List of architectural monuments in Harburg (Swabia)

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The monuments of the Swabian city of Harburg 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 from May 17, 2014 and contains 57 architectural monuments.

FP Guillery: Harburg in Swabia

Ensembles

Harburg old town ensemble

Harburg in Swabia - View from the left bank of the Wörnitz to the castle (left) and the old town with the Protestant (center) and Catholic churches (right)
Harburg in Schwaben - View from the castle to the old town in the foreground and the Wörnitz bridge

The ensemble includes the historic old town of Harburg with the Wörnitz bridge and the entire castle complex . The boundaries are given in the south-west by the historical boundaries of the castle complex, by the neck ditch leading down to the north-east of the city, in the west by the location of the former city gate in Schloßstraße, in the north by the location of the former Nördlinger gate in Nördlinger Straße, from there on through the connection line to the location of the former Egelseetor in Egelseestrasse, in the east through the western Wörnitzufer, including the Wörnitzbrücke, in the south through the location of the former Griestor in Donauwörther Strasse, further along Höllgasse with a connection line west to the castle area.

The Harburg ensemble shows a connection between the originally Hohenstaufen castle and the Hohenstaufen town, overlaid by a count's residence, later a princely castle with a market complex on a medieval floor plan, predominantly with buildings from the 18th century. In the diversity of its facilities, the Harburg, formerly a castle, then a castle, is one of the oldest and best preserved castles, which in terms of development spans a period of around 700 years. It is located where the Wörnitz from the Ries breaks through the Jura, steeply above the town of the same name, which is assigned to it in terms of location and function.

The castle, built around the year 1000, is the oldest part of the settlement. Under their protection, the place developed due to its excellent location as the entrance gate for the important military road coming from Italy, via Switzerland and Augsburg and leading on to the Ries and Nuremberg. Businesses, rural properties and the market emerged. Between 1150 and 1250 this market was expanded into a town by the Hohenstaufen as lords of the castle and market. Around the market and church at the foot of the castle hill stood the five city gates, blocking off the five streets of the village, in a relatively small space: the distance between the individual gates in the north-south direction was about 300 meters, those in the east-west about 150 meters. The natural protection to the east by the river and to the west by the castle hill made a large city wall superfluous. According to the given terrain, the city developed mainly to the south and north.

In the Middle Ages, the city was an imperial property and the center of the surrounding landscape, the seat of ecclesiastical and secular offices. After the town was pledged (1251) to the Counts of Oettingen , the town charter was soon lost and the importance of the place declined. Until 1806 Harburg remained a market belonging to the counts and later princes of Oettingen-Oettingen, and from 1731 to Oettingen-Wallerstein. The castle gradually came to the Oettingern, also by pledging, since 1407, became a residence from 1493 to 1549, after 1731 it was the seat of an office of justice, after 1806 the seat of a judicial office, from 1818 a princely court and from 1848-52 the seat of a royal court - and police authority. The Harburg market suffered heavy losses in the Thirty Years War .

In 1671, a Jewish community was allowed to settle in the poor place after the war . The community built a synagogue, school and cemetery, grew to over 400 members, but decreased sharply by the beginning of the 20th century.

Harburg has been a town again since 1849. Its gates were demolished after 1850. The old town developed in the area of ​​today's Protestant parish church. The center point is the small, high-rectangular market square, the extent of which already refers to the otherwise equally small dimensions of the street and square widths of the place. The town's five streets flow into the market square, which slopes slightly towards the river and is defined by the three-storey mansard hipped roof building with a front staircase at the eastern end and a sloping gable house on the northeast side. The streets, wedged into the restricted terrain between the river and the rocks, adapt to the curved bank zone and the undulating terrain. This creates changing street scenes in a very small space. In Donauwörther Straße in particular, the city's double structural reference to both the river and the mountain becomes clear. The building dominant in this street is the rectory with its high and steep half-timbered gable protruding into the street. The steepest is the Schloßstraße, the Nördlinger Straße is also steep. The building on a medieval floor plan is closed, but irregular: there are alternating eaves and gable houses, ground floor, two- and three-story buildings. The narrow, in places steep alleys show the simple Swabian gable house type in a simple form, mostly smooth plastered, occasionally with half-timbering without decorative elements. The buildings refer to small businesses and trade, less to agricultural functions.

In the distance, the characteristic features of this small Swabian town are particularly evident: its situation on the water, to which the backs of the houses with balcony-like extensions and the garden plots refer, the long, solidly bricked Wörnitz bridge, its length due to the narrow location between the river and the rocks , the steeply towering castle rock with the striking silhouette of Harburg Castle. The elevation view of the palace and town essentially shows the state of the 18th century.

File number: E-7-79-155-1

Harburg Castle

Harburg Castle from the northwest
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Today's Harburg Castle is an extensive and one of the oldest castle complexes . It was built on a steep cliff above the village, consisting of a main castle with an inner ring wall and an outer wall in the south-west and a bailey with economic and administrative buildings and a ditch in the north.

Construction began around 1000. In the 11th century, the area of ​​the upper castle was expanded. It was owned by the Staufers from the middle of the 12th century and was expanded into an imperial castle, including the outer bailey. The castle was pledged to the Counts of Oettingen in 1299 and later became the residence and princely palace. It has been owned by the Oettingen-Wallerstein line since 1731 and has been home to the princely art collection since 1948. The castle is essentially in the state of the 18th century, with the most recent changes from the 19th century taking place in the outer bailey and several outbuildings in the outer bailey being demolished.

The individual components are:

Castle: Lower gate, guard house
  • Inner Bering, wall ring with battlements adapted to the terrain, probably 12th century core
  • Zwinger wall with bastions, 14./15. century
  • Bridge, stone bridge over the moat to the outer lower gate, 1807
  • Outer lower gate, with ogival passage and baroque onion canopy, "1594" (inscribed), renewed in 1616
  • Gate guard, small ground-floor extension with half-timbering and pent roof, 17th century
  • Gate guard, two-story saddle roof building with bricked ground floor and visible half-timbering on the upper and gable floors, 1703
  • Gun turret, round tower with a conical roof, 15th century
Castle: Inner gate
  • Inner lower gate, two-storey saddle roof building on an approximately square floor plan with a basket arched passage, 12th century core
  • Tower servant's apartment, two-storey saddle roof building, 15th century
  • Red stables, single-storey gable roof with three half-timbered half-timbered houses, 15th century
  • Former office maintenance house, two-story saddle roof building with two-story half-timbered gable and elevator openings, 1744
  • Former Zehentstadel, saddle roof building with stepped gable top and elevator hatches, "1679" (inscribed)
  • Former stable and barn, two-storey hipped roof building with belted cornice and arched entrances, the left part older, 16th century, barn 1694
  • Bräustübl, two-story half-timbered building with hipped roof and covered staircase, probably 19th century
  • Beer cellar, saddle roof construction built into the slope with arched entrances and crane device on the gable end, 18th century
  • Enclosure, with a gate to the city in the northeast, probably 15th century
  • Bell tower of the castle church, raised on a round floor plan with a polygonal structure and curved dome, 14th century, 1585
  • Water tower, on a rectangular floor plan with a curved pyramid roof, renewed after 1840
Castle: White Tower
  • White tower, five-storey over a square floor plan with profiled belt and eaves cornice and pyramid roof, 1665
  • Prison tower on a round floor plan with a polygonal structure and tent roof, in the core before 1300
  • Upper gate, with arched opening, wooden portcullis and battlements, renewed in 1616, portcullis "1752" (inscribed)
  • Upper tower servant's apartment, built to the east of the upper gate with a solidly bricked ground floor and upper and gable storeys in half-timbered houses, 16th century
  • Former castle bailiwick, now an inn, three-story saddle roof building with a cantilevered upper floor in half-timbered construction and a round arched stone portal, 16th century
Castle: keep and box house
  • Box house with staircase tower, three-storey saddle roof construction with arched stone portal, corner cuboid, belt cornice and half-timbered Krangaube, former stables on the ground floor, above former Haberkasten, north-west round, polygonal stair tower with storey cornices and conical roof, 1594/95; with equipment
  • Keep, so-called theft tower, on a four-storey square floor plan with a hipped roof, mighty walls made of humpback blocks and smaller house stones in the upper part, originally probably a storage tower, later a dungeon, with direct access to the battlements, oldest part of the castle, 13th century core
  • Hall building, three-storey hipped roof building with a profiled eaves cornice, rustication on the ground floor and plaster framing around the windows, in the basement with stitch cap barrel, basement with Dürnitz 1496, second floor in 1717; with equipment
  • Digestion tower, on a square floor plan with humpback ashlars in the lower floors, strongly constricted tail dome and staircase to the hall building, medieval core, probably 13th century, staircase laid out in 1717, onion dome 18th century
Castle: Pfisterei and Fuerstenbau
  • Princely building, five-storey building with intersecting gable roofs, tail gables and a square staircase with a pyramid roof protruding towards the courtyard in the middle, a trapezoidal corner bay window in the northeast, the foundation walls of the palace from the 13th century, corner bay 1596, staircase 1617/18, inside up to changed several times in the 19th century; with equipment
  • Pfisterbau, bakery with Pfisterturm, two-storey saddle roof building with curved east gable and square tower with pyramid roof in the west and a round, polygonal tower in the substructure with a tented roof in the southeast, 16th century, Pfisterturm built in 1588; Covered corridor, two-storey with niches in the shape of a round or arched arch and a round arched passage to the castle church, probably 16/17 century
Castle: battlements with wooden eyes
  • Castle Church of St. Michael, formerly also a Catholic parish church, single-nave building with a curved west gable on a cross-shaped floor plan with a rectangular choir, drawn in to the east and raised by twelve steps, transverse arms separated from the nave by columns with apsidal closures, exit to the three-aisled crypt between the choir steps and sacristy extension in the southern choir corner, changed and rebuilt several times, southern transverse arm Romanesque, in the 14th century expansion to the east and probably also elevation of the old Romanesque chapel in the southern transverse arm, northern transverse arm after 1605 probably on an older basis, 1619 redesign of the northern chapel and the access to the Crypt, 1628/29 reconstruction of the crypt, 1720/21 church extended to the west and baroque; with equipment
  • Fountain, tubular fountain with round basin made of stone, conical roof on wooden pillars and pulling device, 1596
  • Garden with wayside cross and stone surrounds, probably 18th century

File number: D-7-79-155-1

Architectural monuments according to districts

Harburg (Swabia)

location object description File no. image
Am Bogen 1
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof construction with visible half-timbering in the gable with elevator opening and crane beam, half-timbering on the upper floor plastered, rebuilt in 1679 after destruction D-7-79-155-62 Residential building
Am Bogen 2
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Barbara Hall building with three-sided closed choir with buttresses, sacristy annex to the south of the choir and tower with octagon and onion dome in the west, partly built into the adjacent rock, 1612/13 new building in place of a chapel, modified in 1744; with equipment D-7-79-155-2 Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Barbara
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Am Bogen 4
( location )
Community center Two-storey saddle roof building with corner blocks, cornices, elevator openings and crane beams in the gable and on the ground floor with a profiled arched portal and entrance gate to the former coach house and stables, probably connected to No. 6 by a basement corridor, "1591" (inscribed) D-7-79-155-5 Community center
On the bridge 1
( location )
bridge Stone bridge with covered pillars of seven bays, 1729, 1784 renewed in parts, 1945/46 destroyed sections restored and slightly widened D-7-79-155-39 bridge
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On the bridge 1
( location )
Former meat bank Single-storey saddle roof building on a high base, in the core of the 16th century, rebuilt as an apartment in 1688 D-7-79-155-06 Former meat bank
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On the bridge 2
( location )
Former bathing room Single-storey saddle roof building on a high basement, rebuilt in the core around 1454, 1667/68 after destruction with a bathroom D-7-79-155-7 Former bathing room
On the bridge 6
( location )
Former Bruckmühle Single-storey saddle roof construction with curved volute gable, grooved eaves and gable cornices, pilaster strips in the three-storey gable field and with Krangaube, erected in 1762 in place of a previous building D-7-79-155-8 Former Bruckmühle
Donauwörther Straße 6
( location )
Residential building Three-storey saddle roof building over a raised basement with a dwelling and outside staircase, essentially the second half of the 16th century D-7-79-155-9 Residential building
Donauwörther Straße 10
( location )
Residential building, former outbuilding to the rectory Two-storey saddle roof building with open framework, elevator opening and crane beam in the gable, second half of the 17th century D-7-79-155-10 Residential building, former outbuilding to the rectory
Donauwörther Straße 11
( location )
Associated farm building Ground floor building with a half-hipped roof and sloping corner, around 1800 D-7-79-155-11 Associated farm building
Donauwörther Straße 12
( location )
Former office building, then Evangelical-Lutheran parsonage, now residential building Four-storey saddle roof building with two solid brick floors, the upper floors each protruding in plastered framework, gable with visible framework, in turn, cantilevered twice with elevator openings and crane beams, in the core 15th / 16th. Century, half-timbered gable second half of the 17th century, modern garage installation on the ground floor D-7-79-155-12 Former office building, then Evangelical-Lutheran parsonage, now residential building
Donauwörther Straße 18
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with a high basement, plastered half-timbering and late-Gothic wooden door frame, the core of the 16th century D-7-79-155-13 Residential building
Donauwörther Straße 24
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with volute gable, polygonal corner bay window and girdle and gable cornices, in neo-baroque shapes, 1921 D-7-79-155-14 Residential building
Donauwörther Straße 30
( location )
Residential building Three-storey saddle roof building with grooved ground floor, girders, eaves and gable cornices as well as with a dwelling, third quarter of the 19th century D-7-79-155-15 Residential building
Donauwörther Straße 31
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with gable cornice, in the core probably 17th / 18th century. Century, external appearance second half of the 19th century after demolition of the semolina gate D-7-79-155-16 Residential building
Egelseestraße 2
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with tail gable, eaves and gable cornices, probably from the end of the 18th century D-7-79-155-17 Residential building
Egelseestraße 3
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof construction with bricked ground floor, probably plastered half-timbering on the upper floor, open decorative framework in the gables and gable with crane beams, in the core 1525, 17th / 18th century. century D-7-79-155-18 Residential building
Egelseestraße 4
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with historical wooden door frame, plastered half-timbered gable and crane beam, essentially the second half of the 17th century

Rear building, ground floor saddle roof building with a high knee, bricked plinth like the first floor, above open half-timbering, probably 19th century, perhaps older in the core

D-7-79-155-19 Residential building
Egelseestraße 7
( location )
Residential building Three-storey saddle roof building on an angled floor plan with gable and plastered window frame in the gable, in the core 1613, external appearance in the middle of the 19th century D-7-79-155-21 Residential building
Egelseestraße 8
( location )
Former synagogue, now a residential building Three-storey saddle roof building with corner embossing and arched gate entrance, niche for the former Torah shrine on the upper floor on the bank side, former rabbi apartment, cult administration and mikveh on the first floor, former prayer room on the first floor to the east, built in 1754 instead of a former synagogue, interior redesigned several times, 1938 destroyed inside, warehouse after 1939, residential use since 1951, converted into a residential and office building around 1968; with remnants of stationary equipment D-7-79-155-22 Former synagogue, now a residential building
Judengasse 5
( location )
See Egelseestrasse 5; not re-qualified, not mapped in the Bavarian Monument Atlas D-7-79-155-23 BW
Am Hühnerberg
( location )
Jewish Cemetery With around 250 gravestones from the late 18th century until 1938, laid out from 1671, walled in after devastation in 1745, expanded in 1833 D-7-79-155-61 Jewish Cemetery
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Am Hühnerberg
( location )
Jewish cemetery, Tahara house Small gable roof building with arched stone entrance, 1745 D-7-79-155-61 Jewish cemetery, Tahara house
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Am Hühnerberg
( location )
Jewish cemetery, walling 1745, expanded in 1833 D-7-79-155-61 Jewish cemetery, walling
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Kirchenberg 4
( location )
Catholic parish church Herz Jesu Neo-Gothic hall building with retracted polygonal choir, tower with cornices, corner pilasters, dwarf houses and gables in the southern corner of the choir and with a sacristy extension and open vestibule in the north, by Jakob Angermeir, 1901–1903; with equipment D-7-79-155-3 Catholic parish church Herz Jesu
Marketplace 1
( location )
Residential and commercial building Classicist, three-storey building with a mansard hipped roof, corner pilasters, flat projections with triangular gable, outside staircase and three-storey extension with mansard gable roof and crane beams, 1807 D-7-79-155-24 Residential and commercial building
Marketplace 5
( location )
Residential and commercial building Two-storey saddle roof building with volute gable, pilaster strips in the gable and strongly profiled eaves and gable cornices, in the core probably the second half of the 17th century, the facade of the first third of the 18th century D-7-79-155-25 Residential and commercial building
Marktplatz 13
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with tail gable, gable cornices and Biedermeier front door, in the core probably the second half of the 18th century, redesigned around 1825/35 D-7-79-155-26 Residential building
Mündlinger Straße 1
( location )
Former dyer's house, then an inn, now a residential and commercial building Two-storey gable-independent gable roof construction with three-storey tail gable, corner pilasters, pilaster strips on the eaves side, profiled cornice and richly structured gable with half-columns and cornices as well as with weather vane “1765” (labeled) and massive stable and barn annex, labeled “1755” D-7-79-155-27 Former dyer's house, then an inn, now a residential and commercial building
Nördlinger Straße 2
( location )
Former Gasthaus Sixenausschank Three-storey building with a mansard hipped roof and a dwarf house with elevator opening, the core probably 17th century, second half 18th century baroque, wedge stone above the front door "1781" (inscribed), extended on the back D-7-79-155-28 Former Gasthaus Sixenausschank
Nördlinger Straße 2
( location )
Courtyard gate With arched passage, "1764" (inscribed) D-7-79-155-28 Courtyard gate
Nördlinger Straße 8
( location )
Inn Two-storey saddle roof construction with a tail gable with decorative knobs, cornice and open staircase, in the core 1584, around "1748" (inscribed) Baroque D-7-79-155-29 Inn
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Nördlinger Straße 9
( location )
Residential building Two-storey saddle roof building with cornice and corner pilasters on the upper floor and with arched windows on the ground floor, around 1850 D-7-79-155-30 Residential building
Nördlinger Straße 13
( location )
Double-leaf front door In a wooden door frame, first third of the 19th century D-7-79-155-31 Double-leaf front door
Nördlinger Straße 15
( location )
Residential building Ground floor building with half-hipped mansard roof and high basement, around 1800 D-7-79-155-32 Residential building
Nördlinger Straße 24
( location )
Former farmhouse (removed backwards) with hipped mansard roof, around 1800 D-7-79-155-33 Former farmhouse
Nördlinger Straße 26
( location )
Former farmhouse Two-storey mansard-hipped roof building, in the core perhaps 18th century, probably heavily redesigned and extended in the 19th century D-7-79-155-34 Former farmhouse
Nördlinger Straße 30
( location )
Former mansion Two-storey with a mansard hipped roof, banded corner pilaster strips and a diaphragm with a triangular gable, "1801" (inscribed), extended on the back with banded pilaster strips D-7-79-155-35 Former mansion
Nördlinger Straße 36
( location )
Former post office and inn Two-storey hipped roof building with grooved ground floor, arched door and windows as well as with cornice, 1841; Farm building, on an angled floor plan with a half-hipped roof, second half of the 19th century D-7-79-155-37 Former post office and inn
Schloßstraße 1
( location )
town hall Three-storey saddle roof construction with roof turrets, bricked ground floor, the two upper floors and the gable in half-timbered each projecting, in the core 15th century, redesigned several times with changes of use, 1975-77 redesigned with reused half-timbered parts from the 15th century and expanded with a new building D-7-79-155-38 town hall
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Ebermergen

location object description File no. image
At the bridge 3
( location )
Former bakery Two-storey hipped roof building with arched windows on the ground floor and Krangaube, "1837" (inscribed), "1931" renewed after fire (inscribed) D-7-79-155-41 BW
At the bridge 5
( location )
Inn to the bridge Two-storey hipped roof building with barely protruding central projections, dormer window with curved volute legs and triangular gable, pilaster strips and cornice, "1792" (inscribed), changed several times D-7-79-155-40 Inn to the bridge
At the bridge 5
( location )
Outbuildings Two-storey hipped roof building with corner pilasters, connected to one another by a modern transition, in the core at the end of the 18th century D-7-79-155-40 Outbuildings
From Ebermergen to the B 25; Wörnitz
( location )
bridge Stone bridge with covered pillars of seven bays, probably 17th century, rebuilt in 1747 after being destroyed D-7-79-155-45 bridge
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Kirchgäßle 1
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Peter and Paul The core of the Gothic choir tower church, hall building with a retracted rectangular choir in the compact tower pushed out of the axis, attached buttresses to the east, sacristy extension in the north tower angle and portentry in the west, tower and southern part of the nave 14th century, end of the 17th century nave extended to the north , Tower elevation and sacristy extension, sign probably 20th century D-7-79-155-44 Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Peter and Paul
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Augsburg – Nördlingen railway line ; Badgasse
( location )
Railway bridge With a risalit protruding passage with embossed wedge stones on the round arch, bosses ashlar up to the profiled belt and combat cornice, smooth ashlar stones above and final parapet, identical in construction to the following bridge in Angelgasse, 1846 f. D-7-79-155-46 Railway bridge
Augsburg – Nördlingen railway line; Angelgasse
( location )
Railway bridge With a risalit protruding passage with embossed wedge stones on the round arch, bosses ashlar up to the profiled belt and combat cornice, smooth ashlar stones above and final parapet, identical in construction to the above bridge in Badgasse, 1846 f. D-7-79-155-46 Railway bridge

Großsorheim

location object description File no. image
Kirchenweg 1
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran branch church of St. Gallus The core of the gothic choir tower church , the hall with a retracted rectangular choir in the tower, a profiled eaves and gable cornice, three staggered, round arched niches in the gable, reused Romanesque arched frieze on the north side and sacristy addition to the south of the tower, tower at the beginning of the 15th century, nave in neo-Romanesque forms by Gustav von Bezold, 1922 f .; with equipment D-7-79-155-48 Evangelical Lutheran branch church of St. Gallus
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Langgasse Großsorheim 11
( location )
Small farmhouse Two-storey saddle roof building, former single-storey residential area with parlor porch, 1st third of the 19th century, heavily modified D-7-79-155-47 BW

Heralding

location object description File no. image
Am Zehentstadel 1
( location )
Former Zehentstadel Ground floor hipped roof building with nun roofing and segmental arched gate entrance, 1739 D-7-79-155-49 Former Zehentstadel
Georg-Karg-Strasse 17; Georg-Karg-Strasse 15
( location )
Former inn Two-storey saddle roof building with a flight of stairs, arched house portal and wrought-iron bracket, probably 18th century, facade with plaster decor, second quarter of the 19th century D-7-79-155-50 Former inn
Georg-Karg-Strasse 17; Georg-Karg-Strasse 15
( location )
Outbuildings Residential house, ground floor saddle roof building with plaster decoration, second quarter of the 19th century D-7-79-155-50 Outbuildings
Georg-Karg-Strasse 18
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Martin Choir tower church , neo-Romanesque hall building with blind niches, arched friezes and pilaster strips on the gable facade as well as with drawn-in rectangular choir in the compact tower with octagon, tower substructure mid-16th century, raised at the end of the 17th century, nave 1849; with equipment D-7-79-155-51 Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Martin
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Georg-Karg-Strasse 18
( location )
Cemetery wall With pilaster strips and serrated frieze, around 1849, parts renewed D-7-79-155-51 Cemetery wall

Hopping

location object description File no. image
Main street
( location )
Wayside shrine Rectangular housing with a gable roof, arched niche and strong girdle, eaves and gable cornice, 18th century; with equipment D-7-79-155-53 BW
Spitzengasse 2
( location )
Catholic parish church for the motherhood of Mary, formerly St. Leonhard Hall building with retracted rectangular choir, east tower with octagon and sacristy extensions in the choir corners, tower substructure at the end of the 14th century, octagon 1717, 1730 new construction of the choir and nave, 1932 renewal of the spire; with equipment D-7-79-155-52 BW

Kratzhof

location object description File no. image
Kratzhof 44
( location )
Four-sided courtyard Residential building, neo-baroque, two-storey hipped roof building with banded pilaster strips, profiled eaves cornice, plaster frame around the windows and dormer with triangular gable, "1922" (marked with the year) D-7-79-155-54 Four-sided courtyard

Moors

location object description File no. image
An der Linde 5
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Walburga Hall building with three-sided choir closure and west tower with outside staircase and octagon, Gothic tower substructure 14./15. Century, new building of the church and tower elevation, 1st half of the 17th century; with equipment D-7-79-155-56 Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Walburga
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Im Unterdorf 21
( location )
Small house Ground floor saddle roof building with plastered corner blocks, plastered corbels over the windows and profiled sills like eaves cornices, around 1865/80 D-7-79-155-55 BW

Mouthling

location object description File no. image
Luggasse 3
( location )
Former rectory Two-storey saddle roof building with tail gable, gable cornices and arched house stone portal, "1690" (inscribed), renewed in parts in 1824 D-7-79-155-57 BW
Sankt-Johann-Strasse 1
( location )
Catholic Parish Church of St. John Baptist Hall building with three-sided choir closure, tower with octagon and pointed helmet in the north and sacristy opposite, tower substructure 1623 ff., Nave, choir and tower octagon "1753" (inscribed); with equipment D-7-79-155-60 BW
St.-Johann-Straße 1
( location )
Cemetery wall With historical gate pillars in the west 17./18. century D-7-79-155-60 BW
St.-Johann-Straße 5
( location )
Former school Two-storey hipped roof building, the eastern part of the building with a protruding upper floor, second quarter of the 19th century D-7-79-155-58 BW

See also

Remarks

  1. 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

Web links

Commons : Architectural monuments in Harburg  - collection of images, videos and audio files