List of architectural monuments in Bamberg / Michaelsberg
List of architectural monuments in Bamberg :
Overall facility: Ensemble Altstadt Bamberg Bergstadt: Bourgeois mining town • Domberg • Mountain town immunities: Stephansberg • Kaulberg, Matern and Sutte • Jakobsberg and Altenburg • Michaelsberg and Abtsberg Island City: Inner Island City • Island City expansions Theuerstadt: Lower nursery • Upper nursery • Wunderburg Incorporated places : Bruckertshof • Bug • Bughof • Gaustadt • Kramersfeld • Wildensorg |
The monuments of the Upper Franconian city of Bamberg 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.
This partial list contains the monuments in the area of the former immunity Michaelsberg according to the division of the book series Die Kunstdenkmäler von Bayern . The former immunity Michaelsberg includes the following squares and streets: Abtsberg , Abt-Wolfram-Ring, Am Leintritt, An der Kettenstraße, Andreas-Lang-Steig, Bamberger Weg, Buttenweg, Ethalweg, Ezzostraße, Frutolfstraße , Gumboldsleite , Maienbrunnen , Michelsberg , Multerweg, Ottobrunnen , Ottoplatz , Peter-Schneider-Strasse, Rothofweg, Sankt-Getreu-Strasse , Schweinfurter Strasse , Storchsgasse , Ziegelhof .
Architectural monuments in the former immunity Michaelsberg
Former Benedictine Abbey of St. Michael
The former Benedictine Abbey of St. Michael ( Lage ) ( pictures ) was founded in 1015 and secularized in 1803. There is now an urban retirement home in it. The complex with sandstone blocks built on a hilltop consists of a church, convent buildings, farm yard and gardens.
- Former monastery church ( pictures ), three-aisled basilica with a cross plan, with a gable roof and pent roofs over the side aisles, to the west double tower front with pointed helmets and a facade in early Baroque forms over an open staircase with an elaborate high baroque terrace, to the east transept, with a former sepulture to the south under a sloping mansard roof (today the Holy Sepulcher Chapel) and the main choir flanked by two-storey side choirs with a polygonal end, the oldest visible components of the transept with chorus major and chorus minor, Romanesque, 1117ff., post-Gothic choir closure probably 1583, redesign after Brand (1610) until 1614, reconstruction of the tower front by Georg Niedermaier and vaulting of the nave by Lazaro Agostino, west facade 1697/98 by Johann Leonhard Dientzenhofer, outside staircase with terrace 1723/24 by Johann Dientzenhofer based on a model by Johann Ulrich Moesel with figures by Leonhard Gollwitzer, choir side buildings 1725, Sepultur 1729, with furnishings
- Convent building, four-wing complex forming the almost square Kreuzhof, two-story novice wing attached to the north aisle, side wings aligned with the western front and transept, three-story with gable roofs, the northern main wing three-story with hipped roof, 1696–1702 by Johann Leonzenhofer and from 1707–177 von Johann Leonzenhard
- Courtyard conversion with courtyard and farm buildings on terrain rising towards the church: so-called New Abbey and Chancellery, joined to the south of the tower front of the church, short three-storey connecting building with a gable roof and three-storey pavilion with a mansard hipped roof, followed by a three-wing complex from the southern wing of the chancellery, western gatehouse wing and northern brewery wing, two-storey saddle roof buildings, in the west on a high base, pavilion 1726/27, other buildings with saddle roof and tile roofing 1739–1743 / 44 based on plans by Justus Heinrich Dientzenhofer (with corrections by Balthasar Neumann 1742), sculptures by Johann Peter Benkert
- Merkur fountain, in the forecourt, sandstone basin, 1710 by Johann Dientzenhofer, fountain figure, Merkur, workshop of Nikolaus Resch 1699
- Medieval monastery fortifications, remnants of a wall tower with a short section of wall, northeast of the front side of the northern economic wing
- The convent garden and upper abbey gardens were redesigned or laid out in 1711–1731, separated from each other by walls and terracing and from the eastern plateau and the orangery terrace
- Unterer Abtsgarten, Reuthersberggarten, orangery terrace and east plateau with fixtures cf. Extension of the gardens from St. Michael to Untere Sandstrasse
- Formerly associated brick yard with outbuildings see Michaelsberg 37, Ziegelhof and Ottobrunnen 1
Address: Michelsberg 10, 10b, 10 c, 10 d, 10e, 10f. File number: D-4-61-000-1012.
Extension of the gardens of the Michaelsberg monastery
Extension of the gardens from St. Michael (Michaelsberg 10) ( location ) ( pictures ) to Untere Sandstrasse, Orangery Terrace, Unterer Abtsgarten and Reuthersberggarten, with terracing, walls, pavilions and fountains, enclosing walls and three garden pavilions at the later Lower Abbey Garden and at Reuthersberg below Abbot Ludwig Dietz built by Balthasar Neumann, Johann Jakob Michael Küchel and Conrad Fink 1745–1752, garden terraces and lime tree avenue parallel to the slope on the eastern plateau under Abbot Gallus Brockard completed by gardener Leopold Lieseneck between 1759 and 1767, plateau garden redesigned several times in the 19th century
- Boundary wall of the lower abbey garden above the lower sand road accented by garden pavilions at the corners to the north and south, 1745–1752
- So-called glass house, greenhouse or orangery, sandstone cuboid building with hipped roofs of high, wide central building and low, short side wings, glazed southern front, 1746/47
- South-eastern pavilion on Unteren Abtsberg, two-storey octagonal sandstone block with a tail dome, 1744, attributed to Conrad Fink
- The north-eastern pavilion on the Lower Abtsberg, 1745/46, by the same architect of the same type
- Lower pavilion in Reuthersberggarten, sandstone cuboid construction on a transverse rectangular floor plan, curved hipped roof, one-storeyed on the garden side, two-storeyed when placed on the embankment wall to the sand, 1751/52, attributed to Conrad Fink, coat of arms of Abbot Ludwig Dietz by Johann Ludwig Reuss
- Dolphin fountain, on the central axis of the terraces of the Lower Abbey Garden, sandstone basin, fountain base with dolphin sculpture, no later than 1767
- Separating wall between Unteres Abtsgarten and Reuthersberggarten, from the northern garden pavilion to the eastern plateau, mid-18th century
- Wall with gate from the eastern plateau to the orangery terrace or to the convent garden and to the upper abbot garden, mid-18th century
- Barrier between the former kitchen garden and the eastern plateau, six sandstone pillars with a cast-iron gate, around 1800
- Artificial ruin in front of the south wall (see Ottoplatz 1)
- Classicist fountain facing Untere Sandstrasse in front of the garden wall (see courtyard washing fountain)
Address: Michelsberg 10 d, 10e, Untere Sandstrasse 51, 52. File number: D-4-61-000-700.
Brick yard
The former Gut Bubengereuth was later the Ziegelhof ( location ) ( pictures ) of St. Michael. The old building of the brick yard redevelopment on an angled floor plan, 15. – 18. Century includes the following buildings.
- Former gate building (Michaelsberg 37), two-storey saddle roof construction, with passage, shop fitting to the south, solid and half-timbered, plastered, ground floor essentially late medieval, upper floor around 1600 and at the end of the 17th century in the new building of Ziegelhof 1 with its street-side ground floor wall in 1956 heavily overformed
- Corner house built at an angle (St.-Getreu-Straße 2), elongated two-storey plastered building, eaves with a gable roof, solid construction, second half of the 17th century.
- At the corner a figural niche with depiction of the Man of Sorrows, type of the Erbärmdechristus in a rectangular frame niche, sandstone, late Gothic, early 16th century, including a rectangular tablet with scroll frame of the same width, inscribed "1649"
- Probably at the same time and of the same type of construction the adjoining residential building in the same street (St.-Getreu-Straße 4)
- Former sheep barn, single-storey saddle roof construction, with driveway on the eaves side under the elevator dormer, plastered quarry stone, with half-timbered gables, 1731
- Former monastic wash house (Ziegelhof 4), two-storey building on the retaining wall facing the Otto Fountain, north side as a sandstone block front with mansard roof, south side solid with half-timbered upper floor and gable roof, 1718, 1951/52 installation of apartments
- Barn below the Ziegelhof see Ottobrunnen 1
Address: Michelsberg 37, St.-Getreu-Straße 4, 2, near Ziegelhof, Ziegelhof 4. File number: D-4-61-000-1020.
Way of the Cross of Heinrich Marschalk von Ebneth zu Rauheneck from St. Elisabeth to St. Getreu
Eight stations from the Elisabethkirche over Aufseßstrasse to the Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, six rectangular sandstone reliefs, the seventh station in the first, northern nave chapel of the Provost Church of St. Getreu, donated in 1503 by Heinrich Marschalk von Ebneth zu Raueneck , Crucifixion group and Holy Sepulcher today in the Church of St. Faithful; see. also the relief of the Man of Sorrows, which is closely related to the Way of the Cross, at St.-Getreu-Straße 2. The first station of the Cross is in the area of the former bourgeois mining town.
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Obere Sandstrasse 42; Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16; Aufseßstrasse 2; Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 14 ( location ) |
Way of the Cross of Heinrich Marschalk von Ebneth zu Rauheneck from St. Elisabeth to St. Getreu | First of eight stations, Jesus leaves Pilate's house and is taken to the crucifixion | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Aufseßstrasse ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Second of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche over Aufseßstraße to the Benedictine propstium St. Getreu: Jesus meets his weeping mother | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Aufseßstrasse ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Third of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche via Aufseßstraße to the Benedictine provostry St. Getreu: Simon of Cyrene helps Jesus carry the cross | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Aufseßstrasse ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Fourth of eight stations from the Elisabethkirche over Aufseßstrasse to the Benedictine propstei St. Getreu: Jesus meets the weeping women of Jerusalem | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Aufseßstrasse 2 ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Fifth of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche via Aufseßstraße to the Benedictine propstei St. Getreu: Veronika hands Jesus the handkerchief | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Straße, on the street in front of the church ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Sixth of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche via Aufseßstrasse to the Benedictine propstium St. Getreu: Jesus falls under the weight of the cross | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Seventh of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche via Aufseßstraße to the Benedictine propstium St. Getreu, originally in the cemetery in front of the church, since 1873 in the church of St. Getreu: Crucifixion of Christ | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Eighth of eight stops from the Elisabethkirche via Aufseßstraße to the Benedictine propstium St. Getreu: Lamentation of Christ | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Station of the cross | Ninth station: Entombment of Christ | D-4-61-000-1159 |
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Abtsberg
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Abtsberg 2 ( location ) |
Two-storey storey villa | With penetrating hip and gable roofs, rusticated basement on the slope, structured by oriel turrets with pyramid roof, risalit with sandstone relief (half-figure of the Lourdes Madonna), two-storey covered wooden arbor, 1910 by Daniel Fuchs | D-4-61-000-1870 | |
Abtsberg 6 ( location ) |
So-called Villa Fuchs, later Villa Weyermann | Two-storey plastered building, massive, hipped roof looking towards the street as a mansard roof with a tufted roof, central projectile with saddle roof, built in 1901/02 by Daniel Fuchs as a hipped roof building for himself, changing renovation with extensions to the northeast and southwest in 1911 by Daniel Fuchs, from the renovation by Albin Strobel in 1923 Among other things, the attic, whose appearance was greatly changed in 2008/09 through a modern extension to the east
Garden with a network of paths, terraces, seating areas, fountains, gazebos and extensive sculptures made of cast stone, laid out from 1901, changed after the house renovations in 1913 and 1923 |
D-4-61-000-1450 | |
Abtsberg 13 ( location ) |
villa | Single-family house of the type of summer or holiday home, single-storey plastered solid construction on a square floor plan, in the mansard hipped roof on three sides dwarf houses with different roof or gable shapes, garden side central projection, at two corners polygonal stand bay windows, Werkbund ideas taking up new baroque, 1912 by Anton Fuchs for himself self-built, small changes in 1919 | D-4-61-000-1871 |
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Abtsberg 17 a ( location ) |
Villa developed from the former Kreilholz garden house | Two-part two-storey building, the existing Swiss- style house added to a small garden house built by Pankraz Baader in 1853 , saddle roof construction with solid ground floor and half-timbered upper floor, extensions in 1920/21 and 1928 by Gustav Haeberle , first the massive hipped mansard roof with terrace, then on this the half-timbered extension with a monopitch roof | D-4-61-000-840 |
Aufseßstrasse
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Aufseßstrasse 2 ( location ) |
Aufseesianum | West wing, three-storey mansard roof, by Justus Heinrich Dientzenhofer , 1740; Expansion to a three-wing complex only in 1873 and 1878/79 | D-4-61-000-45 |
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Gumboldsleite
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Gumboldsleite 12 ( location ) |
Garden pavilion | Wooden construction with cross roof, around 1895; belonging to the former gardens that stretched between the neighboring properties (cf. Schweinfurter Strasse 5 and 7) | D-4-61-000-1366 |
Maienbrunnen
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Maienbrunnen 18 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey eaves side building with asymmetrical saddle roof, solid ground floor with plastered rustication, on the upper floor plastered half-timbering, the core probably 17th century, rebuilt in 1860/65 | D-4-61-000-899 |
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Maienbrunnen 24 ( location ) |
Duplex house | Two-storey elongated Traufseitbau protruding with flat sloping gable roof with over older basement entrance, three-storey Risalit, reverse two west extending, lower storey wings, solid plastered with corner pilaster strips and neo-Gothic wood décor Maximilian style building type Swiss-style, 1851-1855 by Georg II. Hofbauer for the Merchant Johann Baptist Ruppert rebuilt in two construction phases | D-4-61-000-900 |
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Maienbrunnen 24 a ( location ) |
villa | Freestanding flat gable roof building, massive ground floor as a brick shell with corner blocks made of sandstone, knee-high timber frame, Swiss style, 1891–1892, roof terrace with single-storey winter garden 1898 | D-4-61-000-1447 |
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Near Maienbrunnen ( location ) |
Former fish pond of the Michaelsberg monastery | D-4-61-000-1447 |
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Maienbrunnen 34 ( location ) |
Single-storey saddle roof construction | Above a barrel vaulted cellar with massive gable walls and plastered half-timbering, 15th / 16th century. century | D-4-61-000-1883 |
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Near Maienbrunnen ( location ) |
Maienbrunnen | Statue of Our Lady made of Scheßlitz shell limestone over a shell-shaped fountain shell, backed by a low semicircular retaining wall, 1928 by Johann Speth | D-4-61-000-901 |
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Michelsberg
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Michelsberg 1 ( location ) |
House of the blue lily, also Mayland house | Two-storey plastered eaves building with a gable roof, massive, plastered half-timbered gable, in the core probably 16th century, upper floor early 18th century, ground floor changed in 1864 | D-4-61-000-1003 |
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Michelsberg 2 ( location ) |
Hebedanz Palais | Three-story, three-winged mansard hipped roof building with a baroque facade, solid, plastered, with sections in sandstone, the core of the two-story building, modified around 1700, with a cautiously structured Baroque facade with corner grooves from the time of the addition of floors 1736–1737, probably based on plans by Johann Jakob Michael Küchel | D-4-61-000-1004 |
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Michelsberg 3 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey, eaves mansard roof building, solid, plastered, with flat facade decoration, annex attached at the rear at an angle with a gable roof, 18th century, conversions 132 and as a custodian for small children in 1896 | D-4-61-000-1005 |
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Michelsberg 4 ( location ) |
Former prince-bishop's vineyard house with wine press | Eaves two-storey saddle roof building, solid ground floor, upper floor in half-timbered, plastered, east risalit-like porch with gable, drilled window and door frames, baroque, 18th century, older in core, remodeling after the secularization in 1832 | D-4-61-000-1006 |
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Near Michelsberg ( location ) |
Courtyard gate | Basket arch, sandstone, 1822 | D-4-61-000-1006 |
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Michelsberg 5 ( location ) |
Residential building | Gable roof building with eaves, which was erected over two parcels, with axially symmetrical attached dwelling, massive ground floor, upper floor probably plastered half-timbering, core around 1600, today's appearance around 1720/30 | D-4-61-000-1007 |
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Michelsberg 6 ( location ) |
Hebedanz-Palais, former farm yard from the stables with carriage shed and barn, today apartments | Single-storey plastered solid buildings, corner grooves, mansard roof buildings, 1738/39 by Johann Jakob Michael Küchel | D-4-61-000-1004 |
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Michelsberg 8 ( location ) |
Residential buildings | Two-storey gable roof building with angled roof on one side, symmetrically structured facade with front door in the central axis, plastered building with sandstone structures, first quarter of the 18th century, courtyard gate at the beginning of the 19th century, interior renovation in 1837 | D-4-61-000-1009 |
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Michelsberg 8 e ( location ) |
Villa Schröppel | Single-storey solid building with hipped mansard roof, richly structured towards the street by additions above a high base, standing bay, risalit with tail gable, stair tower with tented roof, brick plastered with ashlar structures, historicist, inscribed "1902", by Gustav Haeberle | D-4-61-000-1010 |
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Michelsberg 9 ( location ) |
Former tenement house, now a guest house | Two-storey gable roof building with eaves, probably plastered half-timbering, with original quadruple division, 18th century, renovated in 1986/88 | D-4-61-000-1011 |
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Michelsberg 10 e, on the garden wall of the former Benedictine monastery St. Michael, opposite Untere Sandstrasse 34 ( location ) |
Courtyard wash fountain | Small rectangular basin in front of a massive classical pillar, sandstone, around 1788/90 | D-4-61-000-697 |
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Michelsberg 11 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey gable roof building with eaves, plastered half-timbering, ground floor with curtain rustication, upper storey with drilled windows, around 1720 | D-4-61-000-1013 |
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Michelsberg 15 ( location ) |
Residential building | Free-standing two-storey hipped mansard roof building, solid, plastered, axially symmetrical late Baroque facade decor with corner grooves, drilled windows and parapet aprons under the upper floor windows, third quarter of the 18th century | D-4-61-000-1014 |
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Michelsberg 17 ( location ) |
Residential buildings | Two-storey building with a sloping roof on one side, solid ground floor, upper floor in structural framework exposed around 1930, first quarter of the 18th century | D-4-61-000-1015 |
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Michelsberg 19 ( location ) |
Residential buildings | Two-story building with a hipped roof on one side, solid ground floor, upper floor with exposed structural framework, 1712 | D-4-61-000-1016 |
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Michelsberg 25 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey eaves gable roof construction over level-leveling base, plastered solid construction, street front with grooved corner pilasters and field decoration, probably erected in 1717/18, statues of Emperor Heinrich II and Empress Kunigunde on consoles under shell canopies, mid-18th century above the front door | D-4-61-000-1017 |
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Michelsberg 27 ( location ) |
So-called house at the fountain | Corner house, two-storey eaves mansard hipped roof building, with simply decorated fronts, on the back with a two-storey wing under a hipped roof, solid, plastered, either around 1750/58 by mason Johann Konrad Weiß, or in 1807 by master mason Joseph Pfister, conversions in 1882 and 1906 | D-4-61-000-1018 |
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Michelsberg 29 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey eaves saddle roof building with an obtuse-angled broken facade, solid, plastered, core building around 1700, extension to the two southern axes in 1880 | D-4-61-000-939 |
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Michelsberg 31 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey plastered façade building with gable roof, ground floor partly solid, partly in half-timbered, upper floor in half-timbered, after 1695, expanded around 1860 and decorated with Gothicizing forms in the Maximilian style Michelberg 315 (Bamberg) | D-4-61-000-1019 |
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Michelsberg 33 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey mansard roof building with a side entrance, solid, plastered, around 1710/20, ground floor conversions in the last quarter of the 19th century and 1925, middle dormer window in 1934, demolition of the ground floor facade before 1990 | D-4-61-000-940 |
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Otto Fountain
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Ottobrunnen ( location ) |
Otto Fountain | Well house in the form of a field chapel, sandstone building with a gently sloping saddle roof, semicircular closed with a classicist columned pedicle front, rebuilt in 1836 using stone with late or post-Gothic tracery forms, with furnishings | D-4-61-000-1168 |
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Ottobrunnen 1 ( location ) |
Former construction barn | Elongated single-storey hipped roof building, solid, plastered, with ashlar structure, 1751/52 by the monastery master builder Conrad Fink, structural changes inside 1907; Part of the former brick yard of St. Michael (see also there) | D-4-61-000-1353 |
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Ottoplatz
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Ottoplatz 1; Schrottenberggasse 22; Near Michelsberg ( location ) |
Former Felsecker economic institute | Free-standing two-storey hipped mansard roof building, solid, plastered, with flat structure and framing in sandstone, erected 1795–1796, extensive renovation with the addition of the central dormer window in 1922
Ancillary building (Schrottenberggasse 22), single-storey hipped mansard roof structure, solid, plastered, over a mighty slope wall, built as a bakery in 1821 and converted for residential purposes in 1878/79 |
D-4-61-000-1169 |
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Ottoplatz 1, in the front garden ( location ) |
Monument of Saint Otto | Sandstone statue on a base, by Adam Christ and Philipp Dorsch around 1881 | D-4-61-000-1170 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 3 ( location ) |
Former director's villa of the mental hospital | Single-storey solid building on the gable, plastered with ashlar elements, mansard roof with half-hipped diaphragms, round tower, neo-baroque, 1899 by Hans Jakob Erlwein | D-4-61-000-1866 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 13 ( location ) |
Villa Remeis | Two-storey plastered solid building on a rectangular floor plan with a flat sloping hipped roof, round two-and-a-half-storey corner tower, in the core a round temple from 1811, today the tower basement, by Georg III. Hofbauer was expanded to a tower in 1872 and an annex was added, which was extended to the north by two window axes in 1874 | D-4-61-000-1220 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 13 ( location ) |
Former Faulwettersches garden house | Two-storey, plastered solid building in Swiss style, flat pitched pitched roof with wide roof overhang, wooden balcony on the gable side in Maximilian style, built in 1853, kitchen building from 1883 | D-4-61-000-1220 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 13 ( location ) |
Park-like gardens | Created in 1876 ff | D-4-61-000-1220 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry of St. Getreu, church | Eaves, four-section, towerless, solid baroque building, plastered, with simple pilaster structure, nave, four-bay wall pillar construction with saddle roof, around 1652, slightly drawn in choir with saddle roof of the same ridge height, former sacristy drawn in again, hip roof with bell ridge turret, Heinrich Dientzen von Hofer in front , around 1733 the western gable front of the nave has a low sepulture extension with a mansard hipped roof in 1738; with equipment | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 14 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, Propsteibau | Across the front of the choir with a front facing St. Michael, a two-storey sandstone block building with a mansard hipped roof above a high base, a sleek baroque facade with a central projectile, core structure, 1733–1735 by Justus Heinrich Dientzenhofer , 1738–1740 extended on both sides | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, so-called pavilion for women in the mental hospital | Connected to the north of the presbytery, two-storey hipped roof building over a high sloped base, 1898 | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, so-called ballroom building | North of the provost building with a gable roof on the sloping basement, 1907/08, ballroom renovated in 1933 | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, enclosure of the garden to the east | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 16 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry of St. Getreu, column with Christ carrying the cross | in the churchyard, inscription on the base, baroque, inscribed "1714"
After renovation, no longer at the old location, only the foundation is visible |
D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 14 ( location ) |
Former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu, so-called bread marter | In front of the garden wall, a small Romanesque bundle column, 12th century and a shell-crowned sculpture, copy from 1953 of the 17th century tabernacle | D-4-61-000-1221 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 18 ( location ) |
St. Getreu Mental Hospital, former pavilion for men | Wide-spread, plastered solid building made of three staggered structures with central projections, in the eastern part a mansard hipped roof with gable dormers, the western part with a hipped gable roof, two-storey street front, three-storey rear over sloping terrain, neo-baroque, 1907/08 by Wilhelm Schmitz; see. former Benedictine provostry St. Getreu (St.-Getreu-Straße 14/16) | D-4-61-000-1224 |
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Sankt-Getreu-Strasse 41 ( location ) |
Villa Falkenstein | Two-storey brick and half-timbered building, gently sloping hipped roof, wooden bay window, saddle roof of the corner projecting with decorated floating container, Swiss style, 1890 by Emmerich Goes | D-4-61-000-1392 |
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Schweinfurter Strasse
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Schweinfurter Strasse ( location ) |
So-called Rotenhan's torture | Wide base (renewed), top with crucifixion relief and depictions of saints on the narrow sides, sandstone, Gothic, 1501 | D-4-61-000-1287 |
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Schweinfurter Strasse 5 ( location ) |
villa | Two-storey hipped roof building with decorative gable, neo-renaissance, by Daniel Fuchs, 1891 | D-4-61-000-1288 |
more pictures |
Schweinfurter Strasse 7 ( location ) |
villa | Two-storey, multi-section building with a hipped roof on one side, historicist half-timbered upper floor, by Daniel Fuchs, 1893 | D-4-61-000-1289 |
more pictures |
Storchsgasse
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Storchsgasse 1 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey gable-roof house with eaves, solid, plastered, topped up after 1740 or completely rebuilt | D-4-61-000-1338 |
more pictures |
Storchsgasse 2 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey eaves-standing solid construction from 1836, mansard roof 1904, house figure, Anna-Selbdritt, around 1730 | D-4-61-000-1339 |
more pictures |
Storchsgasse 7 ( location ) |
Residential building | Small two-storey, gable-roof house with a simple façade, plastered half-timbering, cantilevered wooden upper floor arcade on the courtyard side, 1726 | D-4-61-000-1340 |
more pictures |
Storchsgasse 8 ( location ) |
Former suburban property, now a retirement home, residential building | Two-storey gable roof construction with a simple plaster structure, largely new building from 1846 with retention and reinforcement of the gable side walls from the end of the 17th century, extensively renovated in 1901 | D-4-61-000-1341 |
more pictures |
Brick yard
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ziegelhof 1 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey hipped mansard roof, massive, baroque cube, 1956 | D-4-61-000-1384 |
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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 monument property - 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 or 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.
literature
- Denis André Chevalley: Upper Franconia . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (= Monuments in Bavaria . Volume IV ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52395-3 .
- The art monuments of Upper Franconia in The art monuments of Bavaria 5.2: City of Bamberg 3, immunities of the mountain town, 2nd quarter volume: Kaulberg, Matern and Sutte . Edited by Tilmann Breuer, Reinhard Gutbier and Christine Kippes-Bösche, 2003, ISBN 3-422-03090-5
Web links
- Bavarian Monument Atlas (cartographic representation of the Bavarian architectural and ground monuments by the BLfD , requires JavaScript)
- List of monuments for Bamberg (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Monument Bamberg - Mobile site with detailed information on Bamberg's monuments