Good Farve

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The manor at Gut Farve - front side
The manor house on Gut Farve - garden side
Bridge to Farve Estate
The Farver Mill

The Farve estate in the municipality of Wangels in eastern Holstein dates back to a medieval castle . The property, which belonged to the former noble estates , has been managed to the present day. The manor house is inhabited and is not open to the public.

historical overview

The silver find at Gut Farve is evidence of Bronze Age settlement .

In the Middle Ages, there was a small castle of the Pogwisch family on the site of today's estate , whose members belonged to the Equites Originarii in the county and the resulting Duchy of Holstein . Henning Pogwisch came into conflict with the Danish King Christian I , who then had the castle destroyed in 1480. After Henning Pogwisch's death, his descendants regained control of the property and had a new castle built at the beginning of the 16th century, which became the core of today's manor house . The Pogwisch family stayed on Farve until 1662, when the property was inherited by the von Blome family , who owned the estate almost entirely for the following centuries. It only came to the Counts of Holstein for a short time due to a new rule of inheritance, but after a marriage in 1749 Farve returned to Blomeschen possession. At the beginning of the 19th century, the landlords changed several times until ownership finally passed to the Reventlow family , under whom the manor house received its present form. Farve remained in the possession of various lines of the Reventlows until 1926, who sold the estate to the Counts Waldersee on Gut Waterneverstorf . A last sale took place in 1929 to the Counts of Holck , who are still based there today.

The estate is farmed to the present day. The manor complex and the manor house are privately owned and are not accessible to visitors, but the Farver Mill , which is part of the manor, is used for tourism.

Buildings

The mansion

The core of the manor house goes back to the castle complex from the beginning of the 16th century. It is a four-wing complex around an inner courtyard, the large main tower, the west and south wings, as well as the renaissance portals of the courtyard date from the time construction began. The castle-like building with its four-wing structure is an exception in the architectural landscape of Schleswig-Holstein, where the so-called semi - detached houses or one to three-wing houses predominated on the estates of the landed gentry .

The manor house, which was built during the Renaissance , was expanded and modernized in the 18th century under the Blome family. It received its current form from 1837 under Count Ernst Christian von Reventlow , who redesigned the house by Joseph Eduard Mose with reference to the English castle style in the romantic forms of neo-Gothic with pointed arched windows, battlements and stepped gables and built the north wing with the courtyard entrance let. The interiors are furnished according to the taste of the time in the style of historicism .

The garden and the estate

With the redesign of the manor house in the middle of the 19th century, the former baroque garden around the building was converted into a park in the style of English landscape gardens , which is designed with tall solitary trees, lawns, ponds and circular paths. To the north of the manor house is the farmyard, the extensive building stock of which, such as the riding stables, dates back to the 18th century. To the north of the manor is the Farver Windmill, an earth dutchman from 1828.

Web links

Commons : Gut Farve  - collection of images, videos and audio files

literature

  • Henning v. Rumohr: castles and mansions in Ostholstein , reworked by Cai Asmus v. Rumohr 1989, 3rd edition, Verlag Weidlich / Flechsig Würzburg, ISBN 3-8035-1303-0 , p. 289.
  • Dehio: Handbook of the German Art Monuments Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1994. ISBN 978-3422030336
  • CH Seebach: 800 years of castles, palaces and mansions in Schleswig-Holstein . Wachholtz, 1988.
  • Deert Lafrenz: manors and manors in Schleswig-Holstein . Published by the State Office for Monument Preservation Schleswig-Holstein, 2015, Michael Imhof Verlag Petersberg, 2nd edition, ISBN 978-3-86568-971-9 , p. 161

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Eduard Julius T. Friedlaender: The silver find from Farve, described by J. Friedlaender and K. Müllenhoff. 1850.

Coordinates: 54 ° 17 ′ 7.1 ″  N , 10 ° 47 ′ 37.7 ″  E