List of architectural monuments in Altötting
The monuments of the Upper Bavarian town of Altötting are compiled on this page . This table is a partial list of the list of architectural monuments in Bavaria . The basis is the Bavarian Monument List , which was first drawn up on the basis of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973 and has since been managed by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation . The following information does not replace the legally binding information from the monument protection authority. The list reflects the update status from July 3, 2018 and includes 74 monuments.
Architectural monuments according to districts
Altötting
Ensemble Kapellplatz
File number: E-1-71-111-1
The ensemble includes the polygonal pilgrimage square with the free-standing Holy Chapel, the collegiate parish church with the attached chapels and the former provost building, church and monastery of St. Magdalena with the congregation hall, the former canons' houses, inns, all pilgrimage shops, the town hall and two free-standing buildings Fountain.
The historical rank of the Altötting Kapellplatz is based on the attraction of the pilgrimage, first made visible in a late Gothic style, then reinterpreted in a Baroque style. As a place, Altötting was of course historically significant long before the beginning of the pilgrimage, as the central building of the Holy Chapel as the oldest rising masonry is testimony to despite controversial dating. The combination of sovereign property since the Agilolfingian era and the (Palatinate) monastery founded by Karlmann in 876/77 and renewed by Ludwig the Kelheimer in 1228 was able to save Altötting, which only became a town in 1898, from village insignificance and prepare the spiritual environment in which to follow Installation of an image of Mary and after a first miracle attested to in 1489 the pilgrimage grew surprisingly quickly. As early as 1493 pilgrims came from Landshut, soon also from Munich. The offerings flowed so abundantly that the collegiate church was replaced by a largely new building in 1499, after the central building of the Holy Chapel had also received a nave in 1494.
The following sixteenth century saw the chapel and the collegiate church in a juxtaposition of two constituent and complementary, but independent structures. Only the appointment of the Jesuits by Duke Wilhelm V and the centralization ideas they brought with them from the beginning of the 17th century tied the two into a space in such a way that the pilgrimage chapel played the role of the meaningful center, the collegiate church and the extension of the Propsteig building as axial Extension of the role of the south wall was intended. The concrete formation of the square began in 1593 on the east side with the college building and the Church of St. Magdalena of the Jesuits, and continued in the west with the “Old Canons ' Cane” from 1619. After the necessary break in the Thirty Years' War , in which Tilly and Maximilian I recognized their confidence The young Enrico Zuccalli was sent around 1672 to complete the square , which radiated from Altötting over the German south and which ultimately preserved the rule of the Wittelsbach and the old Bavarians the catholicity ; he was to vault the heart of the Holy Chapel with a mighty central building. From his plan, however, only the two proud hipped roof buildings of the “New Chorherrenstock” and the “Dechantei” in the northwest were carried out. The vacant lot between this and the old "Hofwirt" was filled with the new baroque town hall in 1908, but at that time not without resistance to the protruding building line, which did not want to adhere to the Zuccallic polygonal idea. In 1697/98 the Jesuits rebuilt their Magdalenakirche: the abandonment of the previous west tower in favor of a dome over the distant east apse brought a favorable correction for the plaza; it reduced the competition between towers and, together with the congregation hall, which was also built by the Jesuits in 1696, resulted in a broad facade effect for the eastern wall of the square. The marble Marienbrunnen built in 1637 west of the Holy Chapel by Santino Solari on behalf of the Archbishop of Salzburg reminds of the keeping of the miraculous image in 1632 in Salzburg Cathedral and thus of the fact that Altötting was an open, unpaved village, that even the Kapellplatz before the construction of the Zuccalli buildings in the north was only screened by a wooden fence and therefore the miraculous image with the pilgrimage treasures had to be brought to a safe place no fewer than four times. On the one hand, this is an indication that today's square in its size and shape cannot be the successor of an old palace court, but rather represents a unique, new achievement of the bond between the people, the clergy and the Wittelsbach court; on the other hand, Enrico Zuccalli was already concerned with the lack of closing options, who therefore provided for at least “6 Porten” - the western one in the main axis in the elevated form of a “Galleria”, so that in future the “carts” and the “Hofmarksvieh” would be held. Conversely, it made sense to occupy the access areas outside the gate positions with special architecture: in 1654–57 the Franciscans, called by Provost Franz Wilhelm von Wartenberg , built the monastery and church of St. Anna (today St. Konrad) in the west, 1734–37 the English Miss in the northeast her institute and her church, while the other gate positions were equipped with inns in the course of time, so that these would also serve the pilgrimage.
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kapellplatz ( location ) |
Well, so-called Marienbrunnen | Baroque complex, by Santino Solari , 1637. | D-1-71-111-31 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz ( location ) |
Fountain | Made of cast iron in neo-renaissance forms, late 19th century. | D-1-71-111-32 | |
Kapellplatz ( location ) |
War memorial | In memory of the fallen of the First World War, neo-baroque canopy on three pillars, with Pietà, by Franz Hoser , 1928. | D-1-71-111-85 | |
Kapellplatz 1 ( location ) |
Catholic pilgrimage chapel of St. Mary, so-called Holy Chapel or Chapel of Grace | Two-part system consisting of an early medieval central building and a late Gothic nave.
Octagonal core structure with a circular, eight-sided floor plan on the inside, with a pointed roof, rebuilt around 1000 in place of a previous chapel belonging to the Carolingian palace complex, three-bay nave with a steep gable roof and roof turret added in 1494, redesign of the interior in the first half of the 17th century, sacristy extension from 1686, covered walkway with segmented arcades, around 1517; with equipment . |
D-1-71-111-15 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz 2 ( location ) |
Former Hofwirt tavern, now Hotel Post | Three-storey hipped roof building with baroque facade structure, lower storeys 17th century, otherwise expansion by Christoph Zuccalli , 1685/1688;
Side wing to the north, three-storey building with plaster structure, probably 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-16 | |
Kapellplatz 2a ( location ) |
town hall | Three-storey new baroque building with corner tower and hipped roof, erected by Rudolf Esterer in 1908. | D-1-71-111-17 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz 4; 4a; 4b ( location ) |
Former deanery, now episcopal administration, pilgrimage museum and new treasury | Three-storey baroque hipped roof building with 19 window axes, built according to a plan by Enrico Zuccalli 1674–1677; with equipment;
Baroque garden over high retaining and enclosure walls (north wall renewed in 1982), corner garden pavilion; West side with open arcade; East side with former stables, ground floor hipped roof building with plaster structure, around 1674/1677. |
D-1-71-111-18 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz 7; 9; Papst-Benedikt-Platz 3 ( location ) |
Former Jesuit church St. Magdalena, since 1874 Capuchin monastery church | Baroque hall building, 1697/1698; with equipment ;
Joseph's Chapel, baroque, with dome light, 1674; with equipment; former Jesuit college, now Capuchin monastery, three-storey saddle roof building, adjoining the church to the southeast, in the core 17th century; Walling of the monastery garden, northern and eastern sections of plastered brickwork, structured on the garden side by blind arcades, around 1700, with two open chapel extensions and a round chapel, 19th century and around 1900, the southern wall was later renewed. |
D-1-71-111-20 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz 8/10/12 ( location ) |
Former canon house, now the deanery | Three-storey baroque hipped roof building with 20 window axes, based on a plan by Enrico Zuccalli , 1677/81. | D-1-71-111-21 | |
Kapellplatz 14 ( location ) |
Coffeehouse | Narrow, free-standing gable building in the style of the Maximilian era, third quarter of the 19th century. | D-1-71-111-22 | |
Kapellplatz 15/17/19 ( location ) |
Pilgrimage shop | Timber construction, shop surround in neo-renaissance forms at No. 17/19, attached to the collegiate church, end of the 19th century. | D-1-71-111-23 | |
Kapellplatz 16 / Kapuzinerberg 2 ( location ) |
Pilgrimage shop, so-called Neuöttinger Brothaus | Ground floor plastered building with hipped roof, mid-19th century. | D-1-71-111-24 | |
Kapellplatz 24; 18; 20; 22; 24a ( location ) |
Former canon house, now residential and commercial building | Two-storey elongated eaves side building with three gables, built in 1619;
To the west behind nos. 20, 22 and 24 row of two-storey pitched roof buildings, 18th century; Back building to No. 18, movie theater, elongated, three-storey building with a hipped roof, built around 1955/1958, with a diorama on the history of pilgrimage in the basement. |
D-1-71-111-25 | |
Kapellplatz 28; 21; Near Kapellplatz; Tillyplatz 2 ( location ) |
Former Canon Church of St. Philip and Jacob, now a Catholic parish church | Three-aisled late Gothic complex, built 1499–1511 on a partly Romanesque basis; with equipment ;
former treasury, completed in 1503, at the north-east corner of the church; Cloister , first half of the 15th century, on a late Romanesque basis, south of the church; with equipment; Sacristy, above chapter room, 1792/93, on the east wing of the cloister; with equipment; late Gothic double chapel in the cloister, ground floor former ossuary, 15th century, upper floor Siebenschmerzenkapelle, 1511; with equipment; Tillykapelle (Peterskapelle), in the cloister, with reliquary chapel on the south side and crypt, around 1425 and 17th centuries; with equipment; Sebastian Chapel, in the cloister, around 1680 based on a plan by Christoph Zuccalli ; with equipment; Ecce Homo Chapel, in the cloister; with equipment; Passage, on the east side of the church to the cloister. |
D-1-71-111-26 |
more pictures |
Kapellplatz 30/32 ( location ) |
Pilgrimage shop | At No. 30 shop surround in neo-renaissance forms, end of the 19th century; attached to the collegiate church. | D-1-71-111-27 | |
Kapellplatz 36 ( location ) |
Former provost office, then district office | Four-storey baroque hipped roof building attached to the west front of the parish church, 18th century, older in core. | D-1-71-111-28 | |
Kapellplatz 38; Am Kreuzweg 1 ( location ) |
Former office building, now residential and commercial building | Two-storey gable roof construction on the eaves, in the core Zehentstadel from 1678, facades after 1803;
Extension to the south, two-storey hipped roof building with loggias on the south facade, probably first third of the 20th century. |
D-1-71-111-29 | |
Kapellplatz 40/42/44/45 ( location ) |
Four pilgrimage shops | On the ground floor with basket arch windows, built in front of No. 38, end of the 19th century. | D-1-71-111-30 | |
Mühldorfer Straße 1 ( location ) |
Gasthof Altöttinger Hof | Three-wing complex, stately three-storey baroque building with hipped roof and two rear wings, built in 1685. | D-1-71-111-44 | |
Pope Benedict Square 5; Kapellplatz 7 ( location ) |
Congregation Hall | Baroque building with hipped roof, built in 1696; with equipment;
Extension, end of the 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-19 |
more pictures |
Outside the ensemble
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bahnhofplatz 1 ( location ) |
Altötting station | Multi-section, unplastered clinker brick building with reception building, two-storey hipped roof building, one-storey wing to the east, built on the south side as a covered, open summer hall (so-called prayer hall), analogous to the western staff wing with integrated, two-storey head building with hipped roof, built in 1896. | D-1-71-111-2 | |
Bruder-Konrad-Platz 1 ( location ) |
Papal pilgrimage basilica of St. Anna | Monumental wall pillar church with retracted choir, neo-baroque, based on plans by Johann Baptist Schott , 1910/12; with equipment ;
Chapel, so-called Pater-Joseph-Anton-Kapelle, three-sided open saddle roof building with transverse gables and bell chair, at the same time. |
D-1-71-111-3 |
more pictures |
Bruder-Konrad-Platz 2 ( location ) |
Former Franciscan house, so-called Stielhaus | Two-storey saddle roof building with baroque facade design, tail gable with fresco, around 1745, revised neo-baroque around 1912, renewed in 1983. | D-1-71-111-4 | |
Burghauser Straße 22 ( location ) |
Wegkapelle, so-called street chapel | Neo-Gothic, 1877; with equipment . | D-1-71-111-6 | |
Gebhard-Fugel-Weg 10 ( location ) |
Panorama of the crucifixion of Christ | Central building with tent roof, 1902/03; Painting by Gebhard Fugel (1863–1939), Josef Krieger and Heinrich Ellenberger . | D-1-71-111-9 |
more pictures |
Herrenmühlstraße 18 ( location ) |
Chapel, so-called Maria-Wasch-Kapelle | Integrated into the western wall of the house, marked with the year 1753. | D-1-71-111-11 | |
Herrenmühlstrasse 26; Herrenmuehlstrasse; Mühlbach ( location ) |
Residential house, so-called wine house, belonging to the Herrenmühle | Saddle roof construction with bay windows and turrets, Gothicising, end of the 19th century;
north single-storey extension, with overbuilding of the Mühlbach, probably at the same time; Court chapel, probably end of the 19th century; with enclosure wall, end of the 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-12 | |
Herrenmühlstrasse 35; Near Herrenmühlstrasse; Herrn- und Schleifmühle; Mühlbach ( location ) |
Former mill, so-called Herrenmühle | Residential house, two-storey stately hipped roof building, in the core 17th / 18th centuries Century;
northern transverse wing with arcades and loggia, two or three-storey hipped roof building; southern transverse wing, three-story hipped roof building; Mill building, three-and-a-half-storey saddle roof construction, with water wheel, south two-storey extension with crooked hip, 1902; Court chapel, so-called Trenkerkapelle, based on plans by master builder Simon Lehner, 1906; with equipment ; Garden wall with pavilion and iron fence enclosure; Garden shed with crested hip. |
D-1-71-111-13 | |
Near Holzhauser Straße ( location ) |
Wegkapelle St. Wolfgang, so-called Detterkapelle | 1879; with equipment . | D-1-71-111-1 | |
Kapuzinerstrasse 1; Bruder-Konrad-Platz 5 ( location ) |
Former Franciscan monastery and Church of St. Anna, since 1953 Church of St. Konrad, from 1802 Capuchin monastery | Built 1654–57, renovated in 1754, 1864 and 1956/57; with equipment ;
Monastery building, two-storey saddle roof structure, adjoining the church to the south, in the core 17th century; Two-storey saddle roof building to the northwest of the church, in the core 17th century. |
D-1-71-111-33 |
more pictures |
Kapuzinerstraße 6 ( location ) |
Former Kapellviertlhaus, so-called Bucherbäckerhaus | Three-storey saddle roof building on a high basement with two bay windows and a front staircase, the 17th century core, renewed at the beginning of the 20th century. | D-1-71-111-34 | |
Kapuzinerstraße 11 ( location ) |
Outbuilding of the Schex inn | Two-storey saddle roof building with partially vaulted ground floor, essentially a so-called second brother or poor house, built by master bricklayer Christoph Zuccalli in 1654, modified after 1803. | D-1-71-111-35 | |
Kapuzinerstraße 21/23 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey eaves side building with profiled eaves and gable cornices and baroque portal, 18th century;
Corresponding single-storey, narrow extension with round gable, probably 17th century. |
D-1-71-111-36 | |
Kolbergstrasse 4 ( location ) |
Josefsburg, so-called Kolbergschlösschen, since 1853 institute of the English ladies | Four-storey saddle roof building with a bay tower to the east, 1491;
Chapel, extended in a neo-Gothic style in 1854; with equipment ; Enclosure wall with pavilion and neo-Gothic gate, around 1853. |
D-1-71-111-37 |
more pictures |
Konventstrasse 4/6 ( location ) |
Canon Monastery of St. Rupertus | Three-storey hipped roof building with short corner wings, modern baroque style, 1927/30;
Chapel, 1927/1928; Saint Rupert's figure in the garden, probably early 20th century. |
D-1-71-111-39 | |
Konventstrasse 7 ( location ) |
Residential building | Baroque two-storey side eaves building, east wall with fresco, 18th century. | D-1-71-111-40 | |
Kreszentiaheimstraße 13 ( location ) |
Former storage cellar, so-called Stiegler cellar | Two-storey saddle roof building, marked with the year 1863, expansion in 1929;
north two-storey gable roof extension, garden side with veranda; east single-storey wing with central projection and saddle roof, marked with the year 1929; Summer garden. |
D-1-71-111-41 | |
Kreszentiaheimstraße 41/43 ( location ) |
Mission and Provincial House of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, so-called Kreszentiaheim | Three-storey main building with central projection and segmented arched gables, 1901, intermediate building, two-storey mansard hipped roof building with continuous balcony and arcades on the ground floor;
Monastery church, Church of the Adoration of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Art Nouveau, based on a plan by Michael Kurz , consecrated in 1916; with equipment ; Stable building of the Kreszentiaheims, gable roof building with dwelling houses, 1925. |
D-1-71-111-42 |
more pictures |
Mühldorfer Strasse ( location ) |
Bridge figure of Saint John Nepomuk | Mid 18th century. | D-1-71-111-46 | |
Mühldorfer Straße 15 ( location ) |
Former gingerbread house, now residential and commercial building | Biedermeier articulated hipped roof building, 1839. | D-1-71-111-45 | |
Mühldorfer Straße 24 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey baroque building with a high hipped mansard roof and plaster structure, 18th century. | D-1-71-111-95 | |
Near Mühldorfer Straße ( location ) |
Chapel, so-called Staudhammer Chapel, so-called Eschbach Chapel | 1989/1990 built at a new location, reconstruction of the baroque predecessor building; with 18th century furnishings . | D-1-71-111-8 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 2 ( location ) |
Gasthof Scharnagl | Multi-part three-storey facility.
Main building, stately hipped roof, rebuilt over an older foundation at the end of the 17th century (roof structure marked with the year 1691), with facade structure from the early 18th century; hipped roof building transversely positioned to the rear with passage and formerly open arcade to the east, probably 18th century; wing added to the northeast, arched on the ground floor, around 1880; Following the passage to the south, a broad section of the building with a large, arched ground floor room and a gently sloping gable roof, mid-19th century. |
D-1-71-111-47 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 4 ( location ) |
pharmacy | Three-storey building with hipped roof, arcades and other vaulted rooms on the ground floor, 17th century. | D-1-71-111-48 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 7 ( location ) |
St. Michael cemetery church | Late Gothic, built in 1469; with equipment ;
Cemetery, with grave monuments from the late 18th to early 20th centuries, late medieval complex, expanded in 1865 ff .; with walling from the 19th century; Crypt arcade hall from 1885; Mortuary, neo-Gothic, late 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-50 |
more pictures |
Neuöttinger Strasse 8; 6 ( location ) |
Institute and Church of St. Joseph (recently the Marriage of Mary) of the Congregatio Jesu, formerly the English Miss | Rococo hall church with vertically structured facade, high round arched ornamental gable and roof turret, 1735–1737; with equipment
Church building inserted between two three-storey building wings of different lengths, in the core 1721/1722, remodeled in the 19th century, to the south included an older former monastery building, three-storey with mezzanine and hipped roof, early 18th century. |
D-1-71-111-49 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 28 ( location ) |
villa | Neo-Renaissance building with a mansard roof and a richly structured dwelling, marked with the year 1895;
iron fence. |
D-1-71-111-52 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 30 ( location ) |
Residential building | Three-storey building with mezzanine and flat hipped roof, plaster structure, marked with the year "1861". | D-1-71-111-53 | |
Neuöttinger Straße 35 ( location ) |
Former doctor's house, residential building | Two-story building with a mezzanine floor, flat hip roof and pilaster strips, Italianized, 1856;
Outbuilding, single-storey saddle roof building with a profiled gable triangle, probably mid-19th century. |
D-1-71-111-54 | |
Neuöttinger Strasse 53; 57; 51; 55 ( location ) |
Franziskushaus, ancestral home of the Seraphinische Liebeswerk, today with elementary and secondary school, education center and kindergarten | Founded in 1893, series of different buildings.
Old main building, two-storey tent roof construction with mezzanine, Italianised, 1889; Gothic-style, two-storey wing buildings with mezzanine, gable projections and saddle roof, connected to the old main building to the south and north by means of single-storey connecting tracts, end of the 19th century; further south, three-storey hipped mansard roof with a dwelling and polygonal bay windows on the south front, end of the 19th century; further north, three and a half storey tower-like hipped roof building with plaster decor in the style of the 1920s; New baroque mansard roof building with arched windows, around 1925/30; to the north, free-standing two-storey saddle roof building with segmented arched windows, third quarter of the 19th century; Institution church from 1894, largely renewed in 1965; Exercise house, three-story building with a mansard roof and a neo-baroque ornamental gable to the north, extension in the west, probably from the end of the 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-55 | |
St. Georgen 2 ( location ) |
Vierseithof, ancestral home of the Schwanthaler sculptor family | Cross bar made of Nagelfluh-Brocken masonry, around 1850/1860;
Bundwerkstadel, around 1830/1840; Backhaus, Nagelfluhbau, marked with the year 1856; Grain box, free-standing two-storey wooden block construction, second half of the 17th century. |
D-1-71-111-56 | |
St. Georgen 4 ( location ) |
Inn and former St. Georgen mineral bath | Biedermeier hipped roof building, marked with the year 1841;
west of the court chapel, late 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-57 | |
St. Georgen 5 ( location ) |
Waterworks with tower | Brick buildings with stepped gables, mid-19th century on the structural basis of the water tower from 1627. | D-1-71-111-58 | |
Traunsteiner Strasse 1a; Burghauser Strasse 28; Traunsteiner Straße 1 ( location ) |
District Court | Stately two-story neo-baroque mansard hipped roof building with stuccoed coat of arms in the gable, around 1900;
east single-storey extension with mansard hipped roof, at the same time; Fencing. |
D-1-71-111-7 | |
Trostberger Straße 6 ( location ) |
Former inn | Three-storey corner building with high neo-renaissance gable, around 1900. | D-1-71-111-61 | |
Trostberger Straße 26 ( location ) |
Four-sided courtyard | Closed facility.
Plastered house, marked with the year 1894; Economic building, end of the 19th century; Remise, structured exposed brick building with decorative wooden shapes, gable roof, end of the 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-62 | |
Trostberger Strasse 52 ( location ) |
Chapel, so-called bark chapel | Small gable roof building completely clad with oak bark with transverse gable and campanile, Lourdes grotto at the rear, around 1870; with equipment ;
associated surrounding garden, at the same time. |
D-1-71-111-96 |
Aigner
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aigner 26 ( location ) |
Bundwerkstadel (south wing of the four-sided courtyard) | Around 1850/1870;
northeast grain box, two-storey block building, 1571. |
D-1-71-111-82 |
Geisberg
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Geisberg 85 ( location ) |
Dreiseithof | Farmhouse with a log upper floor, second half of the 18th century;
east hut, with bundwerk, probably 18th century; south of the barn with latticework, mid-19th century. |
D-1-71-111-65 |
Graming
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Graming 24 ( location ) |
Bundwerkstadel (south wing of the four-sided courtyard) | Around 1825/40. | D-1-71-111-66 | |
Graming 25 ( location ) |
Former smallholder and craftsman's house, so-called Lichtmayr-Webergütl | One and a half storey block building with two entrances (Eckfletz floor plan) and flat gable roof, originally with gable shredded, 1522/1538 (dendrochronologically dated).
The renovation was awarded the monument protection medal in 2018. |
D-1-71-111-67 |
Oberholzhausen
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Oberholzhausen 3 ( location ) |
Four-sided courtyard | Farmhouse, plastered, marked with the year 1832, with lattice work on the hayloft, marked with the year 1832
to the west of the hut, with the upper section of the fret, paintings on the south wall, first half of the 19th century; south passage, 19th century. |
D-1-71-111-72 | |
Oberholzhausen 5 ( location ) |
Dreiseithof | Farmhouse, plastered, with collar on the hayloft, mid-19th century;
to the east of the hut, with bundwerk and subsequent barn wing, probably mid-19th century. |
D-1-71-111-71 | |
Oberholzhausen 40 ( location ) |
Hut (east wing of the four-sided courtyard) | With fret top, around the middle of the 19th century. | D-1-71-111-73 | |
Oberholzhausen 49 ( location ) |
Farmhouse | Plastered central stable with lattice framework on the farm section, around 1860. | D-1-71-111-69 |
Oberschlottham
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Oberschlottham 16 ( location ) |
Lattice frame barn (south wing of the three-sided courtyard) | Mid 19th century. | D-1-71-111-74 |
Cutting edge
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hallway Schneidlehen ( location ) |
Wegkreuz, so-called Geisberger Kreuz | Richly designed polychrome complex with roofing, Christ and Our Lady of Sorrows made of cast iron, around 1900. | D-1-71-111-93 |
Barn
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stadel 58 ( location ) |
Lattice frame barn (south wing of the four-sided courtyard) | Mid 19th century. | D-1-71-111-76 | |
Stadel 61 ( location ) |
Lattice frame barn (south wing of the four-sided courtyard) | Mid 19th century. | D-1-71-111-77 |
Unterholzhausen
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unterholzhausen 41 ( location ) |
Catholic Parish Church of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary | Hall church with chapel on the south side, late Gothic building from 1476; with equipment . | D-1-71-111-78 | |
Unterholzhausen 52 ( location ) |
Former monastery house of the Au am Inn monastery, former rectory | Stately, free-standing baroque hipped roof building with stucco structure, portals with blown gables on the north and south sides, marked with the year 1722. | D-1-71-111-79 |
Unterschlottham
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hall Unterschlottham ( location ) |
Wegkapelle, so-called Jetzkapelle | Built in 1836; with equipment ; 2000 moved a few meters to the west from the original location. | D-1-71-111-81 |
Wallner at the Osterwies
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wallner at Osterwies 27 ( location ) |
Bundwerkstadel (south wing of the four-sided courtyard) | Mid 19th century (renewed). | D-1-71-111-83 |
See also
Remarks
- ↑ This list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. The latter can be viewed on the Internet as a PDF using the link given under web links and is also mapped in the Bavarian Monument Atlas . Even these representations, although they are updated daily by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation , do not always and everywhere reflect the current status. Therefore, the presence or absence of an object in this list or in the Bavarian Monument Atlas does not guarantee that it is currently a registered monument or not. The Bavarian List of Monuments is also an information directory. The property of a monument - and thus the legal protection - is defined in Art. 1 of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act (BayDSchG) and does not depend on the mapping in the Monument Atlas and the entry in the Bavarian Monument List. Objects that are not listed in the Bavarian Monument List can also be monuments if they meet the criteria according to Art. 1 BayDSchG. Early involvement of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation according to Art. 6 BayDSchG is therefore necessary in all projects.
Individual evidence
- ↑ BLfD: Denkmalschutzmedaille 2018 , page 6, accessed on July 3, 2018.
literature
- Wilhelm Neu, Volker Liedke: Upper Bavaria . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (= Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.2 ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52392-9 .
Web links
- List of monuments for Altötting (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Altötting in the Bavarian Monument Atlas