Gut Rothensande
Gut Rothensande , formerly also Gut Rodensande , unofficially also Gut Immenhof, is an agricultural estate in the area of the municipality of Malente in the Ostholstein district in Schleswig-Holstein . The cultural monument became known nationwide in the 1950s as the backdrop for the Immenhof film series .
estate
The estate is located in Holstein Switzerland directly on the Kellersee . Today it has an area of 120 hectares. The entire complex, consisting of gatehouse , manor house , administrator's house, barns and boathouse has been a listed building since 2010. The oldest preserved building is the administrator's house, built in 1894. The manor house and the gatehouse were built in 1911. The buildings are arranged around a spacious farm yard.
history
As early as 1361, a "farm called Rodesand with the Gremsmühle" was mentioned in a document. In the 18th century Rothensande was a Vorwerk until it was given a long lease in 1775 . The lessee acquired the property in 1776; in the 19th century it changed hands several times. Christian Lutteroth acquired the estate in 1853; In 1859 he sold it to Nestor von Schlözer , who together with his wife Luise von Schlözer used it as a retirement home.
The entrepreneur Franz Bleßmann acquired the estate in 1911 and had it rebuilt according to the baroque estate scheme . Among other things, he had the manor house, the cattle barn and the striking gatehouse built, which is still preserved today. In 1917, 1924 and 1936 the owner changed again. The German Red Cross used the property as a children's home after the Second World War .
In 1950 Emilie Lutter bought the Rothensande estate. Ulrich Schultz became the tenant of the property in the course of the purchase. Schultz was friends with Emilie Lutter's fallen husband and had promised him before his death that he would look after his wife and underage son. The families lived together in the manager's house of the estate. Between 1955 and 1957, Schultz made the estate available to Arca-Filmproduktion GmbH as an outdoor backdrop for the homeland films Die Mädels vom Immenhof (1955), Hochzeit auf Immenhof (1956) and Holidays on Immenhof (1957). The children of the Schultz family took part in the filming as extras. Before 1955, the Christian Youth Villages Association rented the manor house and ran a socio-educational institute there. At the end of 1957, the estate was sold to the coffee wholesaler Arthur Nörenberg from Hamburg , who sealed off the buildings from the public, renovated them, bought additional land and set up a horse breeding facility. In 1980 the manor house was damaged by fire and then restored. In February 2001, the manor's stables burned down.
After Nörenberg's death in 2002, which was followed by inheritance disputes, a private investor acquired the vacant property in 2012 and plans to renovate the dilapidated building and convert it into a hotel. The old interior was completely removed, supply and disposal facilities were renewed, the buildings gutted and the outbuildings rebuilt. After the opening was only planned for 2017 and then for 2020, it has now been announced for spring 2021.
See also
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Chronicle of the Rothensande Estate , accessed on May 22, 2017
- ↑ a b c Gut Rothensande - History , accessed on May 22, 2017
- ↑ List of cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein (PDF; approx. 826 kB)
- ↑ Lübecker Nachrichten: Immenhof: Old Shine Returns , July 11, 2017, accessed on December 4, 2018
- ↑ a b Gut Rothensande , accessed on August 21, 2019
- ↑ Chronicle of the Rothensande estate on immenhofkult.de, accessed on November 18, 2018
- ↑ Fiction and Reality at Immenhof , accessed on November 19, 2018
- ↑ a b Who buys the Immenhof , shz.de, accessed on November 19, 2018
- ↑ Fire destroys the horse stable at Malenter Gut Rothensande , mopo.de, February 12, 2001, accessed on January 20, 2018
- ↑ Orly Röhlk: Gut Immenhof: Every building is a total loss. In: Kiel News . October 16, 2014, accessed May 22, 2017 .
- ↑ Lübecker Nachrichten: Big plans for Gut Rothensande , April 26, 2018, accessed on December 4, 2018
- ↑ Immenhof work is taking longer than planned. shz.de, July 10, 2017.
Coordinates: 54 ° 9 ′ 47.9 ″ N , 10 ° 34 ′ 41.9 ″ E