List of monuments in Coburg / Seidmannsdorf

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Coburg district Seidmannsdorf
List of monuments in Coburg :

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Other districts: Beiersdorf  · Bertelsdorf  · Cortendorf  · Creidlitz  · Festungshof  · Ketschendorf  · Lützelbuch  · Neu- and Neershof  · Neuses  · Rögen  · Scheuerfeld  · Seidmannsdorf  · Desert maple

The Coburg district of Seidmannsdorf is made up of the districts of Löbelstein and Seidmannsdorf.

Seidmannsdorf

Löbelstein

50 ° 15 '22.3 "  N , 10 ° 59' 27.8"  E

Street / name description photo
Herzogsweg, Ziegelhüttenberg junction This boundary stone from the 18th or 19th century stands at the old fork of the Herzogsweg to the Veste and the path Ziegelhüttenberg to Löbelstein. The stone is badly weathered and therefore cannot be precisely dated. The two depicted Moorish heads are not worked out on the fronts, but on the other sides, which is unusual for such boundary stones. Co-Loebelstein-Grenzstein.jpg

Seidmannsdorf

50 ° 15 '0.6 "  N , 11 ° 0' 0.2"  E

Street / name description photo
Rohrbacher Strasse 1 A two-storey half-timbered building with a gable roof built in 1746, which was formerly used as an inn. Co-Seidmannsdorf-Rohrbacherstr1.jpg
Seidmannsdorfer Straße
war memorial
In a green area on the corner of Haarsgrund / Am Klausberg is the war memorial for the soldiers who fell in World War I, which was donated by the communities of Seidmannsdorf-Löbelstein, Lützelbuch, Rögen and Rohrbach. In the center of the complex there is a soldier monument surrounded by trees, which depicts a soldier with a steel helmet and a bared upper body. In front of the plinth there is a semicircular water basin with a fountain outlet. There are five inscribed stone crosses on both sides of the monument base. Co-Seidmannsdorf-War memorial.jpg
Seidmannsdorfer Strasse 277 This parsonage in neo-Gothic style was built on the area northwest of the Protestant church in 1852 according to plans by Friedrich Streib . It replaced the dilapidated older rectory building. In 1851 the master carpenter Jacob Römhild from Untersiemau presented the plan for the repair of the old rectory; he was involved in the new building in 1852. In 1956, small renovations were carried out in the interior. During a comprehensive renovation from 1968 to 1970, the spatial program was partially changed.

The building is a two-storey sandstone block with a gable roof. Down the slope there is a three-axis dwarf project on the building; the windows are suspected of being angular. On the left side of the gable, a staircase with a platform provides access to the garden. On the back there is a three-axis dwarf house.

Co-Seidmannsdorf-Pfarrhaus.jpg
Seidmannsdorfer Straße 277 a
Parish Church of Our Lady
This Evangelical Lutheran parish church dates from the 15th century. Possibly it went back from an even older royal own church of the royal estate Sithmarsdorff, which can be dated back to 1074. In 1538 galleries were built; this is an almost certain indication that the church became Protestant at the latest from this point in time. Coburg-Seidmannsdorf-Church.jpg
Seidmannsdorfer Strasse 279 This two-storey, gable-side half-timbered house dates from 1619. It is a saddle-roofed house, the southern and western sides of which are historically slated. The framework consists of an almost square grid with sloping wood. In the middle of the long side a dwarf house with a gable roof protrudes. It was originally a stable house. Co-Seidmannsdorferstr279.jpg
Seidmannsdorfer Strasse 279 a This farmhouse was built around 1800 next to house no. 279 as part of a two-winged farm. The gable roof house is two-story. The half-timbered structure is partially exposed above the massive ground floor, while the south and east sides are historically slated. Co-Seidmannsdorferstr279a.jpg