Humplbräu

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Humplbräu is a listed inn and former brewery inn in the Upper Bavarian town of Wolfratshausen . The three-storey hipped roof building is located in the corner on Obermarkt and essentially dates from the 16th / 17th century. Century.

history

The building was first mentioned in 1619 when it burned down together with the neighboring parish church of St. Andrew. In 1620 a certain brewer Hans Humpl acquired the property, which had been rebuilt after the fire. Since then, the building, which has often changed hands over the centuries, has been called Humplbräu. When the Swedes invaded the Bavarian Oberland in 1632 during the Thirty Years War , the house was on fire again, but Hans Humpl rebuilt it in a few months. Over the years it has been rebuilt and expanded several times. The oldest part has a room with a cross vault .

In 1803 the Humplbräu had an output of 77,040 liters of beer. In 1909, he was the last Wolfratshausen brewery to stop brewing. Since 1912, when Hans Fagner bought the property for 101,292.46 gold marks , it has been owned by the Fagner family. The drinks are still chilled in the historic beer cellar to this day.

Oskar Maria Graf chose the Wolfratshauser Humplbräu as the setting for his story “The Confirmation”, which is mostly disgraceful in the volume . Of youngsters and people who can't stand them is printed.

literature

  • Sybille Krafft : The Humplbräu in Wolfratshausen. In: aviso. Journal for Science and Art in Bavaria, Issue 4/2017, pp. 34–35.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. List of monuments for Wolfratshausen at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (PDF document, 142 kB)
  2. Humplbräu: History Retrieved on December 10, 2017
  3. Sybille Krafft: The Humplbräu in Wolfratshausen p. 34
  4. a b Sybille Krafft: The Humplbräu in Wolfratshausen p. 35

Coordinates: 47 ° 54 ′ 50.3 "  N , 11 ° 25 ′ 4.2"  E