Hotell Anno 1647

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Hotell Anno 1647, south side, Mariagränd
North side, Peter Myndes cheek
North side at night

The Hotell Anno 1647 is a hotel in Stockholm district of Södermalm .

location

The hotel is located in the north of Södermalm, south of the Slussen , not far from the Slussen underground station . It consists of two buildings, the main entrance being in the southern building, which borders on Mariagränd Street. The north wing borders Peter Myndes backe Street. In front of the north wing is the Stockholm City Museum and the sculpture Humor .

Furnishing

The hotel has 42 rooms and belongs to the Worldhotels . Rooms equipped as a bar and restaurant are located on the ground floor of the north wing.

history

In 1647 the master tailor Frantz Bock erected a brick building here. In a register from 1646 it is noted that he had two employees and three horses. On the outside wall of the house there is still a stone marked with his initials FB and the initials of his wife MBW . In addition, there is the German-language inscription Godt mit uns . In 1674 the house belonged to the master tailor Albrecht Möller, who sold it in 1691 to Peder Mynder from Holland , after whom the adjacent hill is named. He was given permission to process tobacco on the property . This use remained through the 18th century. The property was owned by Johan Hofwing and his family.

A description of the building from 1730 characterizes the house as four-story and covered with red roof tiles. In the courtyard facing Mariagränd there was a three-story building, which is now part of the south wing. The south wing received its current facade in 1776. The interior is more recent.

Around 1800 the property belonged to the silk manufacturer Abraham Rehmal. In 1808 it was acquired at auction by Koschell & Co., a company owned by Gabriel Christian Koschell. Koschell had set up a wine cellar on the first floor. Märta Helena Reenstierna , Swedish landlady, friend of Carl Michael Bellman and well-known author of diaries, noted in one of her diaries that she had a glass of Portuguese wine in Koschell's cellar in January 1797. In 1813 Koschell's heirs sold the house to David Ek. During the 19th century, the owner changed several times. An extensive renovation took place in 1873. In 1897 the neighboring Stockholm seaman's home acquired the property and opened a hotel in the building.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Worldhotels where discovery starts, Travel Guide 2014-2015 , page 141

Coordinates: 59 ° 19 ′ 9.4 ″  N , 18 ° 4 ′ 17.6 ″  E