Johann Matthias Krinner

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Johann Matthias Krinner (* 1700 ; † November 22, 1784 in Linz ) was an Austrian builder in Linz on the Danube.

Life

The first written mention of Johann Matthias Krinner can be found on July 26, 1729 in the marriage book of the Linz parish church . In the baptismal registers and guild books Krinner is initially referred to as a painter or master mason. During the occupation by Bavaria and the French during the War of the Austrian Succession , Krinner hired himself out in 1741 to build palisades and redoubts . In the same year, after the early death of the architect Johann Haslinger, he took over his work at the Ursuline Church . In 1743 he was entrusted with the construction of the Triumphal Gate to welcome Empress Maria Theresa on her return from her coronation in Prague . In the following years he mainly worked on sacred buildings in the Upper Austria area .

In 1741 he bought the house at Hofgasse 12 and in 1749 the house Altstadt 2 . According to the death register of the Linz city parish, he died on November 22nd, 1784 at the age of 84.

His son Franz Xaver Krinner († 1806) was named in 1764 in the handicraft protocol of the bourgeois master masons and stonemasons and continued the "Krinnerische Gerechtigkeit" until 1805.

Works

literature

  • Marianne Taub: Johann Matthias Krinner. A master builder of baroque Linz. In: Yearbook of the City of Linz 1935. Linz 1936, pp. 89–103, online (PDF) in the OoeGeschichte.at forum.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Taub 1936, p. 90.
  2. Taub 1936, p. 92.
  3. Taub 1936, p. 94.
  4. a b Taub 1936, pp. 92 and 97.
  5. a b c Taub 1936, p. 91.
  6. Danmiller House. In: stadtgeschichte.linz.at.