Kurhausstrasse 10 (Bad Kissingen)

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Kurhausstrasse 10 in Bad Kissingen
Row of shops

The building at Kurhausstrasse 10 in Kurhausstrasse in Bad Kissingen , the major district town of the Lower Franconian district of Bad Kissingen , is one of the Bad Kissingen architectural monuments and is registered in the Bavarian list of monuments under number D-6-72-114-34 .

history

The two-story residential building with a half-hipped roof was built around 1830 as one of the oldest of today's buildings on Kurhausstrasse. The property is proportioned and structured in the Biedermeier style . One of the property was demolished in 1843 when the house was expanded.

Around 1900 the rear row of shops belonging to the property was built on Lindesmühlpromenade . The row of shops, designed in neo-renaissance forms , is a single-story building with a flat roof , pilasters and a rustic base .

During the National Socialist era , three residents of the property were persecuted. In 1943 the jeweler Simon Hermann Rosenau, his wife Paula Rosenau and Hermann Sigmund Rosenau, Simon Hermann Rosenau's son from his first marriage, were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where they died. They are remembered by three stumbling blocks in front of the property .

literature

  • Hans-Jürgen Beck, Rudolf Walter: Jewish life in Bad Kissingen . Published by the city of Bad Kissingen, Bad Kissingen 1st edition: 1990
  • Denis André Chevalley, Stefan Gerlach: City of Bad Kissingen (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VI.75 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 1998, ISBN 3-87490-577-2 , p. 48 f .

See also

Web links

Commons : Kurhausstraße 10  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 50 ° 11 '43.69 "  N , 10 ° 4' 39.29"  O