Johann Gottlieb Bleidorn

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Gottlieb Bleidorn (* 1749 ; † March 5, 1792 in Weimar ) was tenant of the so-called Welschen Garten from 1774 to 1784, which was redesigned and included in the park on the Ilm .

Bleidorn received this for lease with the condition that the so-called snail and the avenues be looked after. The lead thorn, who was appointed court gardener from 1776, did just that. According to Wolfgang Huschke , Bleidorn paid a rent of 50 thalers. These two conditions, the payment of the rent and the maintenance of the avenues and that of the so-called snail, were very favorable for the ducal chamber. In 1784 the lease contract was terminated to the court gardener with the information that the Welsche Garten should be attached to the park. The maintenance of this area was still his responsibility. According to an instruction written by Carl August in 1788, Bleidorn was to manage the park nursery including the greenhouses in the western part and set up a tree nursery. He was directly subordinate to the court gardener Carl Heinrich Gentzsch .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Wolfgang Huschke : The history of the park in Weimar (= Thuringian archive studies, edited by Willy Flach ), Weimar 1951, p. 47.
  2. Huschke, p. 65.
  3. Huschke, p. 81.
  4. ^ Susanne Müller-Wolff: A landscape garden in the Ilmpark: The history of the ducal garden in Weimar. Cologne / Weimar / Vienna 2007, p. 178. ISBN 978-3-412-20057-2