Gerberhof (Hanover)

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The Gerberhof or Gährhof or Schuhhof in Hannover was a former local official to the shoemaker counting municipal facility for tanning of leather .

history

The Gerberhof and with it the Schuhhof were located in the center of Hanover until the 16th century, in the immediate vicinity of the Old Town Hall, which was built in the late Middle Ages . When the city council decided on Maundy Thursday 1564 to add an additional wing to the town hall, the previous location of the Gerberhof on Köbelingerstraße was selected: "vorhebbens zy de eyne halve des Radthuses, dar de Wage steit, and the Schohoff to buwende and the ordt of Scholars Hoffes, is de Behusesunge oup steit, a pharmacy ... enthorichtende. "So was the former Schuhhof along with parts of the former town scales for Ratsapotheke redesigned. In the same year, 1565, the Gerberhof was relocated to the Leintor in front of the Leineinsel , to the later cloister corridor , where the new Schuhhof was later given number 4a and the “Gerhof” number 4 . The old city hospital and the Soden monastery were soon moved behind the “Gährhof” .

From the history of the family around Hermann Theophilus Söhlmann it is known that the Hanoverian shoemakers were still producing their leather needs themselves around the year 1700 or that they were produced jointly in the tanner's yard at the address Klosterhof 4 , which was then owned by the tanner and shoemaker 's office , where it was until at least 1911 until the time of the German Empire .

literature

  • Arnold Nöldeke : Schuhmacheramtshaus , in ders .: The art monuments of the city of Hanover , part 1 and 2: Monuments of the "old" city area of ​​Hanover , in: The art monuments of the province of Hanover, vol. 1, issue 2, part 1, Hanover, self-published by Provincial Administration, Schulzes Buchhandlung, 1932, p. 656f .; Digitized via archive.org

Remarks

  1. The cloister already in 1750 so named is Klostergang referred, which according to the Hannoversche history leaves in 1914 after the former Convention therein Council and von Soden Monastery got its name; compare Helmut Zimmermann : cloister walk. In: ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover. Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 144.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Christian Ludwig Albrecht Patje : How was Hanover? Or fragments from the previous state of the residence city of Hanover. Hahn, Hanover 1817, chapter “Municipal Public Buildings”, pp. 30, 70–76; online through google books .
  2. Rudolph Ludwig Hoppe: History of the City of Hanover ... With two views and a floor plan. Helwing, Hannover 1845, p. 77; online through google books.
  3. ^ Arnold Nöldeke : The Art Monuments of the Province of Hanover Vol. 1, H. 2, Part 1: Monuments of the "old" city area of ​​Hanover. Self-published by the Provincial Administration, Schulzes Buchhandlung, Hanover 1932, p. 364; online in the Internet Archive .
  4. ^ Rudolph Ludwig Hoppe : History of the city of Hanover. Helwing, Hannover 1845, p. 77; online through google books.
  5. So at least Patje; on the other hand, Friedrich Wilhelm names Andreae as the year of the move 1576. See ders .: Chronicle of the royal city of Hanover from the oldest times to the present. Fincke, Hildesheim 1859, p. 55; online through google books.
  6. Helmut Knocke : Leintor. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 399.
  7. ^ R. Hartmann : History of Hanover from the earliest times to the present. With special consideration for the development of the royal seat of Hanover , Hanover: Ernst Kniep, 1886, pp. 33, 269f .; Digitized via Google books
  8. Gernot Becker: Copy of the Söhlmann family traditions / For Mr. Oeconomie-Rat Rolf Becker / January 23, 1911 as a PDF document downloadable from gebe.paperstyle.de .

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