List of architectural monuments in Segnitz

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The monuments of the Lower Franconian community of Segnitz 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 April 15, 2020 and contains 31 architectural monuments.

Segnitz coat of arms

Hans-Kesenbrod-Strasse ensemble

Eastern part of Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße
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The main street of Segnitz runs parallel to the river in the longitudinal axis of the roughly rectangular, formerly walled settlement area. However, it does not coincide with the through route oriented towards the river crossing and ends blindly. It shows closed development with mostly gable, stately houses from the 16th to 19th centuries. Century. The center is emphasized by the half-timbered town hall from 1588, which obstructs a suggested street cross. Boundary: Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 1–24, Kirchstraße 1, Linsengasse 1. File number: E-6-75-166-1. ( Location )

Architectural monuments

location object description File no. image
Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 2
( location )
Residential building Two-storey mansard roof building in corner position with plastered half-timbered upper storey, labeled "1816" D-6-75-166-1 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 5
( location )
Residential building Two-storey, gable-independent gable roof building with half-timbered upper storey, labeled "1655" D-6-75-166-2 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 5
( location )
Pull-out house Two-story saddle roof building with half-timbered upper floor D-6-75-166-2 Pull-out house
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 6
( location )
Residential and commercial building Two-storey solid building with hipped roof, 1743 D-6-75-166-3 Residential and commercial building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 6
( location )
Coat of arms stone D-6-75-166-3 Coat of arms stone
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 11
( location )
Residential building Two-storey gable-independent half-hipped roof building, limestone, first half of the 19th century D-6-75-166-4 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 13
( location )
Residential building Two-storey eaves saddle roof building with half-timbered upper storey, 18th century D-6-75-166-5 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 14
( location )
Margravial office building The two-storey, gable-facing saddle house is a solid construction with a facade made of unplastered quarry stone masonry and a tail gable at the top. The corner building, standing at the intersection of Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße and Rathausstraße, was built in 1608. At least the portal comes from the master builder and stonemason Hans Kesenbrod . Only the coat of arms of Ansbach-Brandenburg above the portal indicates any sovereign use. The representative house was owned by the Reichenbach family at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1805, the hacker Johann Christoph Reichbach is noted in the list of houses as the owner. It is possible, however, that Johann Georg Reichenbach, the Provincial Commissioner of the Electorate of Saxony, acquired the property at the beginning of the 18th century. The Jewish trading teacher Manasses Katz from Hammelburg lived in the house from 1857 to 1859. D-6-75-166-6 Margravial office building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 15
( location )
town hall The two-storey, eaves gable roof building with a massive ground floor and projecting ornamental half-timbered upper storey and tail gable was built between 1588 and 1591 by the master builder Hans Kesenbrod and carpenter Lorenz Ebel. The representative Renaissance building has a vaulted cellar and a paneled council chamber on the upper floor. The coat of arms stone above the entrance shows the shield of the Margraves of Ansbach and a horse's head, the heraldic animal of the barons Zobel von Giebelstadt zu Darstadt and Messelhausen . An angel spreads its wings over it and symbolizes the desired unity between the two rulers. Below is a winged lion with a long sword over three mountains, the coat of arms of the builder Kesenbrod. D-6-75-166-7 town hall
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 17
( location )
Residential building Two-story gabled house with half-timbered upper floor, 17th century D-6-75-166-8 Residential building
Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 17
( location )
Pedestrian gate Portal by Hans Kesenbrod D-6-75-166-8 Pedestrian gate
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 17
( location )
Outbuildings With half-timbered gable D-6-75-166-8 Outbuildings
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 18
( location )
Residential building Two-storey gable roof building with plastered half-timbered upper storey, 17th century D-6-75-166-9 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 19
( location )
Bavarian house The two-storey, eaves mansard-roof house has a gabled dwelling and has neoclassical shapes. The house was built in 1809 according to the wedge above the entrance door. The builders were the Jewish wine merchant Moses Böhr and his son Israel. In 1835 the Jewish merchant Philipp Mayer Fälklein, who later gave its name, bought the property for a commercial establishment. In 1867 it acquired the higher commercial school for boys with boarding school, founded in 1838 by the cantor and teacher Julius Brussels, and used it as a residential and school building for teachers and students until the school closed in 1881. From 1888 to 1917 the mayor, wine and fruit dealer Ludwig Schwarz was the house owner. Among other things, he had the door frames renewed and given his name and house number 92 at the time. D-6-75-166-10 Bavarian house
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 20
( location )
Residential building Two-storey gable-independent gable roof building with plastered half-timbered upper storey, by Hans Kesenbrod between 1575 and 1616 D-6-75-166-11 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 22
( location )
Residential building Two-storey, gable-independent solid building with tail gable, around 1600 D-6-75-166-12 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 23
( location )
Residential building Two- and three-storey eaves gable roof construction with half-timbered upper storeys and arcade in the rear building, 17th century D-6-75-166-13 Residential building
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Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße 24
( location )
Residential building One-storey hipped roof building in a corner position, in the core 16th century, richly profiled entrance portal marked "1585" D-6-75-166-14 Residential building
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Im Schind, mouth of the Sulzfelder Straße
( location )
Jewish barrier One of three original landmarks of the same type at the former exits to Frickenhausen, Zeubelried and Sulzfeld, limestone column, labeled “1784”, but older D-6-75-166-30 Jewish barrier
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Frickenhäuser Straße between No. 12 and 14
( location )
Jewish barrier One of three original landmarks of the same type at the former exits to Frickenhausen, Zeubelried and Sulzfeld, limestone column, copy of a lost original unknown Jewish barrier
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Frickenhäuser Straße, junction with Schützenhausstraße
( location )
Jewish barrier One of three original landmarks of the same type at the former exits to Frickenhausen, Zeubelried and Sulzfeld, limestone column, copy of a lost original D-6-75-166-31 Jewish barrier
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Kirchstrasse 1
( location )
Residential building Two-storey half-hipped roof building, 18th / 19th centuries Century; covered gate entrance; see also Ensemble Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße D-6-75-166-15 Residential building
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Kirchstrasse 3
( location )
Former home and yard of the builder Hans Kesenbrod Two-storey saddle roof building with a tail gable and stone bay window, on the eaves side protruding, plastered half-timbered upper floor, late Renaissance, built in 1593 D-6-75-166-16 Former home and yard of the builder Hans Kesenbrod
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Kirchstrasse 3
( location )
Courtyard gate D-6-75-166-16 Courtyard gate
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Kirchstrasse 3
( location )
Outbuildings D-6-75-166-16 BW
Kirchstrasse 6
( location )
Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Martin Choir tower church made of unplastered limestone masonry, emerged from a chapel that was mentioned in a deed of foundation in 1350. The oldest part of the tower is dated to 1250. Larger construction and renovation work took place in 1486, 1600 with the tower superstructure and nave and in 1620. The fortified church, lying in the east of the village center, was together with the school and teachers' house and the former parsonage, which was demolished in 1972/73, as a fortified church own wall with towers attached. Initially a branch church of Frickenhausen, in 1448 the parish became an independent parish. In 1601, according to the Protestant denomination of the margrave-Ansbach village lords, the Reformation teaching was introduced. D-6-75-166-17 Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Martin
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Kirchstrasse 6
( location )
Fortification wall, so-called Salettchen and community servant or prison tower Part of the foundations of the Kirchengaden have been preserved D-6-75-166-17 Fortification wall, so-called Salettchen and community servant or prison tower
Kirchstrasse 12
( location )
Residential building Two-storey, gable-independent solid building with a gable roof, cellar entrance marked "1672" D-6-75-166-18 Residential building
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Kirchstrasse 18
( location )
Former tithe house, residential building Two-storey half-hipped roof building with porch, built in 1685/86 on the site of a previous building D-6-75-166-19 Former tithe house, residential building
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Kirchstrasse 18
( location )
Tithe barn D-6-75-166-19 Tithe barn
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Krönleinstraße 2
( location )
Renaissance portal Partly old window frames, around 1600 D-6-75-166-24 Renaissance portal
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Linsengasse 1
( location )
Residential building Two-storey mansard roof building with rear wing and protruding plastered half-timbered upper storey, inscribed "1790"; see also Ensemble Hans-Kesenbrod-Straße D-6-75-166-20 Residential building
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Linsengasse 18
( location )
Corner tower of the former fortification Round tower with clad octagonal upper floor and Welsch hood, heightened around 1520, 1597 D-6-75-166-23 Corner tower of the former fortification
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Mainstrasse 8
( location )
Gate entrance Inscribed "1821" D-6-75-166-21 Gate entrance
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Mainstrasse 24
( location )
Residential building Two-story saddle roof building with exposed stone wall and half-timbered gable, 17th century D-6-75-166-22 Residential building
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Rathausstrasse 4
( location )
Residential building Single-storey gable roof construction, half-timbered, 18th century D-6-75-166-26 Residential building
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Rathausstrasse 6
( location )
portal 18th century D-6-75-166-27 portal
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Near Sulzfelder Straße
( location )
graveyard Inscribed with Renaissance portal "1607" D-6-75-166-28 graveyard
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Near Sulzfelder Straße
( location )
Cemetery, wooden arcades With epitaphs from the 16./17. century D-6-75-166-28 Cemetery, wooden arcades
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Vordere Raingasse 3
( location )
Residential building Two-storey gable roof construction, half-timbered, inscribed "1664" D-6-75-166-29 Residential building
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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 monument property - and thus the legal protection - is defined in Art. 1 of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act (BayDSchG) and does not depend on the mapping in the monument atlas or the entry in the Bavarian monument list. Objects that are not listed in the Bavarian Monument List can also be monuments if they meet the criteria according to Art. 1 BayDSchG. Early involvement of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation according to Art. 6 BayDSchG is therefore necessary in all projects.

literature

  • Denis André Chevalley: Lower Franconia . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (=  Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VI ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1985, ISBN 3-486-52397-X .
  • Norbert Bischoff: Segnitz, your monuments. In: Old stories - news from old Segnitz. No. 8, November 2007

Web links

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