List of architectural monuments in Nonnweiler
In the list of architectural monuments in Nonnweiler , all architectural monuments of the Saarland community of Nonnweiler are listed according to their districts. The basis is the publication of the state monuments list in the Saarland official gazette of December 22, 2004 and the current sub-monuments list of the St. Wendel district in the version of August 9, 2017.
Beer field
location | designation | description | image |
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Am Butzenberg 5 location |
Farmhouse | Built in the first half of the 19th century. | |
Auensbach location |
Altar, figures and chalice of the cath. church | The cath. St. Wendalinus Church was built as a modern building in 1962. The altar, figures and chalice were already in the old chapel and date from the 18th century. |
Braunshausen
location | designation | description | image |
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Karl-Diehl-Straße / Mariahütte location |
Ensemble Mariahütte | Around 1580 a hammer mill was founded near Nonnweiler. After industrial processes brought about the boom in the smelters in Neunkirchen and along the Saar in the 19th century, the Mariahütte was converted to a foundry. Today the location belongs to the Diehl Defense company . Some factory buildings, workers' houses, villas and mansions of the former owners and large parts of a farm estate have been preserved from the old hut. | |
Karl-Diehl-Straße, fountain (individual monument): The cast iron fountain was made in the first half of the 19th century. The water runs over a square base with a lion's head spout into a semicircular basin. Rocaille elements and a coat of arms from the von Beulwitz family decorate the base. A fluted round column with a vase stands on it. | |||
Karl-Diehl-Strasse, monument to Christian Alexander v. Beulwitz, around 1830 (individual monument) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße, factory building, 2nd half of the 19th century (individual monument) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße, factory building, 1st quarter of the 19th century (individual monument) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Strasse no., Residential building, around 1900 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße 5, residential building, 1891–92 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße 8/9, double house for workers, 1st quarter of the 20th century (part of the ensemble) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße 10/11, double house for workers, 1899 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Karl-Diehl-Straße 12/13, double house for workers, 1906 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, passage and archway, 1888 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, servants' house and farm building, 1809 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, building No. 9/10, factory halls, 1939 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, building No. 62, factory hall, 1898–99 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, stable, 4th quarter of the 19th century (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, cowshed, 1888 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, poultry house, 19th century (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mariahütte, Generator, 1914 (individual monument) | |||
Mariahütte, cath. Maria Immaculata chapel (individual monument): The von Beulewitz family had a late classical chapel built on the factory premises in 1836. In 1976/77 it was completely renovated. The chapel is an oval building with flat pilasters and blind arcades. A two-story lantern in neo-Gothic style sits on the slated dome roof. The interior walls are structured with niches. The furnishings include a wooden altar from 1836, a wooden figure of Mary on a Gothic base and a life-size figure of Mary made of sandstone from 1756. | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, Eulenhaus, Remise (individual monument): The remise made of light sandstone, known as the "Owl House" due to its appearance, is an open building with a far cantilevered hip roof. On each of the gable ends there is a round arched gate with two round windows above. One of the long sides is closed, the other is open with three round arches. The building was erected in the 18th century. | |||
Mariahütte, Hofgut, "Härehaus", mansion with annex, water basin, 1764 (individual monument) | |||
Mariahütte 6, Villa von Beulwitz, 1902 (single monument) | |||
There |
for Engelsbach Holy house at the cemetery, crucifixion figures | Built in the 18th century |
Kastel
location | designation | description | image |
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Buweilerstrasse location |
Catholic rectory | The rectory was built in the 18th century on an approximately square floor plan. The two-storey plastered building was erected on a low base that protrudes far from the ground at the rear. On the street side, the building has four window axes with slightly profiled walls. Corner blocks emphasize the corners of the building. You enter the house via a corner projectile at the rear corner of the building. | |
Buweilerstrasse location |
Catholic Church of St. Wilfried | The oldest part of the church is the tower from the 12th century. The nave was built in 1776/77 according to plans by Nicolas Robin . The three-axis hall building with a flat ceiling and cove closes with a retracted choir with a three-sided end. The portal on the gable side is framed by an aedicula with a round arch. In 1908 the church tower was increased and received a neo-baroque, slate-roofed dome with a lantern. | |
Im Brühl 6 location |
Residential building | Built around 1800 | |
Im Brühl 15 location |
Farmhouse | Built in 1857 | |
In the measuring 32 position |
Residential building | Built between 1921 and 1926. |
Nonnweiler
location | designation | description | image |
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Trier street location |
Tomb for Carl Richard Gottbill | The small obelisk stands next to the cath. Church. It dates from 1836 and bears the inscription "Carl Richard Gottbill, the owner of the Mariahütte and mayor of Trier." | |
Trier street location |
Beulwitz burial chapel | ||
Trier street location |
Parish church St. Hubertus , Hubertushorn, Hubertusbrenneisen, sculpture, 1750 | The "Hochwalddom" was built in the neo-Gothic style between 1900 and 1902 based on designs by the Mainz cathedral master builder Ludwig Becker. The three-aisled hall is closed off by a short transept and a choir with a five-twelfth part. Pointed arches on round pillars separate the central and side aisles. Next to the gable portal is a defiant west tower with a slipped pointed helmet and four corner turrets. The church owns a horn that St. Hubert is said to have lost while hunting. On the horn is the inscription: "Nikolaus Clink pastor of the local church, in the year of the Lord 1182." The wooden horn with chasing was later converted into a drinking horn. The Hubertuskirche also features the Hubertus key , a branding iron that was used to heal bite wounds from animals. It dates from the 12th century and was used to treat rabies patients in Nonnweiler until 1828. | |
Trierer Straße 5/7 location |
town hall | The town hall dates from the early 20th century. It is a dreamlike, two-story plastered building with a gable roof. The 18 window axes with upright rectangular windows with fuchsia paintings are irregularly distributed. The main entrance to the building can be reached via an outside staircase. The entrance door has a narrow gable field with a straight, profiled roof. |
Otzenhausen
location | designation | description | image |
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Brunnenstrasse 23 location |
Farmhouse | Built in the 18th century | |
Kirchstrasse location |
Catholic Church of St. Valentin | The Valentine's Church was built in 1772/73. In 1850 the church was expanded by tearing open the north side and building a hall church with a choir apse to the north. In 1864 the church was rebuilt and the southern part of the nave was adapted. In addition, the nave received its current tower. The nave with five window axes is closed off by a choir with a three-sided end. The neo-Romanesque tower with arched friezes has a reduced roof without a hood or helmet. |
Primstal
location | designation | description | image |
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Mettnicher Strasse location |
Row of farmhouses on Mettnicher Strasse | The monument ensemble consists of a connected row of farmhouses from the 19th and early 20th centuries. | |
Mettnicher Straße 12, farmhouse, 1840 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mettnicher Straße 2, residential building, 1st quarter of the 20th century (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mettnicher Straße 14, farmhouse, 1886 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Mettnicher Straße 16, farmhouse, 4th quarter of the 19th century (part of the ensemble) | |||
There |
at the swimming pool Mill | The forest mill was built in 1709 by Nikolaus Feld. It burned down in 1844 and was rebuilt in 1846. Until 1907 the grain was processed into flour with millstones that were powered by water power, then modernized by installing a roller mill. The mill building was renovated in July 1951. The mill was shut down in the early 1960s. | |
Main street |
Mariengrotte, enclosure wall | The Mariengrotte was built in 1898 by private individuals as a replica of the Lourdes grotto. | |
Hauptstrasse 4 location |
Farmhouse | Built in 1846 | |
Matzenberg |
Mettnich-Mühlfeld war memorial | War memorial for the victims of the First World War. | |
Matzenberg location |
Old cath. Church of the Exaltation of the Cross , choir and tower | From the medieval church from the 15th century only the choir and tower are preserved. A new nave was built in 1806, but it was demolished in 1844. In the choir with ⅝ ending and oculus there is a sacrament niche on the north side. In the ribbed vault of the tower hall you can find the name and stonemason mark of Hans Nentlen . | |
Mettnicher Straße |
Wayside cross | Erected in 1747 | |
Mettnicher Strasse 4 location |
Farmhouse | Built in 1882 | |
To the Handenberg location |
Mill | The elongated building complex with residential and farm buildings includes a grinding, an oil and a sawmill. The oil mill, from which the grinding mill emerged, was built in 1747. At first only tan was ground on it for the tanners, later rape and cabbage. In 1943 it was shut down. Before 1847, the grinding mill was a cloth weaving mill. Originally the mill was water powered, but was modernized in the 1940s and received an electric motor. The sawmill has been in operation since 1735. |
Schwarzenbach
location | designation | description | image |
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Oldenburger Strasse location |
Parish Church of St. Catherine | The Katharinenkirche was built in 1876 and was expanded in 1933 according to plans by the architect Monz. The simple hall structure is covered by a flat ceiling with a cove. Two small aisles are attached to the two-axle nave like rectangular niches. A slightly retracted rectangular choir completes the building. An oculus is emblazoned in the gable of the portal side. The simple portal with a double door is flanked by two five-sided turrets. | |
Oldenburger Strasse 21 location |
Farmhouse | Built in the 19th century |
Web links
Commons : Architectural monuments in Nonnweiler - Collection of images, videos and audio files
- List of monuments of the Saarland: List of monuments in the district of St. Wendel (PDF file; 16.81 MB)