Hüttenheim 4

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The house Hüttenheim 4

The house Hüttenheim 4 (until after 1996 Hüttenheim 96 ) is a listed building in the Willanzheim district of Hüttenheim in Bavaria in the Lower Franconian district of Kitzingen .

history

House Hüttenheim 4 was built at the beginning of the 17th century; it is dated to around 1610. The village experienced a great upheaval in terms of its landlord structure during these years . From then on, the rulership of the village was divided between the Lords of Schwarzenberg and the Würzburg prince-bishops . However, the property on the southern village square was still subject to a tenancy fee for the Ebrach Cistercian monastery in the Steigerwald.

The farm was first mentioned in a document in 1714 in the Ebracher Lehenbuch . Michel Eyrich was the owner of the farm between 1713 and 1721. In the following period there were several changes of ownership and the house was empty for several decades. It was rebuilt around 1795, when Jakob Seemann owned the property. In 1809 it was bought by the Schwarzenberg forest master Friedel.

In the same year Friedel exchanged the house for the house 117 Hüttenheim (old count), today's house number 168. The new owner was the farmer Paul Rabenstein. Several hectares of land belonged to the farm, including vineyards . During a comprehensive renovation in the 1990s, the south side facing away from the square in particular had to be renewed. The house is classified as an architectural monument by the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments .

description

The house was built as a gable-independent building at an exposed location in the center of Hüttenheim. It presents itself as a two-storey stable house that was built in half-timbered construction. Only a few outer walls were made of sandstone or quarry stone masonry. It has a partial cellar and ends with a gable roof . The arrangement of the rooms inside makes a representative use in the past plausible.

The half-timbering is not designed uniformly, which indicates several construction phases. The oldest elements from the 17th century are the ornamental forms of the half-timbering on the north gable. Among other things, curly and groomed St. Andrew's crosses can be found here. The south gable, which was not built until the end of the 18th century, is younger. Further renovations were made around 1950. The close-meshed framework of the north-facing gable goes back to them. Likewise, the first floor on the north side was not built until the 20th century.

The interior is dominated by the corridor that measures the entire building . There were once figurative paintings here. The stable was originally to be found in the west of the house , to which a chamber was attached. The room faced the village square. The oven was under the landing. On the upper floor, wall paneling and the mighty beamed plank ceilings indicate the function of the rooms here. Two representative rooms were housed on the south side .

literature

  • Konrad Bedal, Herbert May, Albrecht Wald: The house examples. Court history, building history description . In: Konrad Bedal, Helmut Gebhard, Albrecht Wald (eds.): Farmhouses in Bavaria: Lower Franconia (= Farmhouses in Bavaria. Documentation Vol. 3) . Munich 1996. pp. 133-326.

Web links

Commons : Hüttenheim 4 (Hüttenheim in Bayern)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Bedal, Konrad (among others): The house examples . P. 191.
  2. Bedal, Konrad (among others): The house examples . P. 192 f.

Coordinates: 49 ° 38 ′ 55.1 ″  N , 10 ° 15 ′ 24.3 ″  E