Laimer Schlössl

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Laimer Schlössl
Back and park
House sign

The Laimer Schlössl is a castle at Agnes-Bernauer-Straße 112 in the Laim district of Munich .

description

The building has seven dormers with triangular gables.

It is part of the Laim Cultural History Trail . The castle and the associated garden are under monument protection.

history

In 1433 the property of the Laimer Schlössl initially belonged to the wife of the future Duke Albrecht III. from Bayern-Munich , Agnes Bernauer . Two years later, Duke Ernst, her husband's father, had her drowned in the Danube. In 1713 Max Emanuel used the property as a hunting seat. He also quartered his mistress Agnes de Louchie there. In 1792, Elector Karl Theodor had an earthenware and porcelain factory built and gave the property to his lover Elisabeth Schenk zu Castell in 1793. It fell into disrepair in the 19th century. In 1908, Professor Theodor Fischer acquired the Schlössl and had it restored. Theodor Fischer dies in 1939 and the house is bequeathed to his wife, Therese Fischer. In 1950 a Silesian art and music hall, the Gerhart-Hauptmann-Halle, was opened in the Schlössl. Therese Fischer dies in 1952; The estate is sold by the heirs to the Leuthenmayr family, who opened an antique shop there. After the death, the children Karl, Maximilian and Albert Leuthenmayr took over the property. Since then, Karl Leuthenmayr has been running his specialist shop for decorators in the Schlössl. In 2018, the Leuthenmayr brothers finally sold the property to a private individual.

Individual evidence

  1. Laim Culture and History Trail. (PDF) Cultural Department of the City of Munich, 2009, accessed on May 23, 2018 .
  2. Laimer Schlössl. In: muenchen.de. Portal München Betriebs-GmbH & Co. KG, 2018, accessed on May 23, 2018 .

Web links

Commons : Laimer Schlössl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files


Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 23.4 "  N , 11 ° 29 ′ 53.1"  E