Gut Antoniterhof
Good Antoniterhof even Tönneshof called, is a purpose-built in 1781 farm house of brick and one of the oldest monumental courtyards of the place small destroyers . It was included in the list of architectural monuments in Weilerswist . The coat of arms and the name of the Antoniterhof go back to the Antonites in Cologne , who owned the farm for almost 400 years.
history
On August 31, 1405, Friedrich Herr zu Tomburg and Landskron sold the "Toynberger Hoff" located on the southern outskirts of Kleinvernich to the brothers of the Antoniterhaus in Cologne, whose lay brother Peter Specksny was the first monastic administrator of the property.
According to a description from 1593, the farm included house and farm buildings surrounded by moats, a vegetable garden, 147 acres of arable land as well as bushes, ridges and pastures. It was managed by Halfen . According to a lease from 1664, the annual lease was 32 Malter rye and 32 Malter oats as well as two stubble pigs, two fat hammels, a fat calf and a fat lamb, and butterweck in the kitchen of the Antoniterhaus on Remigiustag (October 1st) , Cheese and eggs. Halfe paid one gold gulden annually for the fishing rights .
After a fire on April 21, 1780, the buildings of the property from the flood-prone Erftaue were moved closer to the former Cöln-Straße - today's Heimbacher Straße - when the new building was built.
As a result of secularization , the farm was nationalized as a spiritual property in 1802. On February 26, 1818, the Cologne bankers Schaafhausen and Herstatt bought it from the Prussian domain administration.
Today the Friedrich Schmitt family lives on Gut Antoniterhof , whose ancestors bought the farm in 1870.
Individual evidence
- ^ Historical Archives of the City of Cologne - U 1/130
- ↑ Hans Welters: Klein Vernich and the Cologne Antoniter . In: Vernich, 1145–1995, contributions to the history of a Rhenish village . Ed. History and local history association of the community of Weilerswist e. V. Special volume of the Weilerswister Heimatblätter. Weilerswist 1995. Pages 54-57.
Coordinates: 50 ° 44 ′ 20.1 ″ N , 6 ° 49 ′ 29 ″ E