, Linz, 1951, p. 318 ff.

Individual evidence

  1. Auerberg. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Supplement 2, Leipzig 1751, column 717.
  2. ^ Benedikt Pillwein: History, geography and statistics of the archduchy of Austria ob der Enns, Volume 1. British Library, Historical Print Editions, London 2011, ISBN 978-1-241-41470-2 .
  3. Linz cultural regions (PDF; 6.0 MB)

Coordinates: 48 ° 18 ′ 0.6 ″  N , 14 ° 16 ′ 53.9 ″  E