Iserhatsche

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iserhatsche is a landscape park in the municipality of Bispingen in the Lüneburg Heath . The 23 hectare park was redesigned by the current owner Uwe Schulz-Ebschbach and added to the hunting villa with a few sights.

history

The Berlin steel construction entrepreneur Ernst Noelle bought an area of ​​230,000 m² in Bispingen and baptized the property with the name Iserhatsche . Iserhatsche was the nickname his mother gave him and comes from Low German , where it means something like 'little iron heart'.

In 1910, at the World Exhibition in Brussels, Noelle discovered a villa that was built by the Wolgast house building company and exhibited there. He bought the villa for his hunting seat, and thus the villa became the first prefabricated house in the Lüneburg Heath. The construction of the villa in Bispingen was completed in 1913.

Noelle died in 1916 and the house passed through several hands; In 1929 the Reemtsma family bought the property and after a short time it became a rest home for employees.

The hunting villa was confiscated by the Wehrmacht in 1940 and used as a hospital . The doctor Ingeborg Wetzel (NS child murderer) is said to have lived there from December 5, 1944 to May 1946 .

In the period that followed, the villa became an alternative hospital for the Eppendorfer Kliniken .

The Reemtsma family converted the villa into a country school home for Berlin children in 1962. The current owner Uwe Schulz-Ebschbach took over the property in 1986.

Schulz-Ebschbach began the renovation of the hunting villa in 1989, including the creation of a Biedermeier room and the Diana Sanssouci room. At the same time he was building the Montagnetto. In the Montagnetto there is an artistic hall, an official registry office, a bread baking grotto and well over 100 collections with many Guinness world records. In 2003 Iserhatsche was opened to the public.

Attractions

Hunting villa

Iserhatsche Hunting Villa

The Iserhatsche Jagdvilla was built for Ernst Noelle in 1913. The sequence of rooms begins with the entrance hall staircase , which, with its hunting trophies and the D-Mark carpet (made from coins from 1948 to 2001) is based on the Gauss ' path system. The focal point of the hunting villa is the fireplace trophy room , which is furnished with furniture from the turn of the century (1890–1910) and a collection of heather pictures. The Biedermeier hunting room is part of the sequence of rooms. The hand-printed wallpapers with hunting motifs give an insight into the world of Biedermeier. The former library of the house, the current hall of mirrors, can also be used for weddings. The cultural framework for this is provided by works of art from different centuries. There is also the Diana Sanssouci room, which illustrates a classic craftsmanship. The tour ends with a visit to the four seasons oak hall , which is furnished with furniture from the early days .

Montagnetto

Montagnetto Iserhatsche

Probably the most interesting building on Iserhatsche is the Montagnetto. It is a miniature representation of a small castle in the Italian style, integrated into a terraced lake system. The specialty is a built-in volcano that can be activated by an electronic circuit . Inside the castle hill there is a ballroom for up to one hundred people, which is used for weddings, celebrations or celebratory events.

Philosophical baroque iron park

Mountain ash-iron-bell-tree

The reconstructed and recultivated baroque garden , with works by the Berlin sculptor and painter WO Hengstenberg , is a philosophical baroque iron park . The focus is on the mountain ash-iron-bell-tree . Each bell stands for one year of the owner's life. This work of art has a height of 8 meters, a trunk circumference of 2.38 meters, 7 golden leaves, 7 golden roots and 12 playable bells. More than 200 philosophical sayings invite you to take a spiritual and philosophical walk.

Web links

Commons : Iserhatsche  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 11.2 "  N , 10 ° 0 ′ 41.3"  E