Hompesch-Schlössl

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Hompesch-Schlössl on the slope to the right of the church of St. Georg and the rectory, to the left of the picture in the valley Bad Brunnthal, painting by Carl August Lebschée , 1818

The Hompesch-Schlössl was a noble residence that was demolished in 1862 in what is now Munich 's Bogenhausen district .

history

The estate, a former fiefdom of the bishops of Freising , came to the Munich patrician family Astaller in 1453 and was acquired by Caspar Gregor von Lachenmayr from Clemens Gaudenz Graf zu Toerring von Seefeld in 1740. The property was entered in the land table in 1741 as Neuberghausen. Johann Baptist Gunetzrhainer and François de Cuvilliés the Elder were commissioned with a new building . Later the estate passed to August Joseph Graf Toerring-Jettenbach. In 1808 it was leased to the former Bavarian Finance Minister Johann Wilhelm von Hompesch , who died a year later, but whose name remained with the building.

In 1827, the Tivoli landlady, Maria Buchmayer, bought the complex and opened what is known as “Neuberghausen”, a place where celebrities like the poet Heinrich Heine frequented. Around 1860 the area was acquired by King Maximilian II , who, after the castle was demolished in 1862, had the official relics institute built there, which in turn was destroyed in World War II and the ruins of which were demolished in 1945. In 1956 a school building designed by Paul Schmitthenner was erected on the site.

construction

The castle was a "noble mansion" with "famous terrace gardens". In 1863 the painter Anton Höchl created a watercolor of the building, which has since been abandoned.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Karl Spengler: Munich street stroll . Munich 1960: Verlag F. Bruckmann KG, p. 220 f.
  2. The name goes back to the previous owner von Lachenmayr, who came from Berghausen near Freising; after Karl Spengler: Munich street stroll . Munich 1960: Verlag F. Bruckmann KG, p. 220 f.
  3. ^ A b Willibald Karl (Ed.): Bogenhausen. From a rural parish village to a posh district. Buchendorfer Verlag, Munich 1992, ISBN 3-927984-11-6 . (Online version at: More about the Hompeschschlössl nordostkultur-muenchen.de, accessed on August 30, 2018)

literature

  • Willibald Karl (Ed.): Bogenhausen. From a rural parish village to a posh district. Buchendorfer Verlag, Munich 1992, ISBN 3-927984-11-6 . (Online version at: More about the Hompeschschlössl nordostkultur-muenchen.de, accessed on August 30, 2018)
  • Karl Spengler: Munich street stroll . Munich 1960: Verlag F. Bruckmann KG, p. 220 f.
  • Willibald Karl / Karin Pohl: Bogenhausen. Time travel to old Munich. Edited by the Munich City Archives. Munich: Volk Verlag 2014, pp. 31–36. ISBN 978-3-86222-113-4 .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 '49.2 "  N , 11 ° 36' 3.6"  E