Mühlleiten outdoor seating area (Gmunden)

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Mühlleiten outdoor seating on the Traun

The Mühlleiten outdoor seating area (Gmunden) , also known as Mühlleiten Castle ( Mühlleuthen ), “Kurzmühle” or “Plassmühle” , is located in the Traundorf district of the town of Gmunden in Upper Austria (Kurzmühlgasse 6).

history

In 1305, the Mühlwanger family of the same name was first mentioned in a document on Mühlwang in Traundorf. Around 1550, the Mühlwangers appear as the first owners of Mühlleiten. As a result, the Jörger owned the Mühlleiten outdoor seating area, which belongs to the Neydharting domain as a subservient property . Other owners are: Wolfgang Pagkhl or Plankhl (1565), Hans Schintler (1575), Count Schernberg (1580); Sebastian von Seeau acquired the patio in 1603. Abraham von Rohrbach and Marbach zu Ebenzweier (1607) followed them. Weikhart Plass († July 24, 1621) acquired Mühlleuthen in 1610. He was a servant of the Roman imperial majesty, Roman imperial collector of the salt office in Gmunden, caretaker of Puchheim . He was married to Katharina, daughter of Achaz II. Seeauer († ~ 1600) and both had 16 children including Zacharias, Hanns, Ermail, Ferdinand, Helreicher, Ott, Maximilian Georg, Adelheid, Lina, Regina Sabina and Susanna Catharina. An alliance coat of arms of a Plass on Mühlleuthen is to the right of the entrance to the Roith outdoor seating area . 1619–1710 Mühlleiten was owned by the von Seeau family or their relatives. Hans II. And Hanns III. Seeauer von Seeau acquired the title "von Mühlleuthen" in 1612. Eva Regina Schmidt, daughter of Weikhart Plass and Katharina Seeauer, owns 1621 mill people. She was followed in 1658 by Regina Plassin, néeuis von Goisernburg, married to Georg Adalbert Plass zu Mühlleiten and Roith, "imperial Mautner zu Gmunden and official administrator". Sabina Ziepelin, née Plassin, married to Johann Ziepili, city judge in Gmunden, has 1663 mill workers. Maximilian Ernst Schmidt von Schmidtberg, “imperial head water supervisor on the outer Traun”, acquired Mühlleuten in 1688.

In 1710, Max Schmid von Schmidberg sells the Mühlleithen outdoor area to Katharina Plamberger, from whom he bought it back in 1725. Katharina Plambergerin, daughter-in-law of Schmidt von Schmidtberg, owns 1710 mill people. Johanna Gnadlstorferin, whose heirs sell Mühlleiten in 1723 to Ferdinand Andrä Schmidt von Schmidtberg, "underwater seer at the outer Traun". In 1740 Mühlleuten was owned by Johann Ferdinand Schmidt von Schmidtberg (son). In 1760, Konrad Leopold Scherrer (brother-in-law of Johann Ferdinand), "Verwesamtscassier in Ebensee", acquired Mühlleuten. In 1781 the widow Barbara Scherrer, née Schmidt von Schmidtberg, is owned by Mühlleuten. In 1791 Mühlleuten came to Franz Paul Scherrer by inheritance. Mühlleiten had been a mill for a long time. In 1827, Franz Kurz, a miller in Hallstatt, bought millers by auction. Since then, Mühlleuten has been popularly known as the “short mill”. In 1845 Mühlleuten came to Raimund Kurz by inheritance. In 1880 the heirs of Raimund Kurz sold millers to the Eichmann und Companie paper mill in Arnau on the Elbe . As a result, Mühlleuten was converted into a sawmill with a turbine drive, then in 1888 into a wood loop. In 1897 this was leased to the “Styrermühle” paper factory and acquired in 1901 by the Steyrermühl paper factory.

Otto Reichsgraf von Seeau died in Linz in 1884 as the last baron of Mühlleuthen , baron on Würting and baron on Helfenberg and Piberstein. The property then became the property of the Tausch family.

Mühlleiten outdoor seating today

The patio is located directly on the Traun . Today it consists of a well-preserved two-storey residential building with a round oriel tower . A grinding mill and a boardsaw are attached to the residential building. The former patio is privately owned and is used as a residential building.

literature

  • Herbert Erich Baumert, Georg Grüll : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria, Volume 2: Salzkammergut and Alpine Foreland . Birken-Verlag, Vienna 1983, ISBN 3-85030-042-0 .
  • Georg Clam Martinic: Castles and palaces in Austria. Landesverlag in Veritas Verlag, Linz 1991, ISBN 3-85001-679-1 .

Individual evidence

  1. Ignaz Gielge: Topographical-historical description of all cities, markets ... Volume 2, p. 227.

Web links

Coordinates: 47 ° 55 ′ 10.7 "  N , 13 ° 48 ′ 11.8"  E