Linslerhof

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Linslerhof Überherrn (entrance)
Linslerhof (aerial view)

The Linslerhof near Überherrn in the Saarlouis district in the Saarland is a historic estate . The ensemble of courtyard buildings is one of the architectural monuments of the municipality of Überherrn . Today the Linslerhof houses a romantic hotel and various leisure facilities.

history

In the two confirmation documents of the Augustinian Provosty and later Fraulautern Abbey by the Archbishop of Trier Hillin (document of 1154) and by Pope Hadrian IV (document of January 23, 1155), the Augustinian Provosty Fraulautern is confirmed an allod to Lendesele and to Lindenselle , respectively Wirich and his mother had previously given Jutta. A lay judge from 1422 names the Lindesell farm in the Warndt district and Völklingen High Court as belonging to the Fraulautern Abbey. The name was subsequently slumped to Linsel and recently expanded to Lins (e) lerhof . In the base word, the name follows a number of other names on -sel.

The name "Leseln" or "Leslerhof" is still used today by the local population for the Linslerhof. The nuns of the abbey were always obliged to read three masses in the chapel at the Linslerhof. Pilgrimages and market days developed from this. The day on the Saturday after Pentecost, known as “Readers' Day”, is still celebrated today.

The origin of the Antonius Chapel is obscure. In the Thirty Years War it was destroyed, set up in 1682 again.

During the French Revolution , the Fraulautern monastery was closed in 1789 and the Linslerhof was auctioned in 1791. In another auction in 1824, Louis Henri Fulbert de Galhau acquired the estate. His son Nicolas Adolphe de Galhau had the current buildings built in 1874. Today the Linslerhof is owned by Wendelin von Boch-Galhau , who grew up on the farm. In the 1990s he renovated the Linslerhof together with his wife Brigitte.

literature

  • E. Ausfeld: The beginnings of the Fraulautern monastery near Saarlouis . In: Yearbook of the Society for Lorraine History and Archeology, 12th year, Metz 1900, pp. 1–60, therein on Linsel, pp. 16ff. (Documents No. 1 and No. 2), placed in the index p. 57 on Linslerhof. Online at gallica
  • Dieter Staerk: The desert areas of the Saarland. Contributions to the history of the settlement d. Saar area from the early Middle Ages to the French Revolution . Publications of the commission for Saarland national history and folk research; Vol. 7, Saarbrücken 1974. At the same time dissertation, Saarland University, 1974.
  • Ruth Kunz; Maria Vòllono: North and South words in the Saar-Mosel area. Old word layers in toponyms of an exemplary interference space . Publications of the Commission for Saarland State History and Folk Research; Vol. 42, Saarbrücken 2009.

Individual evidence

  1. Ausfeld 1900, p. 16ff.
  2. Staerk 1974, p. 284
  3. Kunz; Vóllono 2009, p. 262
  4. a b c Historical overview on the website of the Hotel Linslerhof
  5. History of Gut Linslerhof on Burgen-und-Schloesser.net

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 15 '8 "  N , 6 ° 43' 53"  E