Klostergasse 2 (Heilbronn)

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The house at Klostergasse 2 in Heilbronn was a historic building that had been a listed building since 1927. The building was destroyed in the air raid on Heilbronn on December 4, 1944.

Architecture and sculpture

The Alemannic half-timbered house showed on the corner above a console the stone sculpture of a lion with a little girl's head in its right paw, created in the 11th or 12th century.

history

The house last belonged to the wine merchant Lang-Schoellkopf. The Schoellkopf wine shop was founded in 1862 by Robert Schoellkopf at Klostergasse 2, after the First World War the company moved to Jakobsgasse. After the destruction in 1944, the wine shop in Sonnengasse was rebuilt; The managing directors were Hella Schoellkopf, Else Schoellkopf and Werner Schoellkopf.

Individual evidence

  1. to Heilbronn City Archives, archive materials, signature A034-2888, "The building has been a listed building since 1927" in the HEUSS database
  2. Helmut Schmolz / Hubert Weckbach: Heilbronn with Böckingen, Neckargartach, Sontheim. The old city in words and pictures . 3. Edition. Konrad, Weißenhorn 1966 (Publications of the Archives of the City of Heilbronn, 14), [No. 16 Klostergasse with a view of Kilian's Church, around 1934].
  3. ^ According to Heilbronn City Archives, contemporary history collection, signature ZS-5137, Schoellkopf wine shop in the HEUSS database

literature

  • Jan Fastenau : The Romanesque stone sculpture in Swabia , Paul Neff Publishing, Esslingen a. N. 1907.

Coordinates: 49 ° 8 ′ 27.8 ″  N , 9 ° 13 ′ 15.8 ″  E