Heimbach settlement / Teurershof

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Heimbach settlement / Teurershof
Coordinates: 49 ° 6 '47 "  N , 9 ° 43' 4"  E

Heimbachsiedlung / Teurershof is a district of Schwäbisch Hall .

Names

The Heimbach settlement is named after the neighboring old hamlet of Heimbach .

The Teureshof was a rich estate of the imperial city of Hall , which already existed in the High Middle Ages . It got its name from the noble family Teurer (Theurer). Later in the possession of the knightly noble bourgeois family Bachenstein , it came from them to the Haller hospital in the 15th century .

Sacred buildings

In the district on Naumannstr. 6 there is a Christian. Sacred building: the parish church "Christ the King". This was built according to plans by the architect Hans Georg Reuter and consecrated on March 12, 1961. Consecrator was the auxiliary bishop Wilhelm Sedlmeier and the patronage is Christ the King Sunday. The Christ the King mosaic by Dieter Franck and the choir room design from 2003 by Joseph A. Schaeble are remarkable. The Sophie Scholl Church is also located at Stauferstraße 34.

Secular buildings

The Teurershof at Teurerweg 2 now houses a free Waldorf school. In 1827 it housed the Hall for the poor. The building complex consisted of a residential building with 5 stables, an economy building, a bakery, a wash house, a courtyard, a garden and a cellar (house), a total of 1 5/8 acres. The Teurershof was built from the stones of the castle to the Wiesenstein of the Lords of Hainbach (ancestral relatives of Schlez / Schletz), which was located in Heimbach.

The building complex is a listed building

literature

  • Andreas Maisch (eds.) / Hermann Bausinger / Mathias Beer / Martina Blaschka / Emmy Kunz: The second home: Heimbach settlement and Teurershof 1949-1998

Individual evidence

  1. Theurer surname on forebears.de "(Theurer) 1398 Schwäb.-Hall may mean the appraiser (Middle High German tiuren" appreciate in value ")" - also: historical official name to Middle High German tiuren to appraise, appreciate; thus the official who has to check the market goods for the price ("the expensive ones").
  2. From Rudolph Friedrich von Moser's description of the Oberamt Hall from 1847 in Wikisource: Bachenstein, page 147 “Bachenstein. [...] The rich brook of Döttingen , owner of the Theurershof .... "
  3. a b http://www.schwaebischhall.de/buergerstadt/geschichte/haeuserlexikon/gebaeudeververzeichnis/besitzerliste-1827.html?Detail=1321
  4. ^ Eugen Gradmann : The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 102 ( archive.org ).

Web links