Langreith hunting lodge

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Langreith hunting lodge

The Langreith Hunting Lodge is located in the Hintersee municipality in the Salzburg-Umgebung district of the State of Salzburg (Hintersee 16).

history

The hunting lodge goes back to the manor house on the Hintersee , for which the Amann of the Tanner Office had to prepare the bedclothes every time the Archbishop went to hunt in Fuschl and Hintersee . This mansion must have been built in the 15th century at the latest, as it was burned down in the Peasants' War in 1525/26. The judges of the Wartenfels Care Court had to promise to rebuild the manor house in Hynndersee in 1528 , and they had to provide guarantors to Archbishop Matthäus Lang . In 1556 the mansion, box and kitchen were re-covered. In 1617 it was reported to Archbishop Markus Sittikus that the building was damaged and that the roof would have to be re-covered. In 1657 the game and fish keepers moved out and the house was empty. In 1659 the roof was repaired, but the windows and stoves were broken, but the house could still be used for hunting. In 1691 there was talk of repair work. In 1694 an apartment was set up for the hunter and the hunter servants in the adjacent Herrenkuchel , in 1699 a horse and horse stable was built in addition to the cowshed. In 1705 the roof was repaired and in 1724 the retired hunter was allowed to move into the manor house. In 1741 the vaults on the ground floor and the vestibule had to be demolished, and the soot-blackened walls from the peasant war period also came to light.

In 1762, court builder Wolfgang Hagenauer suggested to the caretaker Gottfried Ludwig von Moll that the old house should be completely demolished and rebuilt. According to the plans of the time, a two-story building with two ox eyes in the attic was planned, as well as a cowshed and a Treschtenn . The building served as a dwelling for the hunter. During the time when Salzburg was an electorate (1803–1806), Langreith belonged to Ferdinand III. from Habsburg-Tuscany . After the state of Salzburg was annexed to Austria, the building, which had previously been administered by the court chamber, was transferred to the kk arar in 1816 . In 1925 the building came into the possession of the Austrian Federal Forests .

Langreith hunting lodge today

Today there is a representative building that still shows elements of the Hagenau design. The building is two-story and has ox eyes on the front in the attic. In contrast to the design from 1762, there are not just four, but six window axes. On the ground floor there is a round-arched door with two similar windows, whereas a rectangular door was previously planned. The side view shows five window axes and gable dormers in the attic. Two outbuildings belong to the property.

The property is privately owned and cannot be visited.

literature

  • Friederike Zaisberger & Walter Schlegel : Castles and palaces in Salzburg. Flachgau and Tennengau . Birch series, Vienna 1992, ISBN 3-85326-957-5 .
  • Benedikt Pillwein (Ed.): History, geography and statistics of the Archduchy of Austria on the Enns and the Duchy of Salzburg in five parts. Fifth Part: The Duchy of Salzburg or the Salzburg District . Johann Christ. Quandt, Kastner's soul. Eidam, Linz 1839.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Benedikt Pillwein, 1839, p. 392.
  2. Military Veterans Association of Faistenau and Hintersee ( Memento of the original from May 18, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.oekb-hintersee.at

Web links

Commons : Jagdschloss Langreith  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 47 ° 44 ′ 7.6 ″  N , 13 ° 15 ′ 28.2 ″  E