Landolinsgasse 8/1 (Esslingen)

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Landolinsgasse 8/1

The house Landolinsgasse 8/1 is a plastered half-timbered building from the late Middle Ages.

history

The house on the corner of Heugasse was built around 1360 and received a new, multiple cantilevered gable in the 17th century. In the 19th century, changes were made, of which wall-mounted elements such as fillet stucco and wall panels in the interior are evidence.

The house consists of two different parts: Its north part is a half-timbered building with an independently cut substructure. The two-storey structure in post construction protrudes; The remains of a plank room have been preserved on the first floor.

The southern part of the house, on the other hand, has a masonry ground floor, on which two floors were also placed in post-and-beam construction. The solidly bricked part originally comprised halls that occupied the ground floor and the first floor. Possibly it was a storage room.

Former owners

An advertisement from Samuel Lauchheimer from 1896

The house was assigned to Heugasse until 1902 and had the address Heugasse 18. It was temporarily owned by the cattle dealer Samuel Lauchheimer. Lauchheimer, who moved from Jebenhausen to Esslingen in 1865 after the legal equality of Jewish citizens with other citizens had taken place in 1864, was the first Jewish cattle dealer in Esslingen and used the building for his business and at least in 1896 as a dairy cure facility. The cattle shed was opposite the house. The Lauchheimer family lived in Esslingen for several decades. Samuel Lauchheimer's daughter Babette married Moritz Horkheimer from Zuffenhausen ; the son Max Horkheimer emerged from the marriage . The sons Max (1860–1919) and Otto (1866–1932) took over the cattle business after Samuel Lauchheimer's death. Otto Lauchheimer's property also included the house at Zwerchstrasse 6 , which he rented out and which his widow Rika later inherited. She was deported to Riga in 1941, where she was murdered.

Individual evidence

  1. Andrea Steudle et al., Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany. Cultural monuments in Baden-Württemberg. Volume 1.2.1. City of Esslingen am Neckar , Ostfildern 2009, ISBN 978-3-7995-0834-6 , p. 167
  2. Eberhard Kögel, have you done well? Memories of the Jewish cattle trade in Esslingen and the cattle Jew Berthold Oppenheimer and his family , Esslingen 2006, ISBN 3-933231-37-X , pp. 7–9

Coordinates: 48 ° 44 ′ 30.5 ″  N , 9 ° 18 ′ 38.2 ″  E