Haseldorf manor house

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The Haseldorfer Herrenhaus is a classicist building in the municipality of Haseldorf in Schleswig-Holstein .

Architecture and park

The mansion from 1804

The history of the estate goes back to 1190 (see: Haseldorf ) .

The present mansion was planned and built in 1804 by the Danish master builder Christian Frederik Hansen . The client was Hans Heinrich von Friccius- Schilden . It is a single-storey brick building with flat corner projections and a two-storey, rusticated central projectile. The entrance portal is flanked by columns. The outside staircase and the dormer windows are not original. They were created later (at the end of the 19th century). The mansion and the outbuildings form a U-shaped system.

  • The Kavaliershaus, which was built at the end of the 18th century, is west of the main house. It is a two-story brick building with a hipped roof and two flat risalits.
  • The stables are on the east side. It was built in 1821 as a two-story brick building. The door with a semicircular skylight is flanked and gabled by pilasters. The stables were last used as an apple cellar and warehouse. Around 2002 it was converted into a residential building.
  • The estate park that surrounds the facility has a species-rich old tree population. In it, an avenue from the north leads to the main building. In the east of the park, hidden behind tall trees, is the mausoleum, built in 1884. There used to be a castle there, the moat and a rampart are still preserved. At the western end of the park is the late Romanesque St. Gabriel Church .

history

In the 12th century, the Haseldorfer Marsch began to be dyed. The Archbishop of Bremen had a castle built in Haseldorf in 1184. It was destroyed in the turmoil of the war in 1258 and rebuilt in 1317. It temporarily served as a robber barons nest with different owners.

The Bailiwick of Haseldorf went to King Christian I of Denmark in 1460 . In 1494 King Johann I sold the bailiwick to the knight Hans von Ahlefeldt . In 1627, Wallenstein's troops destroyed the castle in the Thirty Years' War . In 1731 the von Schilden family bought the property from the Ahlefeldts. In 1896, the Haseldorf estate (together with Haselau and Hetlingen and Palsgaard / Denmark) fell to Prince Emil von Schoenaich-Carolath -Schilden (1852–1908) as the son of Emilie von Oppen-Schilden . The prince was a poet and storyteller. In its time, the mansion became a literary meeting place. Among other things, Rainer Maria Rilke was a guest here. The grave of the "Poet Prince" can be found in the old cemetery at the St. Gabriel Church . Today Udo Prince von Schoenaich-Carolath is the host of the Haseldorfer Gut.

literature

  • Rudolf Brinkmann: Excerpts from the Haseldorf estate register , in: Yearbooks for the regional studies of the Duchies of Schleswig , Volume 1, 1858, p. 1 ff. ( Digitized version )
  • Henning v. Rumohr: castles and mansions in northern and western Holstein , reworked by Cai Asmus v. Rumohr and Carl-Heinrich Seebach 1988, 2nd edition, Verlag Weidlich Würzburg, ISBN 3-8035-1272-7 , p. 272.
  • 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. 231

Coordinates: 53 ° 37 ′ 57 ″  N , 9 ° 35 ′ 52 ″  E