List of architectural monuments in Homburg

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In the list of architectural monuments in Homburg , all architectural monuments of the Saarland city of Homburg and its districts are listed. It is based on the publication of national monument list in the Official Journal of the Saarland of 22 December 2004, the last 9 as at August 2017 as part monument list Homburg the monument list of Saarland .

Desolate

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Audenkellerhofstrasse
location
The Audenkellerhof ensemble The ensemble consists of the house and the farm buildings of the old manor. The oldest part of the courtyard, the house, dates from the last quarter of the 17th century. The farm building with stable and a residential wing was built in the first half of the 19th century and rebuilt in 1929 by Rudolf Krüger . Krüger also built another farm building in 1947.
Audenkellerhofstrasse, farm building, 1947 by Rudolf Krüger (part of the ensemble)
Audenkellerhofstrasse, farm building and stable, residential wing in the first half of the 19th century, remodeled in 1929 by Rudolf Krüger (part of the ensemble)
Audenkellerhofstraße, residential building, 4th quarter of 17th century (individual monument)
Bliesweg
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Ingweiler town center ensemble Ingweiler was first mentioned in 1180 in a deed of donation from the Wörschweiler monastery. Until 1603 the place belonged to the County of Nassau-Saarbrücken, then it came to the Duchy of Pfalz-Zweibrücken through an exchange contract. Several houses as well as a tithe barn and the cemetery wall from the 19th century are under monument protection.
Bliesweg, Zehntscheune, 18th century (individual monument)
Bliesweg, cemetery wall of the Ingweiler cemetery, 19th century (individual monument)
Bliesweg 2, farmhouse, 19th century (part of the ensemble)
Bliesweg 3, residential building with cellar, 18th century (individual monument)
Bliesweg 4, residential building, 17th century (individual monument)
Bliesweg 7, residential building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
At the Ohligberg
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Ev. Christ Church The church was built from 1958 to 1960 according to designs by the architects Otto Stahl and Richard Hummel. The hall church was built in red-brown sandstone. The building is slightly rounded at the front. Both long sides are illuminated by skylights from lead-glazed concrete windows. The tower stands behind the church on a square floor plan and takes up the concrete elements of the skylights of the nave on the sound windows. 20150920-Germany Saarland Homburg Einöd Am Ohligberg Christ Church.jpg
Am Schwedenhof 4
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Schwedenhof, courtyard, conversions from the 19th and 20th centuries. The agricultural estate was built in 1723 by the Swedish builder Jonas Erikson Sundahl on behalf of the Swedish King Karl XII. erected to build a domicile for the widow colonel Karolina de la Brier as unofficial administrator for the Duchy of Zweibrücken. The L-shaped complex consists of residential buildings and farm buildings and was built in the Baroque style.
Main street
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Ev. Parish church The church building was built in 1752/53 as an extension of an earlier chapel. The church was expanded in 1808 and rebuilt in 1868: the hall building was given a façade with a stepped gable facing the street to the south, and a red brick tower was built in front of it. The windows were Gothicized and iron tracery was installed. Einöd Apostlekirche 03.JPG
Hauptstrasse 49
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Farmhouse 18th century
Hauptstrasse 53
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Farmhouse 1st half of the 19th century
Hauptstrasse 64
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Residential building, Built in 1782, renovated in 1909
Hauptstrasse 66
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portal 18th century
Homburger Strasse 38
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"Edelhof", Gutshof, today Roman Museum Schwarzenacker Like the Schwedenhof diagonally opposite, the Edelhof was built in 1722 by Jonas Erikson Sundahl . The house has an almost square floor plan and is covered with a mansard hipped roof. The street side of the two-storey plastered building has five window axes with segmental arches and three dormers, the sides each with three axes and four dormers. Schwarzenacker Edelhaus.jpg
In the Wieschen
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school Built in 1930/31
Kandelgrundstrasse 1
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Residential building 1736
Marienstrasse
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Bell of the cath. Einöd-Schwarzenacker branch church The bells of the modern branch church of the Birth of the Virgin Mary were cast by Christoph Klein in 1756.
Marienstrasse
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Kath Filial Church of the Birth of Mary The church was built between 1960 and 1962 according to plans by W. Focht, Regbaum and G. Helfrich. The building is cuboid with a lower circumferential corridor. The tall pyramid-shaped bell tower stands apart from the actual church building. The interior of the church is illuminated by many, irregularly distributed square windows. Schwarzenacker Maria birth 04.JPG

Homburg-Mitte

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Friedhofstrasse
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Ensemble of the old and middle cemetery In addition to the ensemble “First Municipal Cemetery and Jewish Cemetery”, the old cemetery from 1877 and the central cemetery from the 1st quarter of the 20th century are also listed.
Friedhofstraße, Mittelfriedhof, 1st quarter of the 20th century (part of the ensemble)
Friedhofstraße, Alter Friedhof, 1877 (part of the ensemble)
Schlossberg-Höhen-Straße
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Ensemble of castle, palace and fortress ruins on the Schlossberg In the 12th century Hohenburg was the seat of the Counts of Homburg. After the death of the last Count of Homburg in 1449, the castle fell to the Counts of Nassau-Saarbrücken. In the second half of the 16th century, they rebuilt the castle into a renaissance castle and later into a fortress. During the reunification period, fortress builder Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban expanded the fortress. The fortifications were demolished for the first time in 1697 and finally in 1714. The ruins served as a quarry for the construction of Karlsberg Castle. The ramparts and walls with gates and stairways have been preserved.
Fortress ruins (part of the ensemble of castle, palace and fortress ruins on the Schlossberg) Homburg Fortress 01.JPG
Friedhofstrasse
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Ensemble of the First Municipal Cemetery and the Jewish Cemetery After the two denominational cemeteries in Homburg had been abandoned, the first municipal cemetery was established on the eastern edge of the city in 1832, where the Jewish cemetery had already been established a few years earlier. The eastern area was assigned to the Protestants and the western area to the Catholics. Since the complex was obviously originally walled on three sides in the north, south and east, so that it could only be expanded to the west, the area immediately adjacent to the Jewish cemetery had already become too small for the Protestant population by the end of the 1860s so that in 1877 a second communal cemetery was laid out in the east.
Friedhofstraße, Jüdischer Friedhof (part of the ensemble): The Jewish cemetery, which is located in front of the morgue in the vicinity of the municipal cemetery, was laid out in 1822 and was first used in February 1824. The last funeral so far was in 2006. Homburg Jewish Cemetery 1.jpg
Friedhofstraße, Friedhof, 1832 (part of the ensemble): The first urban and therefore non-denominational cemetery, which was only used in the short period from 1832 to 1877, is now a park-like facility. Only 13 scattered tombstones have been preserved. There is also an obelisk on the cemetery grounds as a war memorial to the Franco-German War of 1870/71.
Fruchthallstrasse / Karlsbergstrasse
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Ensemble Karlsbergstrasse The ensemble consists mainly of houses from the 18th century.
Fruchthallstraße 2, residential building (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 15, Haus Weirich, residential building, 18th century, renovation 1957 (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 17, residential building, 18th century, renovation around 1960 (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 19, residential building with vaulted cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 20, residential and commercial building, 1st quarter of the 19th century (individual monument) Homburg Karlsbergstrasse 20.jpg
Karlsbergstraße 22, Keilstein, 18th century (individual monument) Homburg Karlsbergstrasse 22.jpg
Karlsbergstraße 23, residential building with vaulted cellar, 18th century, renovation around 1860 (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 25/27, residential building with cellar, around 1680 (individual monument)
Karlsbergstraße 31, "Altes Zunfthaus", residential building with a fountain, 18th century (individual monument) 20190926Karlsbergstrasse 31 Homburg.jpg
Karlsbergstraße 33/35, residential and commercial building, 18th century, renovation in 1961 (part of the ensemble)
Karlsbergstraße 37, residential building, 1892 (part of the ensemble)
Kirrberger Strasse
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Ensemble Landeskrankenhaus Homburg
Kirrberger Straße, Klinikkirche Homburg (building 55) (single monument): The Simultankirche is part of the Saarland University Hospital. The church was built between 1906 and 1909 together with the other oldest buildings in the clinic in the historicism style. The architect was the royal Bavarian building officer Heinrich Ullmann from Speyer . A side aisle was built north of the main nave with barrel vaults. The choir is asymmetrically shifted to the south under the tower. Its walls are covered with Art Nouveau paintings. To the north of the choir stands the baptismal font in front of a gabled arched niche. Homburg Clinic Church 02.JPG
Kirrberger Straße, ballroom building (building 34), 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (individual monument)
Kirrberger Strasse, mortuary (building 30), cemetery with gravestones, 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (individual monument)
Kirrberger Straße, director's villa (building 17), 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (individual monument)
Kirrberger Straße, house (building 12), 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (part of the ensemble)
Kirrberger Straße, administration building (building 11), 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (individual monument)
Kirrberger Straße, double house (building 2), 1904-09 by Heinrich Ullmann (part of the ensemble)

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Ensemble Marktplatz / Klosterstrasse The monument ensemble around the market square consists mainly of two-storey plastered buildings on the eaves. Despite the destruction of the Second World War and modern shop fittings, the character of the small baroque residence has been well preserved.
Eisenbahnstraße 1, Leyser house, residential and commercial building, 1899 (part of the ensemble)
Eisenbahnstraße 3, residential building, 18th century (part of the ensemble) 20190926Eisenbahnstraße 3 Homburg1.jpg
Fruchthallstraße, monastery wall, hillside retaining wall, rock cellar, 19th century (part of the ensemble)
Fruchthallstraße 17, western axis of the facade, 4th quarter of 17th century (individual monument)
Klosterstrasse 1, cath. Rectory, around 1690 (individual monument)
Klosterstraße 3, residential building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Klosterstrasse 4, house and restaurant "Zum Storchen", warehouse with vaulted cellar, 17th century, remodeling around 1830 (individual monument) 20190926Zum Srorchen Homburg2.jpg
Klosterstrasse 5, portal, 18th century (individual monument)
Klosterstrasse 6, former Franciscan monastery church, synagogue (single monument): The Franciscan monastery church was built in 1697 and 1699. In 1860 the Jewish community of Homburg bought the building and converted it into a synagogue. In 1938 the synagogue was damaged during the Night of the Pogroms and destroyed in air raids during World War II. In 1952 it was partially demolished and since then the building has only been preserved as a ruin. From the street side, all that remains is the wall surrounding the ground floor with a pointed arched window and a portal with a pointed arched skylight. From the rear wall there is still the ground floor with two straight windows and the first floor with arched windows and the side walls. Homburg Ruins of the synagogue in Klostergasse 2012-05-11.JPG
Klosterstrasse 7, portal, around 1690 (individual monument)
Klosterstrasse 8/10/12 / 12a / 14, wing of the former Franciscan monastery, 1700–50, today residential buildings Homburg Former Franciscan Monastery 2012-05-11 01.JPG
Klosterstrasse 10 / 10a-d, wing of the Franciscan monastery, around 1690 (individual monument)
Marktplatz 1, residential and commercial building, 1936–37 by Fritz Zawar (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 2, Fleck House, residential and commercial building, vaulted cellar, 1890 (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 3, residential and commercial building, vaulted cellar, 18th century, renovation in 1890 (individual monument)
Marktplatz 4/5, residential and commercial building, vaulted cellar, 18th century, remodeling in 1890 (individual monument)
Marktplatz 6, residential and commercial building, 2nd quarter of the 18th century (individual monument)
Marktplatz 8, Old Town Hall (part of the ensemble): The original town hall was built around 1680. In 1825 a new building was built, which was the seat of the city administration until 1924. In 1952 the town hall was extended to include a northern extension and an arcade. The two-storey plastered building with eight window axes has a half-hip roof. In the third axis there is an entrance portal, above which a balcony sits on the first floor. The sloping terrain to the south allows the basement to protrude from the ground. 20190926Old Town Hall Homburg1.jpg
Marktplatz 9, residential building, vaulted cellar, 18th century, renovation 1955 (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 11, Felsenkeller, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 13, residential and commercial building, cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 14, residential and commercial building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Marktplatz 15, residential and commercial building, 18th century, facade redesigned 19th century, extension (rear building) from 1900 (part of the ensemble)
Saarbrücker Straße 2/4, residential and commercial building, 18th century, redesign of the facade around 1900, repair in 1987 (part of the ensemble)
Saarbrücker Straße 6, residential and commercial building, vaulted cellar, around 1900 (part of the ensemble)
Saarbrücker Straße 8, residential and commercial building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Saarbrücker Straße 10, Ratskeller, 17th century (individual monument)
Saarbrücker Straße 12/14, residential and commercial building with vaulted cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
To the caves 2, residential building with vaulted cellar, 19th century facade (individual monument)
To the caves 6, cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
To the caves 7, cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
To the caves 12, cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Schlossberg-Höhen-Straße
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Ensemble Schlossberghöhlen The cave system in the sandstone of the Schlossberg belongs to the Schlossberghöhlen monument ensemble.
Schlossberg-Höhen-Straße, Schlossberghöhlen : The Schlossberghöhlen are the largest red sandstone caves in Europe. The cave system consists of twelve floors and extends over a length of 140 meters and a width of 60 meters. It was created by mining red sandstone. Adjacent to the sandstone caves is a bunker area that was laid out in the early 1950s for the then Saarland government on the lower nine floors. Homburg Castle Hill Caves (7) .jpg
St.-Michael-Strasse,
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Ensemble St.-Michael-Strasse The monument ensemble consists of the cath. Church of St. Michael and the houses opposite from the 18th century.
St.-Michael-Straße, hall 1, parcel 201/2, cath. Church of St. Michael with interior decoration (individual monument): The neo-Romanesque building with cube capitals and round arch friezes was built from 1836 to 1841 according to designs by civil building inspector August von Volt . The hall church made of red sandstone blocks has a striking tower in the shape of an octagon above the choir. Homburg Church of St Michael 2012-05-03.JPG
St.-Michael-Straße 11, residential building with vaulted cellar, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
St.-Michael-Straße 13, residential building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
St.-Michael-Straße 15, residential building, 18th century (part of the ensemble)
Mainzer Strasse, Hüttenstrasse
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Ensemble Werksiedlung Mainzer Straße The Mainzer Straße settlement was built in the early 20th century for workers from the Roth & Schüler ironworks and the Homburg ironworks.
Mainzer Straße 36/38, foreman's house of the small ironware factory Roth & Schüler, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Mainzer Straße 40/42, foremen's house of the small ironware factory Roth & Schüler, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Mainzer Straße 44, workers' house of Neunkircher Eisenwerk AG, around 1925 (part of the ensemble)
Mainzer Straße 46/48, workers' house of the small ironware factory Roth & Schüler, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Mainzer Straße 50/52, workers' house of the small ironware factory Roth & Schüler, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Hüttenstraße 18/20, double worker house, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Hüttenstraße 22/24, double worker house, around 1903 (part of the ensemble)
Outside of the location
coordinates are missing! Help.
Ensemble Westwall Ebersberg
Outside the location WH 525/1, WH 525/2, WH 525/3, Siegfried Line fortification (ensemble)
Old Reichsstrasse 41 Schwarzenbach School, 1923/24 (individual monument)
At the Karlsberg
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Karlsberger Hof (individual monument) The Karlsberger Hof is the only remaining building of the Karlsberg Palace. The farm building was built around 1780 in the baroque style. From 1866 it was a forester's house, in 1975 it was converted into a residential building. The single-storey plastered building has a two-storey extension with three window axes. The hipped roof of the main building has eight dormers with triangular gables. A dwelling with two windows and a triangular gable rises above the entrance portal. Karlsberg Baumagazin 01.jpg
At the roundabout 3
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Peterhof, Homburger Hof, Hotel (single monument) The Homburger Hof was built around 1907 in neo-Gothic style as the Hotel Peterhof. After both world wars, the building was the commandant of the occupying powers. The three-story plastered building has windows with a slight pointed arch on the ground floor. There is a bay window on the first floor at the west corner. On the street side, the building has a dwelling with a stepped gable to the west and a corner projectile to the north. The three-part windows on the street side are lavishly decorated above. The middle window is higher than the two flanking ones. 20190926Homburger Hof3.jpg
Out of town
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Karlsberg Castle ruins and remnants of the associated gardens (individual monument) Duke Karl II. August von Pfalz-Zweibrücken had Karlsberg Castle built on the grounds of the Louisenhof between 1778 and 1788 and moved his residence there in 1779. In 1793 the castle was destroyed by French revolutionary troops. The ruins of the castle with the walls of the orangery, the Tschifflik pleasure palace , trilage pavilion, cavalier building and a rambling pleasure garden with ponds, bear pen and aviaries have been preserved. Orangery 2.JPG
Bahnhofsplatz 6
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Railway maintenance office of the "Palatinate Ludwig Railway" with residential building (individual monument) As part of the Palatinate Ludwig Railway, Homburg had a train station in 1848. The railway maintenance office was built around 1902. In addition, a house was built for the staff. Homburg Bahnhofsplatz 6.jpg
Bahnhofsplatz 7
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Residential building 1849 Homburg Bahnhofsplatz 7.jpg
Bahnhofsplatz 8
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Residential building
Bechhofer Strasse 37
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Gut Königsbruch , Bruchhof, Königsbrucher Hof, also Tascher Hof, manor house with farm buildings (individual monument) The Königsbruch estate was built around 1760/70. The manor house with farm buildings is said to have a great resemblance to the Louisenhof, built in 1760, which was the nucleus of Karlsberg Palace . The two-storey main house with a hipped roof has several farm buildings on both sides. Gut Königsbruch - Herrenhaus.jpg
Blieskasteler Straße 13
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school Built around 1925
Blieskasteler Straße 106
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school
Blieskasteler Straße 135
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school around 1850
Burgweg 12 (at)
Lage
Elevated water tank Built in 1896
Dürerstraße 23
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Residential building Built in 1902
Eisenbahnstrasse 4
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basement, cellar 18th century
Eisenbahnstrasse 23
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Residential and pharmacy house The residential and commercial building of the pharmacist Rondee was built in 1905 in the Art Nouveau style. 20190926Eisenbahnstraße 23 Homburg3.jpg
Eisenbahnstrasse 40
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Former Royal Bavarian Rent Office with official apartment (extension) The Rentamt is a sandstone building built in 1893 in the classical style. In 1911 the building was expanded. From 1920 to 1968 it was used as a tax office, and since 1972 it has been the police station. The two-storey building with a mansard roof has a central projectile that extends into the roof. Surrounding sill cornices divide the building horizontally. 20190926Eisenbahnstraße 40 Homburg1.jpg
Eisenbahnstrasse 69
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Residential building Built around 1899
Hallway
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Catholic Church of St. Remigius St. Remigius was built in 1953/54 according to plans by the Homburg architect Herbert Lück. The hall church is illuminated by tall rectangular windows. A slightly vaulted ceiling closes the hall. You enter the church via the tower with a square floor plan, which was added to the nave. Beeden St. Remigius 01.JPG
Friedhofstrasse 7
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Residential building Built around 1900
Fruchthallstrasse 4
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Rock cellar 18th century
Fruchthallstrasse 8
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Rock cellar 18th century
Gasstrasse 5
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Residential building The house was built by Fritz Zawar in 1923/24 .
Jägerhausstraße 73
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Former Palatinate intercity center, power station, switchgear, machine and boiler house, administration wing The power plant was built by Oscar von Miller in 1913/14 .
Kaiserslauterer Strasse
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Napoleon stone, monument In 1811, Napoleon Bonaparte had an obelisk erected on the Kaiserstraße he had built for the birth of his son.
Kaiserstraße 6
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Residential building Built in 1906
Kaiserstraße 28
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Adolf Sigwart factory owner's villa The villa was built by Ernst Geiger in 1922/23 .
Kaiserstraße 34
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Director's villa with enclosure Built around 1906
Kaiserstraße 38
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relief 1914
Kaiserstraße 41
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City Electricity and water works with apartment The municipal electricity and waterworks were built in 1897 and expanded to include a gasworks in 1909. It has been the city archive since 2004. The two-storey building on the eaves consists of a core structure and two gable-side, flanking building parts. While these have two window axes, the core structure is designed on three axes. The plastered building with a sandstone plinth has segmented arched windows with accentuated wedge stone on the ground floor and straight lintel windows on the first floor. The core building has a cornice and a sill cornice.
Karlsbergstrasse 7
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basement, cellar 18th century
Karlsbergstrasse 8
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Residential building Built around 1860
Karlsbergstrasse 29
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Residential building The house was built in the 18th century and rebuilt in the 19th century and in the 1st quarter of the 20th century.
Karlsbergstrasse 36
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basement, cellar 18th century
Karlstrasse 7
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Residential building Built from 1927 to 1930 by Fritz Zawar
Kasernenstrasse 4
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basement, cellar 18th century
Kasernenstrasse 6
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basement, cellar 18th century
Kasernenstrasse 10
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basement, cellar 18th century
Kirchenstrasse
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Ev. City Church A baroque tower was added to the previous building, built in 1699, from 1779 to 1793 according to plans by master builder Franz Georg Schaefer. In 1874 the church building was torn down and a three-aisled neo-Gothic nave without a transept with five window axes was built instead. Homburg Protestant Church 03 2012-06-05.JPG
Kirchenstrasse 10
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basement, cellar 18th century
Kirchenstrasse 12
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basement, cellar 18th century
Lagerstraße 2
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Sister house of the deaconess association Built around 1899
Lagerstraße 10
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villa The villa was built by Fritz Zawar in 1924/25.
Lagerstraße 46
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Residential building The house was built in 1921/22, and then expanded between 1928 and 1930 according to plans by Otto Müller.
Marktstrasse 7
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basement, cellar 18th century
Upper avenue
coordinates are missing! Help.
Garden pavilion Built in the 4th quarter of the 18th century
Reiskircher mill
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Reiskircher mill Built in the 18th / 19th century
Richard-Wagner-Strasse 114
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Residential building Built in 1929/30
Saarbrücker Straße 11
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basement, cellar 18th century
Saarbrücker Straße 11a
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former brewery cellar Built in 1858/59
Saarbrücker Straße 13
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basement, cellar made 1850-1900
Saarbrücker Strasse 17
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basement, cellar 18th century
Saarbrücker Straße 19
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basement, cellar 18th century
Saarbrücker Straße 20
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basement, cellar 18th century
Saarbrücker Strasse 22
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basement, cellar Created around 1780
Saarbrücker Strasse 23
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basement, cellar 18th century
Saarbrücker Strasse 24
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basement, cellar Reconstruction around 1950
Saarbrücker Straße 26
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basement, cellar 18th century
Scheffelplatz 1
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former Royal Bavarian Cultural Building Authority, administration building, 1914 (individual monument) The Royal Bavarian Cultural Building Office was built in 1914 in a classicist style. From 1922 it was the post office, 1970 health office and since 2009 the office of the Saarpfalz district. The nine-axis, two-storey building with a hipped roof has a central protrusion on the street side, which has a balcony on columns of Tuscan order above the entrance portal and shows a coat of arms in the roof structure with triangular gable.
Schlossbergstrasse 29
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Cellar, rock chamber, pottery furnace 19th century extension
Schulstrasse 20
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Vaulted cellar in the Hohenburg School 4th quarter of the 17th century
Schulstrasse 25v
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Cellar, rock chamber, pottery furnace 18th century, extension of the 19th century
Schützenstrasse 7
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Residential and craftsman house Built around 1873
Schwesternhausstrasse 4
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cross 19th century
St.-Michael-Straße 7
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basement, cellar 18th century
St.-Michael-Straße 8
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basement, cellar 18th century
St.-Michael-Straße 10
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basement, cellar 18th century
St.-Michael-Straße 27
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basement, cellar 18th century
St.-Michael-Straße 33
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basement, cellar 18th century
Steinbachstrasse 60
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Catholic Church of St. Andreas with furnishings The three-aisled hall church in neo-Gothic style was built in 1903/04 by Wilhelm Schulte sen. built. In the west rises a 64 m high tower with a pointed helmet. The three-sided choir with net vault is decorated with a blue ceiling painting. The nave is designed in three bays with ribbed vaults. The church building has three window axes with rich tracery. The gallery and the front wall are also equipped with tracery. Homburg-Erbach Catholic Parish Church St. Andreas 02.JPG
Turmstrasse
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Tower ruins (choir tower) with cemetery wall and tombstone Dietrich Lütticher, 14th century (individual monument) The tower ruin is the former choir tower of a St. Remigius church. It was first mentioned in 1212. The church was destroyed in the Thirty Years' War. Little more than the ground floor with its Gothic tracery window and portal with arched arches remained of the quarry stone tower . Beeder Turm.JPG
Untere Allee 75
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Former District hospital, high school (single monument) The hospital was built in 1898. Around 1925 the building was used as a high school. In 1925 it was increased and in 1928 a south wing was added.
Untergasse 6
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basement, cellar 18th century
Westring 27
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Mother of God figure in the cath. Church of Mary of Peace Sculpture from the 1st quarter of the 18th century Erbach Maria vom Frieden inside Marienstatue.JPG
To the Lokschuppen
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Engine shed Built in 1865, alterations in the 1st quarter of the 20th century
Zweibrücker Straße 24
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Former Royal Bavarian District Court The district court with prison was built in 1885 and an annex was added in 1905. District court Homburg (Saar) .jpg

Jägersburg

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Höcherstraße / Schlossstraße
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St. Hubertus Palace Chapel The palace chapel was built by Jonas Erikson Sundahl in 1720/21 . French revolutionary troops destroyed the church. It was only rebuilt in its old form in 1984. Gustavsburg with chapel.jpg
Höcherstrasse 5
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Gustavsburg The Count of Zweibrücken-Bitsch had a moated castle built here in 1395. In 1590 Count Palatine Johann I had the castle converted into a palace. In 1622 the building was given a defense tower. The castle burned down during the Thirty Years War. Instead, a house with a barn and stable was built under Duke Friedrich Ludwig. In 1720/21, Duke Gustav Samuel Leopold von Zweibrücken had Jonas Erikson Sundahl's residential building erected today and named the building Gustavsburg Castle. The oldest preserved part is the tower from the 16th century. A farm building from the 17th century and the residential building, as well as parts of the surrounding wall and the moat, have also been preserved. The main house is a two-story plastered building with a mansard roof. The ground floor with straight lintel windows is elevated, the upper floor has windows with segmental arches. Jägersburg Gustavsburg 01.JPG
Websweilerhof
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Gutshof, 18./19. Century (single monument) The three-sided courtyard made of rubble stones was built in the 18th and 19th centuries. The mansion is flanked by farm buildings. Today the farm is the seat of a golf club. Websweiler.jpg

Kirrberg

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Kirchbergstrasse
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Mother of God figure in the cath. Church of St. Mary The miraculous image dates from the 18th century. It was originally in the monastery church of Saar Werden. When the monastery was profaned during the French Revolution, a citizen bought the statue of Mary at auction and donated it to the church in Kirrberg shortly after 1800. Kirrberg Mariä Himmelfahrt Inside Gnadenbild.JPG

Wörschweiler

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Bierbacher Strasse
location
Ensemble of Gutenbrunnen Palace and Courtyard From 1723, Duke Gustav Samuel Leopold of Pfalz-Zweibrücken had the little Luisenthal castle and chapel built by Jean François Duchesnois in Gutenbrunnen Valley . As early as 1793, the palace was partially destroyed by French revolutionary troops.
Bierbacher Straße, embankment wall, slope support wall, wall niche fountain, well room, trough, around 1860 and 1930–40 (part of the ensemble)
Bierbacher Straße, manor house, western farm wing of Louisenthal Castle with vaulted cellar, farm building with stables and servants' apartments, around 1725 by Jean Francois Duchesnois (individual monument)
Bierbacher Straße, eastern economic wing of Louisenthal Palace, head pavilion and southern half of the central wing, agricultural building with stables and servants' apartments, around 1725 by Jean Francois Duchesnois (individual monument)
Bierbacher Straße, Walpurgis Chapel / Castle Chapel, around 1725 (foundation stone April 27, 1724) by Jean Francois Duchesnois (individual monument)
Bierbacher Straße, so-called old brewery, distillery of the Gutenbrunner Hof with vaulted cellar, 2nd half of the 18th century / 1st half of the 19th century (individual monument)
Bierbacher Straße, so-called chapel house, residential building, 1st half of the 18th century, renovation in the 2nd third of the 19th century (individual monument)
Bierbacher Straße, farm building, blacksmith's shop, storage hall, stable, 2nd half of the 18th century - 1st quarter of the 20th century (part of the ensemble)
Bierbacher Straße, objects in the area of ​​the former Gutenbrunner Hof: garden wall, well room, walls, sandstone footbridge, 18th / 19th centuries Century (part of the ensemble)
Bierbacher Straße, objects in the area of ​​the palace and palace gardens: boundary wall with corner posts and iron grating, cast iron statue, English park with pond, pond island, iron footbridge, 2nd half of the 19th century (part of the ensemble)
Outside of the location
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WH 427, Siegfried Line fortification Group shelter from 1938
Outside of the location
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Memorial stone around 1876
Klosterberg
location
Ruins of the Cistercian monastery Wörschweiler with remains of the monastery church, foundation walls, fragments, grave slabs The abbey was founded in 1131 by Count Friedrich I von Saar Werden as a Benedictine monastery and settled by monks from Hornbach monastery under a prior. In 1614 it was destroyed in a fire as a result of an accident. The monastery church was a three-aisled pillar basilica made of sandstone, built around 1265, with a straight choir and a transept. The west facade has a triple stepped portal and remains of a large rose window. The cloister with cloister as well as residential and farm buildings was south of the church. Numerous grave slabs have also been preserved. Woerschweiler monastery front.jpg

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