List of architectural monuments in Dinkelsbühl
List of architectural monuments in Dinkelsbühl :
Ensemble Altstadt · City fortifications · Former Hospital of the Holy Spirit Core city street names: A · B · C · D · E · F · G · H · I · K · L · M · N · O · P · R · S · T · U · V · W Other districts: Bernhard Wend · Froschmühle · Gaismühle · Hammer Mill · Hardhof · Hausertsmühle · hunger farm · Kemmleinsmühle · ketch Weiler · Knorr mill · Langensteinbach · Mögelins-Schlößlein · Neumühle · Oberradach · Radwang · Rain · Reichert mill · Sankt Ulrich · Segringen · Seidel village · Sinbronn · Weidelbach · Wolfertsbronn |
The monuments of the large district town of Dinkelsbühl in Central Franconia 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 list reflects the update status of October 3, 2014 and contains 627 architectural monuments.
Dinkelsbühl old town ensemble
The ensemble includes the former imperial city in its fortification belt with the Wörnitzinsel and the river course of the Wörnitz, with the ponds at the Segringer and Rothenburger Tor as well as the Hippenweiher and the area of the Bleiche within its late medieval fortifications.
The city of Dinkelsbühl is embedded in the gently sloping terrace slope of a basin of the Wörnitz, which has dug its bed through a bubble sandstone height. In the settlement-geographically favorable ford location, which also gained importance in terms of traffic geography due to the two important highways of ancient origin that cross at this point (in the north-south direction of the trade route in the Wörnitztal, crossing the so-called Nibelungenstraße), the market place that with high probability was raised to the status of a Hohenstaufen city by Emperor Barbarossa after the mid-12th century.
In 1188, with the marriage contract that Emperor Friedrich I Barbarossa concluded for his son Duke Konrad von Rothenburg , Dinkelsbühl was first mentioned in a document and at the same time it was also shown as a Staufer property. Probably fortified as a large Hohenstaufen castle in the battle for the royal throne from 1126 and raised to the market in 1142/1146, the emperor must have raised or founded the town shortly before the marriage contract. By 1251, at the end of the Hohenstaufen rule , the city had expanded the fortification of the oval old town center, which is still clearly visible in the current course of the streets.
In the center, directly at the crossroads - undoubtedly predetermined in the location as the first market church - a first stone church rose in the middle of the 12th century, probably St. Ursula consecrated. It was expanded around 1227 with a campanile as a late Romanesque church. Overbuilt in the 14th century with the St. Bartholomäuskirche and the first St. Georgskirche, the predecessor of the late Gothic Eseler building 1448–1499, two-storey tower house (octagon) and hood in 1550. The town church was in the beginning ecclesiastically still the mother parish of Segringen and thus subordinated to the Hirsau patronage monastery Mönchsroth ; Measured against the representative forms of the architectural sculpture that has been preserved on the tower portal, this building can be seen as an essential testimony to the early growth in importance of the young Staufer city. In 1532 the city acquires the right of patronage and the tithe.
Two structural undertakings - next to the hospital enlargement and installation of Gothic Carmelite - monastery church - bear witness to the ongoing economic rise, the increase in population and a total of awareness and reputation of the then free bourgeoisie: First, the protective after 1314 Outer trench after 1360 and the other Wörnitzufer enclosed, which included in a generous extension the suburban district, which for a long time was only loosely developed. From 1372, the walling of today's city ring began, which with its stately inner and outer gate towers and front gates, the former 22 wall towers, the kennels with their towers and bastions created a well thought-out defense system of high practicality and at the same time of decisive effectiveness for the cityscape. In the Thirty Years' War the city had 55 gate and wall towers, kennels and bastions.
The character of the closed late medieval city structure is intensified by the fact that the city fortifications, such as the high city gates and the wall towers on the Upper Wall Trail, extend far into the center of the city and can be seen from the many different views. The largely preserved older paving , the numerous wheel deflectors , the windows almost entirely divided by cross- bars and the street lighting mostly attached to the houses also contribute to the cohesion of the city ensemble .
In the area of the ensemble there are 583 individual monuments, some of which consist of several buildings like the hospital or the city fortifications. The following city and square images are to be listed as special areas within the ensemble: Altrathausplatz, Bauhofstraße, Hintere Priestergasse, Kirchhöflein, Klostergasse, Koppengasse, Lange Gasse, Ledermarkt, Marktplatz (with wine market ), Nördlinger Straße, Obere Schmiedgasse, Russelsberg, Schweinemarkt, Segringer Straße , Turmgasse, Untere Schmiedgasse, Wörnitzgasse.
File number: E-5-71-136-1.
City fortifications
The first almost circular fortification of the early 13th century can still be seen in today's street structure, but only remains at the Wörnitztor are preserved.
From 1372, in connection with an expansion of the urban area, the construction of the fortification ring began, which is still almost unchanged today. The work continued until the Thirty Years War with a total of 55 towers and gates. It is a closed wall ring with four inner city gates, four abandoned outer city gates, once 22 individually designed watchtowers, 18 kennel stands and bastions of the inner city wall, others on the outer city wall as well as a moat and lined wall. The Dinkelsbühl town mill, which is integrated into the fortification as a fortified mill, is unique .
The city wall consists of continuous masonry made of chunky blocks from 5 to 6 m high up to the height of the walkway of the battlements after 1372, at the beginning of the 19th century battlements largely removed and covered with nuns' bricks. On both sides of the Wörnitztor city wall with Romanesque humpback ashlars around 1230. The city wall is equipped with loopholes , covered battlements and key notches . The kennel complex has been preserved, no kennel was built in western Bering because of the moat and mill ditch.
Today's four city gates are: in the east the Wörnitztor at the Mühlgraben fed by the Wörnitz, in the north the Rothenburger Tor, in the west the Segringer Tor on the road to the neighboring town of Segringen, in the southeast the Nördlinger Tor. The city gates are listed as monuments under separate file numbers.
The following watchtowers are present in the course of the city wall: Dalkinger Tower (Stump), Faulturm, Green Tower, Dreikönigsturm, Wächerturm, Berlinsturm, Haymersturm, Dönersturm (base remains), White Tower, Hagelsturm, Hertlesturm, Krugsturm, Salwartenturm, two Radstatt towers of the city mill, Am Türlein (stump), Bäuerlinsturm, Henkersturm, three-gang tower, small bastion.
The city moat stretches from the digestion tower along the Kapuzinerweg and after the Segringer Tor along the Upper Wall Path. Most of it is lined, has an outer wall and terrace lining walls and is reinforced by kennel stands. Most of them have been converted into garden houses or residential houses (see Kapuzinerweg 5, Oberer Mauerweg 12, 16, 20, 26, 30, 36, 50). The former stands are managed under their own file numbers.
File number: D-5-71-136-1.
Going counter-clockwise, starting at the Wörnitztor, there are the following gates, towers and kennels in the city fortifications:
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Altrathausplatz 7, Mühlgraben ( location ) |
Wörnitztor | Eastern city gate, gate tower partly made of Staufer blocks, partly plastered, with gable roof and pointed arch gate, flanking wall parts with passages and former gate kennel, passage around 1230, tower heightened around 1400, upper floor of the tower with gable from the late Renaissance around 1600 | D-5-71-136-18 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 10 ( location ) |
Hospital bastion | Semicircular, open corner kennel bastion | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 14 ( location ) |
Blackland Bastion, so-called Dalkinger Tower | Eckzwingerbastei, two-storey plastered ashlar building with hipped roof, 16th century | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse 12; Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse; Near Bleichweg ( location ) |
Rothenburg Gate | Northern city gate, five-storey, partially unplastered, ashlar gate tower after 1372, with late 16th century gable, front gate with diagonally placed corner core and hipped roof, 16th century | D-5-71-136-100 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse 12; Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse; Near Bleichweg ( location ) |
Rothenburg Gate | Access road, partly on high substructure, quarry stone masonry, 16th century | D-5-71-136-100 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse 29 ( location ) |
Digestion tower | Prison tower, high plastered round tower with conical roof, loopholes, battlements led around the outside, covered external stairs from the 19th century, slightly recessed over a high base, 1370/1420 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse 29 ( location ) |
Park ranger's house, former corner kennel at the digestion tower | 15th century, conversion to a residential building in the 16th century, single-storey, unplastered solid construction with a steep hipped roof and half-timbered gable | D-5-71-136-114 |
more pictures |
On the city wall between Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 29 and Kapuzinerweg 5 ( location ) |
Former kennel | Outer walls |
more pictures |
|
Kapuzinerweg 5 ( location ) |
Former kennel, now residential building | Two-storey plastered building with a slightly protruding transept and hipped roof, 16th century | D-5-71-136-197 |
more pictures |
Near Kapuzinerweg 2 ( location ) |
Green tower | Watchtower and prison tower, tall, slender, plastered stone building with a conical roof and cornice structure, first quarter of the 15th century, battlement outside. In documents, the tower is also referred to as the high tower or Luginsland | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Near Kapuzinerweg 1 ( location ) |
Dreikönigstürmlein | Watchtower, square stone building set over a corner with a pointed tent roof, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Kapuzinerweg 1 ( location ) |
City wall and lower part of the Epiphany Tower | Belongs to the residential building | D-5-71-136-193 |
more pictures |
Segringer Straße 58 a ( location ) |
Segringer Gate | Western city gate, five-storey plastered gate tower with cornice structure, onion dome and lantern, newly built by Antonio Don 1655–1660, onion dome with lantern 1749, 19th century stone staircase on the wall adjoining to the north, two-storey front gate building on the field side with hipped roof and basket arched gate | D-5-71-136-567 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 12 ( location ) |
Extension to the former kennel with a massive roofed terrace and bowling alley | After 1825 | D-5-71-136-409 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 12 ( location ) |
Pike kennel, former kennel of the city fortifications, then a garden restaurant and summer cellar | Two-storey hipped roof house built against the city wall, on a high basement, 15th century core, arched “1518”, conversion in the 18th century | D-5-71-136-409 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 14 ( location ) |
Wächtersturm, tower at the women's shelter | Watchtower, two-story exposed stone building with tent roof and loopholes, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 16 ( location ) |
Former kennel, now garden shed | In the kennel area of the city fortifications, two-storey cubic solid building with hipped roof and loggia, in the core 15th century, remodeling 19th century | D-5-71-136-411 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 18 ( location ) |
Berlinsturm | Watchtower, three-storey exposed stone building with a gable roof and cornice structure, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 20 ( location ) |
Former kennel, now residential building | Two-storey solid construction with tent roof and plaster structure, 15th century core, remodeling 17th / 18th. Century;
Extension to the city wall, two-story saddle roof construction, after 1825 |
D-5-71-136-413 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 22 ( location ) |
Haymarsturm, prison tower | Small unplastered round tower made of ashlar with eight-sided tent roof, battlements led around the outside, after 1372, neo-Gothic windows | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 26 ( location ) |
Former kennel, now residential building | Two-storey cubic building with a gable roof on a high basement, partly plastered stone, in the core 15th century, alterations and additions 18th / 19th century. century | D-5-71-136-416 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 28 ( location ) |
White tower, watchtower | Four-storey exposed stone building with a steep hipped roof, loopholes and pointed arch entrance, planned as a gate to the south, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 30 ( location ) |
Former kennel, now residential building | Two-storey cubic building with hipped roof, substructure and ground floor partially plastered stone, in the core 15th century, remodeling 17th / 18th. century | D-5-71-136-418 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 32 ( location ) |
Hailstorm, watchtower | Square bare stone building with tent roof, bosses and tracery openings, after 1372, bricked up on the city side in the 17th century, change marked "1720" | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 36 ( location ) |
Remnants of a former kennel | Ashlar, 15th century | D-5-71-136-421 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 40 ( location ) |
Hertlesturm, watchtower | Slightly recessed round tower made of sandstone blocks with a conical roof, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 42 ( location ) |
Krugsturm, watchtower | High round tower made of ashlar stones with a conical roof, extended on the city side by an entrance porch, after 1372, change marked "1669" | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 48 ( location ) |
Salwart tower, watchtower | High round tower made of unplastered ashlar stones with a conical roof, town-side porch with former arched entrance, after 1372 | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 50 ( location ) |
Former corner kennel, now residential building | Two-storey plastered hipped roof building with flat bay windows, on a high basement, 15th century core, remodeling 17th / 18th. Century; Intermediate building to the city wall after 1825 | D-5-71-136-428 |
more pictures |
Oberer Mauerweg 48 ( location ) |
Side gate of the south-eastern city gate | Around 1400. Arched passage, pedestrian gate (secondary gate) and covered access stairs, 1971 | D-5-71-136-399 |
more pictures |
Nördlinger Straße 62 ( location ) |
Nördlinger Tor, south-eastern city gate | Rectangular gate tower made of unplastered ashlar, with four floors and a pointed arched gate, plastered fourth floor around 1400 and stepped gable before 1600, lookout bay in the gable floor 1655 | D-5-71-136-399 |
more pictures |
Mönchsrother Straße 1 ( location ) |
Stadtmühle , Wehrmühle as part of the city fortifications | Fortified mill from 1378–1600, once on the field side with a moat, Radstatt with battlement and two slender round towers with a conical roof, water inlet and outlet of the Mühlgraben, on the field side battlement in the Mühlhaus, which once continued on the Mühlhof wall to the gate and the battlement at the Nördlinger Tor . Renaissance front gable, coat of arms inscribed "1600" | D-5-71-136-310 |
more pictures |
Unterer Mauerweg 1 ( location ) |
Bäuerlinsturm, watchtower | Slender, unplastered ashlar stone building with a protruding half-timbered crown storey and a steep half-hipped roof, in the core 1400, upper third of the tower and structure from the 16th century | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Unterer Mauerweg 2 ( location ) |
Executioner's storm, watchtower | Square, unplastered ashlar stone building with a tent roof, after 1372. The tower served as a place to stay for the hangmen who had traveled | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Near Altrathausplatz ( location ) |
Three-speed tower, watchtower | Slender, unplastered round tower made of stone with a conical roof, around 1400. The wall of the city expansion meets the Staufer city wall of the first fortification here | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
Near Altrathausplatz ( location ) |
Small bastion, gun turret | Broad round tower made of unplastered stone with a conical roof, marked 1555. The battlements of the city wall are completely preserved here up to the Wörnitz gate | D-5-71-136-1 |
more pictures |
In the Wörnitz lowlands, along the entire northeast side of the city, the open and naturally given defensive area was secured by a chain of ponds and the dammed Stadtmühlgraben. An outer city fortification with towers, the outer Rothenburg gate tower and the Wörnitzbastei were located along today's Loderweg and Bleichweg. The wall in the area of Loderweg 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 and on Bleichweg was built over. The city moat there was preserved as a depression, along with part of the moat lining on the Bleichweg.
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Bleichweg 4 ( location ) |
Former Wörnitzbastion | Semi-circular substructure with plastered superstructure included in the residential building, the core of the 15th century | D-5-71-136-80 |
more pictures |
Bleichweg 4 ( location ) |
Fortification wall | Partial section, 15th century | D-5-71-136-80 associated |
more pictures |
Loderweg 7 ( location ) |
Former kennel complex | D-5-71-136-737 |
more pictures |
Former hospital for the Holy Spirit
Around 1280 the former hospital to the Holy Spirit was founded. At that time it was still outside the city, that is, outside the first city fortifications. From 1380 the facility was extensively rebuilt or expanded with new buildings. The Spitalkirche around 1280, expanded around 1310 and 1445. Baroque style in the 18th century, ceiling fresco “Redemption” from 1774. The Spitalhof is bordered to the east by the city wall and to the west by Dr.-Martin-Luther-Strasse. The main building is the three-winged Pfründneranlage (No. 6a), to which the hospital church (No. 8) adjoins immediately to the north. The former orphanage (No. 6b) is located north of the hospital church, separated by the small former cemetery. This is followed by the main entrance to the hospital with a round gate. The former hospital (No. 6c) is north of the main entrance. The former Fronveste or the Amthaus (witch interrogation) and prison (No. 6d) borders the city wall with the Rothenburg Gate. There is a large barn in the hospital courtyard, today the State Theater (No. 10). A mill wheel and a cold ironer were set up as museum objects in the inner courtyard on the eastern city wall. The system consists of the following parts.
location | object | description | File no. | image |
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Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6a ( location ) |
Former hospital building | Two-storey three-wing complex on a high basement, massive plastered construction, south wing with hipped roof marked "1551", east wing with crooked roof marked "1774" | D-5-71-136-96 |
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Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6a, on the city wall ( location ) |
Former farm buildings | Ground floor solid buildings with pent roof, 18th century | D-5-71-136-96 |
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Near Dr. Martin Luther Strasse, at the city wall ( location ) |
Outbuildings | Ground floor pent roof building made of quarry stone, 18th century | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6a-b ( location ) |
Running fountain | Six-sided iron basin with crank fields, inscribed "1710", neo-Gothic wood paneling of the 19th century fountain column | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 8 ( location ) |
Evangelical Lutheran Hospital Church | Hall building with strongly drawn-in, straight-closing choir, attached sacristy and slender facade tower, 1280/1456, conversions and fixtures 17th / 18th. Century; with equipment . Only the tower from 1456 is visible from the street. | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b ( location ) |
Former orphanage | Three-storey saddle roof building with curved Renaissance gable, protruding second half-timbered upper floor, bay-like porch with arcade hall, stair tower and roof turret. Inside building inscription 1567, on the street gable the coat of arms inscribed "1599", "1698" and "1730" | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b ( location ) |
Former cold deficiency in the dye works at Wörnitztor | Relocated wooden construction with Göpel, renewed in 1735 | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b-c ( location ) |
Former mill wheel of the abandoned Hardmühle | 18./19. century | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6c ( location ) |
Former municipal hospital, nursing home | Three-storey rectangular building with hipped roof and side stair tower,
late 19th century |
D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6c ( location ) |
Draw well in the courtyard | Stone fountain surround with wooden swinging tree | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6d ( location ) |
Former prison, called Fronveste and Amthaus | Two-storey plastered solid building with a crooked hip roof, early 16th century | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 10 ( location ) |
Former hospital barn, state theater | Large, ground-floor solid building with a half-hipped roof and protruding half-timbered gable, marked "1541" | D-5-71-136-96 |
more pictures |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b ( location ) |
Enclosure of the former hospital cemetery | Between the street-side buildings Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 8 and 6b, massive, 17./18. century | D-5-71-136-96 | |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b-c ( location ) |
enclosure | Between the street-side buildings Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6b and 6c, massive, 17./18. century | D-5-71-136-96 | |
Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6d ( location ) |
enclosure | Between the street-side buildings Dr.-Martin-Luther-Straße 6c and 6d, massive, 17./18. century | D-5-71-136-96 |
Former architectural monuments
This section lists objects that were previously entered in the list of monuments.
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Segringer Straße 31 ( location ) |
Residential and commercial building | Two-storey side eaves building in corner position with half-hipped roof and protruding plastered half-timbered upper storey, 18th century with an older core | D-5-71-136-541 |
more pictures |
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.
literature
- Hans Wolfram Lübbeke: Middle Franconia . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (= Monuments in Bavaria . Volume V ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52396-1 .
- Gerfrid Arnold: Chronicle Dinkelsbühl. Vol. 1 Early 1024. In the empire of the Merovingians, Carolingians and Saxons. Books on Demand 2000, 220 pp.
- Gerfrid Arnold: Chronicle Dinkelsbühl. Vol. 2 1024-1273. The royal city. Salier-Staufer Interregnum. Books on Demand 2001.
- Gerfrid Arnold: Chronicle Dinkelsbühl. Vol. 3 1273-1369. The imperial city. From King Rudolf I to Emperor Karl IV. Books on Demand 2002.
- Gerfrid Arnold: Chronicle Dinkelsbühl. Vol. 4 1370-1400. The city republic. Emperor Karl IV. And King Wenzel I. Books on Demand 2003, ISBN 3-8311-4899-6 .
- Gerfrid Arnold: Villa Dinkelsbühl. To locate the Carolingian royal court. In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 1995, pp. 6–20.
- Gerfrid Arnold: A sensation in the history of the city: early Staufer fortification on Schreinersbergle. In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 1996, pp. 39–45.
- Gerfrid Arnold: From the Stauferburg to the house of history. In: Historischer Verein Alt-Dinkelsbühl e. V. House of History Dinkelsbühl of War and Peace. Festschrift 2008, pp. 93–112.
- On the early history of St. Georg Minster in Dinkelsbühl 1142–1448. In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 2001, pp. 1–7, 9–11.
- Gerfrid Arnold: Craftsmen uprising and guild in Dinkelsbühl. For the 75th anniversary of the guild dance. In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 2003, pp. 17–22.
- Gerfrid Arnold: The emergence and decline of the Evangelical Lutheran state church in the imperial city of Dinkelsbühl. 450 years of religious peace in Augsburg in 1555. In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 2005, pp. 33–48.
- Gerfrid Arnold: Evangelical churches in Dinkelsbühl. The Heiliggeistkirche in Dinkelsbühl - The St. Paulskirche in Dinkelsbühl. DKV Art Guide No. 667, 2011, ISBN 978-3-422-02297-3
- (Walter Bogenberger :) Dinkelsbühl. Excavation in St. Georg (foundations of the previous churches). In: Historical Association Alt-Dinkelsbühl. Yearbook 1977/79, pp. 8-17.
- Gerfrid Arnold: The town mill in Dinkelsbühl - unique fortified mill (1378–1600). In: Alt-Dinkelsbühl, messages from the history of Dinkelsbühl and its surroundings, 2013, pp. 27–32.
swell
- ^ Gerfrid Arnold: Evangelical Churches in Dinkelsbühl, DKV Art Guide 2011
Web links
- List of monuments for Dinkelsbühl (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Bavarian Monument Atlas (cartographic representation of the Bavarian architectural and ground monuments by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (BLfD) )