List of cultural monuments in Allendorf (Eder)

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The following list contains the cultural monuments identified in the monument topography in the area of ​​the municipality of Allendorf (Eder) , district of Waldeck-Frankenberg , Hesse .

Note: The order of the monuments in this list is based first on the districts and then on the address; alternatively, it can also be sorted according to the name, the number assigned by the State Office for Monument Preservation or the construction time.

The basis is the publication of the Hessian list of monuments, which was created for the first time on the basis of the Monument Protection Act of September 5, 1986 and has been continuously updated since then.

The presence or absence of an object in this list does not provide legally binding information as to whether it is a cultural monument or not: This list may not reflect the current status of the official monument topography. This is available for Hessen in the corresponding volumes of the monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany and on the Internet under DenkXweb - Kulturdenkmäler in Hessen (under construction). Even though these sources are updated by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Hesse , they are not always up-to-date because there are always changes in the inventory of monuments.

Only the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Hesse can provide binding information .

Cultural monuments according to districts

Allendorf

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Half-timbered house Allendorf, Bachstraße 15
hallway: 11, parcel: 30
The half-timbered house on a massive base storey built on the eaves facing Bachstrasse in 1851 now forms the western boundary of the square at the confluences of Bachstrasse, Luisenstrasse and Goldberg. In a prominent urban position, it forms the eastern end point of the closed historical development of the Allendorf town center. A single-storey framework with a simple structural framework and steep storey-high struts rises above the massive basement. More recently, the building was lengthened at the rear and renovated by the municipality between 1992 and 1996. It has housed a museum since 2002. 1851 79080
 
Bakehouse Allendorf, Bachstraße 8
hallway: 10, parcel: 27
The bakery was built by the municipality in 1847 at the confluence of Riedeselstrasse on an elongated, triangular plot of land directly on the Linspherbach, on the eaves facing the Bachstrasse that bends here. In front of the bakery, the street widens like a square and includes the course of the river through a bridge in the street scene. A fully slated half-timbered upper floor rises above a ground floor made of quarry stone in layers and is closed off by a flat gable roof. There are two ovens on the ground floor and a detention cell on the upper floor. From 1958 the bakery served as a milk collection point. 1847 79079
 
Allendorf (Eder) railway station
more pictures
railway station Allendorf, Bahnhofstraße 22,
hallway: 8, parcel: 32/18
After several unsuccessful attempts since the 1870s, the Prussian state parliament approved the construction of a railway line from Frankenberg to Winterberg in 1898. After a few delays, the line was opened on December 1, 1908. In 1911 the line to Bad Berleburg was added. Passenger traffic on both routes ceased in 1966 and 1981, respectively. Note: The railway line should be active again as part of the establishment of passenger traffic for the Kellerwald-Edersee National Park.

The station was built as a neo-baroque type building in 1910 based on a design by the architect Alois Holtmeyer (see Röddenau). The solidly bricked, white plastered ground floor has door and window reveals made of red sandstone and is closed off on the street side by a high mansard roof and a half-hip towards the tracks. While the track-side mansard storey is slated, on the front gable side there is a cantilevered structural framework with storey-high struts on the corner posts above profiled beam heads. On the right side of the street there is a risalit that takes up the structural shape of the facade, and a single-storey, two-axis porch with a hipped roof is attached to the rear. A single-storey goods shed was built on the east side.

1910 79081
 
Half-timbered yard ride Allendorf, Goldberg 19
hallway: 11, parcel: 15/1
At the confluence of the Lohwiese, over a plastered base, a half-timbered courtyard with a two-storey residential building that faces the Goldberg. It is a post construction from the 18th century with a two-storey intermediate post structure with profiled long bars between the storeys. The profile of the transom also continues above the notched corner and collar studs. The half-timbered structure is stiffened on the ground floor by storey-high struts, on the upper floor by means of man figures and in the gable by wooden legs. 18th century 79082
 
Combing mill Allendorf, Kämmersmühle
hallway: 15, parcel: 17/1
The first mention of the Kämmersmühle dates back to 1484. On March 24th of this year, the Commander of the Wiesenfelder Johanniter Gottfried Wigands sold the property near Allendorf to the Röddenau citizen Henz Kämmerer, whose family still gives it its name. Over the centuries, the mill passed through many hands, as it was not designated as a ban mill and thus hardly fed the residents. The mill itself burned to the ground on June 7, 1914 and was rebuilt from scratch in the following years. The property today consists of three buildings erected at the same time after 1914, a two-storey house, a single-storey mill building and a boarded stable, which together loosely enclose a courtyard. The main building is the L-shaped residential building. A mostly slated and boarded-up half-timbered upper floor rises above a brick-walled ground floor, which opens into a loggia in the courtyard-side risalit. The upper end of the residential building is formed by a steep gable roof, which at the risalit covers a half-timbered gable with ornamental framework, St. Andrew's crosses and diagonal struts and forms a protruding verge with carved purlins and a small crooked hip. At the same time a small mill building made of half-timbered with brick infills was erected on the courtyard side. The building, which is provided with a wide diaphragm, was built on small supports partly above the Mühlgraben and shows a simple structural framework with steep, storey-high struts. 1484 79179
 
Drawing before 1910
So-called old church Allendorf, Luisenstraße 4
hall: 10, parcel: 32/1
Allendorf was already a subsidiary of Battenfeld in the Middle Ages and only became an independent parish in 1964. The portal stone dating from the existing building is described in the Battenfeld church hall book in 1740: "In the Allendörfer Cappel above the door there is the coat of arms of a Wolfangel with three Creeute cum ao 1496." However, it is uncertain whether it is actually a new building in all parts or whether older remains have been integrated. A headband in the tower was examined dendrochronologically for 1490 ± 8 years as well as a door post on the tower around or after 1480. The wooden vault in the nave was probably built around 1700, the ridge vault in the choir was renewed in 1948/49. When the old church was no longer needed after the new building "Auf dem Loh", it narrowly escaped demolition in 1965 and was able to be maintained by a sponsorship group despite initially lacking use. The complete renovation took place from 1976 to 1981, and the floor was also lowered. Today the room is used for church services of both denominations, for exhibitions and concerts. Small, plastered hall building made of quarry stone with a massive choir east tower, both components in the external effect with stone corners. Small windows without tracery in the choir and in the eaves sides (with sandstone walls) are Gothic, the wide, rectangular window on the west side is younger; above a slated half-timbered gable. The sandstone slab above the (renewed) portal on the south side is certainly a spoil (a grave slab?), Whereby the two heraldic shields - on the left a wolf tang, on the right an unrecognizable animal with three toes on one foot, surrounded by three crosses - are original , on or in which the year "1496" was subsequently inserted. The small inscription to the left of the heraldic plaques, which uses an existing space, “This church is newly built in the year” is also one of the additions. The stone of the time probably around 1460 to 1480 was probably only worked and used in this form in the 18th century. The choir tower is older in the upper area without any further openings and perhaps in the wall core (see Rengershausen, Viermünden). Slated upper storey made of half-timbered structure and a spire that is hipped on all sides with a short longitudinal ridge, each with a bay window to the north and south; dendrochronologically dated to 1496. In the interior, a segment-arched beam separates two clumsily constructed wooden vaults, which imitate groin vaults with wooden keystones and painted ribs. The (real and only optical) support links and the window frames are shown in dark red. The strongly recessed choir is opened to the nave in a low pointed arch, above it a wall projection and a door to the upper floors of the tower with a staircase from the north gallery. The choir vault (renewed in 1948/49) without beginners or fighters. A quarry stone altar block has been preserved from the medieval furnishings. The three-sided gallery on stands, shorter on the south side because of the pulpit, is dendrochronologically dated to 1572 and 1679 ± 8 years, the beams are partly used a second time. The parapet fillings of the west gallery and the pulpit with floral motifs and stylized vegetable forms, probably 18th century. The pulpit probably from the 18th century with a crucifix after a copper engraving. Bell from 1774, Schneidewind foundry in Frankfurt / Main. 15th and 16th centuries 79083
 
Inn Allendorf, Schulstrasse 1,
hallway: 10, parcel: 23
Two-storey inn from the early 19th century with a younger extension, built on a flat stone base at the corner of Riedweg, enclosed by a half-hipped roof. The building is constructed in a post-and-beam construction and has a two-storey intermediate post structure, which includes a wide beam zone with grooved beam heads and rounded filler timber. The corner studs on the ground floor take on the profile at the level of the threshold-like long bar on the upper floor and have a round bar profile above it. On the ground floor, the framework is stiffened by struts of different lengths, on the upper floor by means of man figures and in the gable by wooden legs. Beginning of the 19th century 79084
 
barn Allendorf, Schulstraße 4
hall: 12, parcel: 53
The barn that closes off the courtyard at the rear and faces the street, was built at the end of the 18th century and with its gable side looks into the street area of ​​Bahnhofstraße. The double cantilevered gable, which supports a gable roof, is completely slated like the street-side framework. On the back there is a two-storey half-timbered building built on a high, stepped base made of sandstone and rubble. The upper floor cantilevered over an entablature zone with rounded filler timber and a profiled threshold, like the ground floor, is stiffened by man figures, which are provided with footbands running in opposite directions on the upper floor. 18th century 79085
 
Complete system of the historic town center Allendorf, entire facility 1 The entire system comprises the straight course of the Bachstraße, which is expanded like a square at the ends, between the Linspher Bach and the confluence of the Ortstraße. The Bachstraße gets its urban planning characteristic structure through an even row on similarly sized plots of 19th century riding school. The court rides consist of half-timbered houses with gable ends on massive basement floors or plinths with courtyards open to Bachstrasse and closed at the rear by barns standing on the eaves. The entire complex ends in two square-like extensions, the west of which is characterized by the bakery and prison and the east of which is more recently characterized by the local history museum. To the southwest, behind the buildings on Bachstrasse, it extends to the church, which is only accessible via a narrow path.
Schulstrasse Allendorf, entire facility 2 The entire complex, located on the corner of Schulstrasse and Riedweg, consists of two-story half-timbered houses of different dimensions and courtyard riding on plots of different sizes, which document the development of architectural styles in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. All houses are built on massive basement floors, the half-timbering of the upper floors is partly open, partly it is clad. There are gable and eaves buildings alternating.

Battenfeld

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Jewish Cemetery Battenfeld, on the Krögerain
corridor: 9, parcel: 156
The Jewish community of Battenfeld, which probably dates back to the 17th century, comprised four families in 1712. By 1830 it grew to 60 members, in 1859 there were 50. After that, the number of Jewish citizens decreased to 29 by 1905 and finally there were 22 in 1933. By 1777 at the latest, a synagogue and a cemetery existed in Battenfeld. The first Jewish school, founded by Aron Blumenthal in 1825, was converted into a public elementary school in 1876/77 and closed in 1925. Although the school building survived the Third Reich, the synagogue was burned down in 1938, the cemetery was closed and the tombstones were used to fortify the Mühlgraben and the railway embankment. After the end of the Second World War, the Battenfelder had to rebuild the cemetery as far as possible under the supervision of American soldiers. The cemetery was laid out in the 18th century northwest of the town "auf der Struth" near the edge of the forest for the Jews in the Battenberg district and covers 3620 m². About 170 tombstones have been preserved. The oldest from the 18th century are made of red sandstone and only have Hebrew inscriptions and little ornamentation. The grave inscriptions of the following period are still written in Hebrew, but are supplemented with age information and dates of death in German. The younger tombstones often have two inscriptions in Hebrew and German, either on one side of the tombstone or on top of each other. 18th century 79099
 
Road bridge Battenfeld, Eder
corridor: 12, parcel: 81/1
The bridge spans the Eder with two flat arches made of iron framework that rest on abutments at the sides, in the middle on a pillar with a breakwater made of sandstone blocks. The roadway lies above the structure. An inscription plate is attached to the middle pillar: "Built in 1883 in two halves without relocating road traffic". 1883 79100
 
Half-timbered house Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 13
hallway: 13, parcel: 21
Large-volume half-timbered house at the side entrance to the rectory, built around the middle of the 19th century, independent of the gable facing Edertalstrasse. The two-storey building rises above a massive basement and is accessed on the courtyard side by a two-flight flight of stairs. It shows three window axes facing the street and five now partially closed window axes facing the courtyard. The building, which is tiled up by floor, is structured by a dense framework structure with a multitude of steep, story-high struts. The building, which is trimmed down without overhangs, is closed off at the top by a crooked hip roof with classical eaves cornices. Mid 19th century 79087
 
Rectory Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 15
hallway: 13, parcel: 20/1
Large-volume two-storey half-timbered house from the late 18th century on a sandstone ashlar base, on a plot behind the rest of the building. The building is plastered on the eaves side on the ground floor, slated on the upper floor and accessed via a high flight of stairs through a two-wing historicist door. The framework is stiffened by widely spread struts that are provided with head angle timbers. The entablature zone with beveled beam heads, rounded filler timber and ship fillets is remarkable. The double overhanging gable has a gable roof with a small crippled hip. Late 18th century 79088
 
Former bakery and school Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 21
hallway: 14, parcel: 47
1860 as a two-storey, gable-independent quarry stone building on a flat base with sandstone finish at the confluence of Marktstrasse. Part of the school lessons took place on the upper floor. That is why the bakery was also called a small school. The building, which is closed by a flat gable roof, has windows with grooved sandstone reveals and a twin window in the gable. On the four-axis eaves side, two doors with profiled reveals and flat, younger open stairs are arranged in the outer axes. 1860 79089
 
Half-timbered house Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 23
hallway: 14, parcel: 25/3
Gable-independent, broad, two-storey half-timbered house on a high stone plinth with sandstone blocks. The building, which is slated on the gable side, shows figures of men on the eaves at corner and collar studs as well as an entablature zone with grooved beam heads, rounded filler timber and a profiled upper floor threshold. Created in the 18th century, it still has overhangs. 18th century 79090
 
A house Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 38
hall: 15, parcel: 35/5
Gable-independent, two-storey single house on a high stone plinth with corner blocks that extends far into the plot. The half-timbered structure from the early 19th century is built without projecting storeys, is completely slated and closed by a gable roof with a crooked hip. The five-axis residential part is accessed on the eaves side via a central, high, two-armed flight of stairs. At the back of it is a wide gate entrance. Beginning of the 19th century 79091
 
Half-timbered house Battenfeld, Edertalstraße 44
hallway: 15, parcel: 22/4
Large-volume, two-storey half-timbered house on a sandstone base with a high, two-armed open staircase typical of the area opposite the confluence of the Teichweg. The central entrance axis is flanked by two window axes combined in pairs. The completely slated neo-baroque building from the middle of the 19th century is closed off by a mansard roof with a central, gabled dwarf house. The builder of the house was Levi Dessauer (1846–1924), a Jewish wholesaler from Elsoff, who moved to Battenfeld shortly after the mid-19th century. Mid 19th century 79092
 
Eder Bridge Battenfeld, railway, Altes Ederbett, Eder
corridor: 10, 12, parcel: 316, 62, 79, 87
North-west of Battenfeld as an iron lattice girder in trapezoidal shape over the Eder bridge from 1910. The lattice girder rests on abutments made of stone. To the east there is a foreland bridge over the riverbanks on pillars and abutments, also made of natural stone, which has a continuous Art Nouveau railing. 1910 79075
 
Former elementary school Battenfeld, Heinrich-Sellmann-Straße 6
hallway: 14, parcel: 8
The large-volume building was built in 1938 as a new elementary school and has been used as a kindergarten since the central school opened in 1970. A two-storey building with a single-storey entrance porch on the gable ends was erected on a basement at the eaves facing the street. While the windows of the plastered ground floor are lined up, those of the slated upper floor are combined in pairs. The gable roof is provided with gable dormers. 1938 79093
 
Evangelical Church Battenfeld (Eder)
Evangelical Church, formerly St. Marien Battenfeld, Marktstraße 1
hallway: 13, parcel: 15
In the battle near Laisa and Battenfeld in 778, mentioned in three sources, the Saxons on their way back from the Rhine suffered a devastating defeat. The Poeta Saxo (around 890) as one of the chroniclers calls Battenfeld "Baddanfeldun". The early mention of a location in the immediate vicinity of a battlefield, the location on a road crossing the Eder and the fact that the Battenfeld Church was the original parish church of the Battenfelder Land suggests that the church was founded early, possibly on property belonging to the Konradines. Not only the age, but also the shape of the remaining building remains of the church confirm a prominent position against churches in the surrounding area. In 879, the Konradines donated the patronage of the Battenfeld Marienkirche to the St. Severus monastery in Kettenbach in the Aartal, which they founded in 845 and which was moved to Gemünden in the Westerwald shortly afterwards. At that time the patron saint was probably Count Berengar from Conradin. The monastery, to which the Marian patronage may go back, held the patronage until 1462, but gave it as a fief. Around 1200 it was held by the lords of Leiningen, and between 1240 and 1770 by the lords of Biedenfeld, who came from Waldeck and lived in Berghofen, as a fief, after which the counts of Solms took it for themselves. The fundamental renovation or extensive new building around or shortly after 1200 is attributed to the initiative of Count Werner von Wittgenstein, first mentioned in 1174, who also founded the Kommende Wiesenfeld and died in 1213 or shortly before; political connections to him are not proven. The tower spire dates from the 15th century. During or after the Thirty Years War the aisles were demolished. An extensive renovation in 1954 was followed by renovation of the tower, roof and interior in 2000. The church and churchyard are protected by a building block only a little away from the main road and today's Eder Bridge not far north of the Eder in the flat valley. Today's churchyard, which extends north and northwest of the church, shows no traces of a former fortification. Old rectory on a remarkably large area south of the church. Before the side aisles were demolished, three-aisled, two-bay, vaulted pillar basilica made of quarry stone with sandstone structures in a bound system, transept with extremely short arms, choir bay with sacristy on the north side and west tower. The preserved central nave of the nave is provided with sharply ridged, slightly pointed vaults on wall shields, which are separated by a broad, likewise pointed belt arch on box templates; the box templates bear block-like scale capitals. The wall shields lie on corner templates that are included with the box templates. The vaults may have been renewed in the late Middle Ages; in the crown of the arch to the east vault is the double coat of arms of Biedenfeld and of Allendorf. The arcades visible on the outside (only well preserved on the north side) separate broad intermediate supports, and in the earlier passages (now half walled up, windows above) simple brackets made of platelets and inclines. The aisles were probably also vaulted. The south wall in the arcade area with a wide portal and uneven windows, 17th century; The double coat of arms of Allendorf and von Biedenfeld is located above one of the windows. Upper clad windows partly changed later. The roof structure with a row of central pillars, rafters sloping chair columns and double collar beam position is possibly very old. The square vault of the "transept" is clamped in round-arched beams that rest on box templates with capitals with a block frieze. It is slightly lower than the vaults in the nave and has more irregular caps. The short side arms, less expansive than the side aisles originally, are covered with transverse barrels. A noticeable recession of the front wall, particularly on the southern arm, indicates a subsequent increase in the bulge. The arch between the nave and the crossing is particularly strong: to the west, two stepped beams on templates are attached to the actual girder, which give the impression of the space a heavy weight. The eastern belt arch to the choir, which lies opposite, was also considerably reduced in width and height with a set second belt arch on templates with flat-profile fighters. The galleries are accessible from the west via external stairs, the end walls are provided with half-hips. In the longitudinal section of the church, Luthmer depicts a portal in the center of the northern end wall that was provided with a gable tympanum and which is also called Esterhues; today there are two unequal windows here. Noteworthy is the figurative sculpture, which was certainly used a second time, on the exterior: On the north gable the hollow relief of a standing knight with a pointed shield, the sword in his right hand is lost. Next to it a bearded man's head protruding from the stone. On the east wall of the south arm, a flat male head with two protruding parts of the beard. The origin or the original building context of the Spolia as well as their age are unclear. However, it can be seen from the existing structure that the remainder of a Carolingian-Ottonian church was probably integrated in the "transept": a flat-roofed hall building at a slightly higher height than today's apex with lower annexes that were connected via flying buttresses. In addition to the floor plan and the relief foils, the fighters (including those of the belt arch in the central nave), with their very flat bevels and ridged corners broken up into scales or elongated blocks, speak less in the early 13th than in the 9th or 10th centuries Th century are to be dated. The choir, with its domed vault, is the youngest part of the church and is likely to date from the first half of the 13th century. It is slightly rectangular in its basic shape, the vault rests on wall shields with simple corner templates. Two Gothic windows with tracery, only the southern one was later converted into a door (outside staircase next to the small priest portal), the dividing bar of the nested lanes was removed under a quatrefoil. The wall niche in the eastern south wall, which is set into a wall protrusion, is unusual. The sacristy is provided with two domed vaults that are connected to one another by a belt arch that is not designed separately, which probably date from the 13th century. There is only a window on the east side; access from the choir is in the west yoke. Old strappy floor in a herringbone bond. The tower made of irregular ashlar masonry is slightly drawn in against the ship and pushed into the west wall of the ship with the belt arch. The somewhat longitudinally rectangular, vaulted ground floor hall has no external access; small window to the west. The lack of further window openings and a bell storey point to an escape tower (holes for transom beams on the high tower staircase), which, however, clearly exceeds the similar towers of Rengershausen and Viermünden in height. Dominant late Gothic finish of eight-sided pointed helmet and four large polygonal wichhouses made of slated half-timbering, each covered with a small pointed helmet. Presumably still Romanesque stone canteen in the choir, possibly made of reused cuboids, later inscription "J • G • BICHMANN • AO • 1720 •" above the floor on the east side. A wooden leaf of a door with curved iron bands placed in the north annex, probably still Romanesque. So-called alphabet bell in the tower from the 14th century. Triumphal cross of the three-nail type on the corresponding cross board with quatrefoils and partly original setting, around 1420/30. Smaller wooden crucifix, third quarter of the 15th century. Possibly a late Gothic, polygonal pulpit with fillings on a stone plinth, the elevation with handrail and the sound cover date from the 16th century. Squat baptismal font made of sandstone in the shape of a chalice, 16th century. The lower galleries on both sides of the nave are inscribed from 1661 (cf. Bromskirchen), on the parapet panels are images of the apostles, the four evangelists and Luther as well as the coats of arms of noble families, 1742. The upper galleries and the three-sided in the choir with board docks and slender round docks. Epitaph of Ernst Ludwig Ferdinand von Geismar under the organ, † 1722. Gravestone Johann Georg Bichmann and Maria Sophia Magdalena geb. von Biedenfeld, † 1743/44. The organ built in 1871 by Jakob Vogt in Korbach with a five-axis front on the west gallery from 1815. On the north annex or north cross arm outside grave slab of the chief forester Hans Nagel with coat of arms held by deer in honor wreath and with skull, † probably 1765. A second grave slab with rococo mirror clamped between two high columns with (illegible) writing, crowned by a divine symbol of the sun. 79094
 
Hofreite Battenfeld, Marktstraße 22
hallway: 14, parcel: 2
At the confluence of Heinrich-Sellmann-Strasse, a small historic courtyard was built, the courtyard of which opens up to the intersection, thus visually expanding it. The fully slated half-timbered upper floor of the house rises on an almost square floor plan over a flat base and a ground floor made of brickwork. The three-axis building, whose segment-arched window and door reveals on the ground floor are accentuated by shaped bricks, faces the courtyard and is accessed on the right-hand side of the building via a flight of stairs through an original front door with a glass skylight. The barn and stable are combined in a building with a gable roof, which is at right angles to the house and at the gable facing Heinrich-Sellmann-Straße. Here, too, the ground floor consists of bricks, the upper floor of slated timber. 18th century 79095
 
Half-timbered yard ride Battenfeld, Marktstraße 23
hall: 13, parcel: 1/2
Half-timbered courtyard with a gable, two-story house on a flat sandstone square base and angled, two-story barn. The five-axis building is accessed from the eaves via a slightly off-center, flat open staircase. There, flanked by two narrow windows, is a double-leaf baroque frame panel door with a fixed glass skylight. Both the frame and the door leaves are intricately carved with volutes, rocailles, stars and floral motifs. The framework is stiffened by man figures with opposing footbands on corner and collar posts. The corner posts are decorated with round rod profiles that end in floral carving and on the ground floor on a volute, on the upper floor on a wickerwork base. The floor-to-ceiling house, whose upper floor slightly overhangs a beam zone with grooved beam heads, rounded filler timber and a profiled threshold, is slated on the gable side and closed off by a double-overhanging gable with a crooked hip roof. To the left of the barn door, the ground floor of the barn is made of red sandstone blocks. The framework is stiffened by man figures with opposing footbands on corner and collar posts. The lintel bears the following inscription: "Built by God's help and power by Christian Muth and Marga kattarina desen Ehefrau have trusted God and this crowd built in the year 1791 on the 10th of May The carpenter master was known Johan Daniel Schweizer was the first to build a woodworker." . 1791 79096
 
Old school Battenfeld, Rennertehäuser Weg 4,
hallway: 13, parcel: 27/5
Set back from the street, two-storey, gable-free half-timbered house from the late 18th century with a narrower extension to the street. The almost completely slated building shows on the back of the wider component two-storey corner and collar studs with two-storey intermediate studs that are mortised into a long bolt. The framework is stiffened by three-quarter high struts, which are provided with opposing footbands on the upper floor. A gabled dwarf house with a crooked hip and several gabled dormers crown the half-hipped gable roof on both sides. Late 18th century 130153
 
Half-timbered house Battenfeld, Rennertehäuser Weg 8,
hallway: 13, parcel: 29
Gable-independent, two-story, solidly built half-timbered house with a gable roof on the ground floor, the gable side of which is slated. The entrance with the original front door in the middle of the eaves is flanked by two narrow windows and two gates. On the upper floor there is a constructive framework with storey-high struts. The building was built in the second half of the 19th century as an old-age divider house on the wide parcel of a courtyard opposite the residential building. 2nd half of the 19th century 79098
 

Groves

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Half-timbered house Haine, Neue Straße 13
hallway: 10, parcel: 38/4
Set back from the street, eaves, closed off with a gable roof, accessed via a high, partially covered staircase. Two storeys in a constructive framework with storey-high struts rise above a solid masonry base. The second floor is completely slated. In the frame of the first floor there is the following inscription: "The master carpenter was Johannes Jesberg from Roeddenau in 1833 the 8th of May" 1833 79105
 
Protestant church Haine, Neue Straße 5,
corridor: 10, parcel: 51
From the Middle Ages up to 1836 the Hainers paid their church tithe to the pastor in Battenfeld, although they usually used the services of the pastor from Röddenau. The church tithe is a commitment that dates back to when Haine belonged to the Battenberg county before it was destroyed around 1370. However, since the new settlement came from the Hessian office of Wolkersdorf, new ties arose between Haine and the Hessian village of Röddenau.

In 1711, instead of a small chapel from 1671, a gabled half-timbered church with a three-eighth closure was built over a high quarry stone base with corner blocks made of red sandstone. The framework, which has been slated on the gable side since 1755, is stiffened by storey-high struts and St. Andrew's crosses. Above the entrance portal with beveled sandstone reveals an inscription panel with an angel's head decorated segment gable, also made of red sandstone, has been preserved: "The house for service and honor to the Lord is erected that we listen to pure teaching for the comfort and teaching of the souls until one after this Time can serve the Lord there in Ewickeit in 1711 "The overhanging gable has a gable roof with a crooked hip, which is crowned by an octagonal, double-tiered roof turret with a Welscher hood and weather vane. In the interior, which is closed off by a beamed ceiling with two longitudinal beams, the interior fittings, presumably a donation from the St. Georgenberg monastery, were installed in 1738. The gallery with coffered parapet, which is supported by beveled pillars and arches, bears the year 1671 above the altar. The other two, lower galleries, which are attached to the longitudinal wall and above the door, come from a renovation phase in 1743. Since then When a concrete floor is introduced, the gallery pillars stand on plinths. The pulpit rests on a pillar with volute collars and is provided with a sound cover that is suspended from the beam ceiling. In the wall surface above the altar, a baroque stone canteen resting on four balusters with the date 1671 in the base plate, five putti heads are embedded in the wall, including the wall pieces in which they sit from other churches here. In 1978 a new organ from Bosch was installed. The pews were renewed in 1984 as part of a comprehensive renovation of the church.

1711 79102
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Haine, Neue Straße 7
hallway: 10, parcel: 33/14
At the brook behind the buildings on Neuer Weg, on a set-back plot of land, built around 1800, two-storey half-timbered house on a high plastered base. The timber-framed timber-framed structure is stiffened by struts of different heights and man figures on the eaves side of the upper floor and is closed off by a gable roof. The corner posts on the ground floor are carved with a round bar profile, on the upper floor with a tau bar profile, and the threshold to the upper floor is profiled. The building is accessed via a high, partially covered flight of stairs. around 1800 79103
 
Half-timbered house Haine, Neue Straße 8,
hallway: 9, parcel: 41
Half-timbered house from the middle of the 19th century built on an irregular plot of land surrounded by streets on all sides opposite the church. The single-storey building is centrally located in the center of the village and forms the optical closure of the street spaces of Neue Straße, Röddenauer Weg and Grundweg, which are aligned with this residential building.

The single-storey framework with a dense structure and storey-high struts on corner and collar studs rises above an almost storey-high, solid base. The three-zone building with slanted gable ends is closed off by a steep gable roof.

Mid 19th century 79104
 
Former school Haine, Röddenauer Weg 2
corridor: 10, parcel: 30/6
The probably oldest building in the village previously stood elsewhere. Acquired as a schoolhouse in 1765, it was demolished there in 1816 and rebuilt by the stream. It is a two-storey half-timbered building on a low basement made of ashlar with sandstone corner blocks. The almost completely slated or clad building shows on the gable side simple half-timbering with a man figure on the corner post, which is carved with a cartridge. Structurally expanded in 1846 by sawing through the middle and inserting four containers there, the house has been privately owned since 1898. 1765, reconstruction in 1816 79106
 
A house Haine, Röddenauer Weg 6
hallway: 10, parcel: 25/9
Detached house on the gable, set back from the street, on a solidly bricked high plinth, now extended to the ground floor. Above it rise two timber-framed storeys, which are stiffened by widely spread struts on the one hand with neck bolts and headwoods on the first and on the other hand with opposing footbands on the second floor. The second floor and the gable protrude over a wide beam zone with grooved beam heads and rounded filler timber. The round bar profile and stars of the corner post on the first floor are remarkable. The building, which is now used as a residential building and erected by Paulus Truß in 1807, is complemented on the opposite side by a two-storey barn from the late 19th century, the structural framework of which rests on a massive ground floor. 1807 79107
 

Rennertehausen

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Aggregate irrigation and drainage system Rennertehausen, On the puddles, In the long meadow, Eder, In the hat, On the Steinacker, Salbach, In the Senftenhute, Zu Allershausen
Corridor: 16, 17, 18, 19, 25, Parcel: 190, 207, 210, 212, 213, 225, 226,

252/3, 256, 247, 249, 253, 215, 228, 231/219, 232/219, 233/219, 255

The "Cooperative for the improvement of the meadows on the left bank of the Eder between Rennertehausen and the Hatzbachmühle", which was founded in 1872 and consisted of meadow owners from Rennertehausen and Birkenbringhausen, built an irrigation system in the following years according to plans drawn up by the district meadow builder Claas in 1871. To do this, part of the meadows was leveled and around four kilometers of trenches were dug. A basic weir in the Eder enables the water to be dammed up, which can be distributed over the meadows by ten large weirs. The point of intersection of the ditch system with the Salbach is remarkable, where the irrigation ditch is led in a bridge over the creek. The first flooding of the trench system took place in 1875, which was then carried out regularly until the 1980s. Today the smaller trenches are silted up, but still clearly visible in the landscape, while the main trenches continue to carry water. from 1872 722417
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Grünweg 3
hall: 1, parcel: 151/4
Gable-independent, two-storey half-timbered house opposite the junction with Jägerstraße built around 1800 over a high base. The building, which is accessible via a flight of stairs on the eaves side, through a younger vestibule, is trimmed with overhangs on each floor. Grooved beam heads and rounded filler wood characterize the entablature zones. The half-timbered construction is stiffened by man figures on the corner posts and three-quarter struts on the collar posts, on the upper floor additionally with opposing footbands. The gable, which overhangs twice and is closed off by a gable roof, is provided with angular timbers, which mainly emphasize the parapet compartment below the central window. around 1800 79109
 
Half-timbered building Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 26
hallway: 1, parcel: 668/4
The two-storey half-timbered building, at a bend in the main street, which is also the junction of Schuhmacherstraße, angled towards the street and protruding slightly into the street space, forms with its eaves an optical end to the east-running main street. Over a plastered base with ashlar painting, cross-storey structural frameworks rise into which a two-storey intermediate framework with long bolts is pegged. The framework is stiffened by man figures on corner and collar posts and shows profiled long bars and grooved beam heads. A lintel beam secured by corner pieces of wood with the inscription: "The blessing God gives us here on earth should be scrubbed here" marks a former gate passage and documents the original use of a part of the building as a barn. To the side of the added gate there is a younger vestibule accessible through a high flight of stairs. The building from the late 18th century, slated on the gable side, is closed off by a flat gable roof. Late 18th century 79110
 
Half-timbered yard ride Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 30
hallway: 1, parcel: 626/2
Half-timbered courtyard with a gable, two-storey residential building above a rubble stone base with a two-storey barn set at right angles, closing the courtyard at the rear, in a constructive framework with a high gate entrance. Both buildings are closed by gable roofs. The house from the early 19th century, which is slated on the gable side, shows on the eaves side cross-story stands with long bars in between to separate storeys. The framework, which has no overhangs, is stiffened by three-quarter struts, which are provided with footbands running in opposite directions. The two-wing historicist entrance door, which is accessible in the middle via an outside staircase, is flanked on both floors by two windows combined in pairs. Beginning of the 19th century 79111
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 35
hall: 1, parcel: 639/3
In the line of sight of Schuhmachergasse at the confluence of Feldhardsweg, a two-storey half-timbered house from the early 19th century built on the gable side towards the main street, which has recently been extended parallel to the first and added an angled barn. The house, which is slated on the gable side, is provided above the high stone plinth with sandstone corner blocks without overhangs with cross-storey structural supports, between which an intermediate support structure with long bolts is inserted instead of a frame and threshold. The profiling of the long bar, which is provided with an inscription that is no longer legible, is adopted on the structural stand. The five-axis facade, which is accessed in the middle via a high two-armed flight of stairs, is stiffened with three-quarter struts and closed off by a gable roof. The two storeys of the barn, which are timbered, rise above a storey-high plinth. The structural framework is stiffened by storey-high struts. Beginning of the 19th century 79112
 
Former barn Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 49
hall: 1, parcel: 81/1
A two-storey, gable-independent, two-storey half-timbered building erected over a plastered base, the ground floor facing the eaves, whose function as a barn can still be seen on the added gate. The goal posts and the lintel are provided with a circumferential profile; the lintel bears the following inscription: "Johann Battenfeld and Anna (...) Cattarina, his wife trusted God and built this barn. The master carpenter was Heinrich Wirth von Allendorf on the 6th of May in 1808". Overhanging entablature zones with grooved beam heads and rounded filler wood characterize the gable facade, which is closed off by a gable roof. The framework is reinforced by struts of different heights. 1808 79113
 
barn Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 57
hall: 1, parcel: 90/7
A two-storey barn built in post construction over a flat, partially plastered sandstone base, the gable side of which is completely slated towards the main street. A high gate, above which a triangular loading hatch is attached, opens up the building from the courtyard. The ground floor has been massively renewed to the right of the gate and extended to the rear in the direction of the ridge. While the extension with storey-high struts was built in the early 20th century, the rest of the half-timbered structure with three-quarter struts can be attributed to the early 19th century. Beginning of the 19th century 79114
 
Half-timbered house on the eaves Rennertehausen, Hauptstraße 63
hall: 1, parcel: 160/7
A half-timbered house on the back of a deep courtyard closes off at the rear. Above a clad base rise two storey-timbered storeys with an elaborate entablature zone, which is provided with beveled beam heads as well as profiled filler boards and a carved upper storey threshold. The framework is built symmetrically and stiffened by wide curved struts with headwoods. The building from the middle of the 18th century, which is closed off by a gable roof, is accessed through a central, double-leaf historicist door. Mid 18th century 79115
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Hauptstrasse 65,
corridor: 1, parcel: 164/2
The half-timbered house set back from the street and at a slight angle to the eaves rises above a high basement made of sandstone blocks, which also houses the access. On the upper floor, the dense framework is stiffened by man figures on corner and collar studs, while on the ground floor there is only a head angle wood and a strut. The only decoration of the building, which was built in the first half of the 19th century, is the entablature zone with a profiled threshold, rounded beam heads and filler wood. 1st half of the 19th century 79116
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Hauptstrasse 67,
hallway: 1, parcel: 176/1
At the corner of Grünweg, eaves facing Hauptstrasse, a two-storey half-timbered house with a gable roof. At the corners there are cross-storey stands in which a long bolt, which takes on the function of frame and threshold, is inserted. The profiling of the long ledger continues over the corner post. The half-timbered structure from the second half of the 18th century is stiffened by storey-high struts on the ground floor and three-quarter struts on the upper floor. The eaves side facing the street, in which the entrance is also located, has been massively renovated on the ground floor, the gable side is clad from the upper floor. 2nd half of the 18th century 79117
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Hauptstrasse 69,
hallway: 1, parcel: 175/5
The back of the courtyard, which is open to the street, closes off the eaves, two-storey half-timbered house from the second half of the 18th century on a flat sandstone plinth. It is accessed in the middle through a double-winged classicistic front door with a fixed glass skylight. The dense half-timbered structure is built up by cross-storey corner posts with long bolts into which two-storey intermediate posts are pegged. The long bars of the eaves facade form an entablature zone with rounded filler timber and beam heads accentuated by pearl bars in the upper long bar, whereas on the gable side there is only one long bar to separate storeys. The right corner post is cut off like a console at the level of the entablature zone. Instead of the strongly curved struts with head angle wood on the front side, simple storey-high struts take over their function on the gable side. 2nd half of the 18th century 79118
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Im Wiesenhof (Rennerteh) 14
hallway: 1, parcel: 597/6
On an arch of the street Im Wiesenhof above a flat, plastered base, a gable-free, two-storey half-timbered house that visually closes off the southern part of the street to the west. The ground floor has been massively renewed in parts, but the overhanging upper floor and gable show regularly built half-timbering from the early 19th century with male figures with counter braces for bracing. The gable facade is determined by an antithetically symmetrical half-timbered figure of struts, neck bolts and head angle timbers in the center of the collar posts of the upper floor, in the gable by several angle timbers and short struts. The entablature zones with rounded filler timber and profiled thresholds are also remarkable. Beginning of the 19th century 79122
 
barn Rennertehausen, Im Wiesenhof (Rennerteh) 2
hallways: 1, parcel: 599
Two-storey, gable-free barn with its ground floor façade adapted to the course of the street, the courtyard of which opens onto the street and provides access to the buildings erected at the rear in the courtyard. The half-timbered construction of the late 17th century is a hybrid of post and floor construction. The upper floor of the gable facade protrudes on the left side over the ground floor and is decorated there floor by floor, the other corners have continuous studs, of which the street side is finished off like a console. While the two-storey structural intermediate framework on the eaves sides is mortised into a single long bolt, there is a frame on the gable side and a threshold carved with valleys. The cantilevered ceiling beams, chamfered on their front sides, rest on curved lugs and bends. The half-timbered construction, which rises above a stepped quarry stone base, is stiffened by widely spread three-quarter struts. From the courtyard, the living room and barn are accessed through board doors or a gate. Late 17th century 79119
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Im Wiesenhof (Rennerteh) 22
hallway: 1, parcel: 2/2
On a parcel to the south behind the court riding that forms the street, two-storey half-timbered house with gable-sided slate, closed by a crooked hip roof. Above a nearly storey-high, clad base rises regularly without overhangs, timbered, double-locked framework that is stiffened by strut figures made of two-thirds struts with opposing footbands and head angle wood. The windows of the eight-axis eaves facade are combined in pairs. What is striking there is the two-winged historicist frame and panel door with a fixed glass skylight and integrated lighting, which is flanked by two tall rectangular hallway windows, which is accessed via a high, two-armed flight of stairs. The house, built by the building contractor Arnold only a few years earlier, passed into the possession of the Jewish dealer and brandy producer Benedikt Blumenthal from Battenfeld in 1829, whose family had "Blumenthals Bitter" produced on the property until the early 20th century. In 1936 the community bought the house and made it available to the Reich Labor Service; it has been privately owned again since 1965. 1829 79123
 
Evangelical church and tithe barn Rennertehausen, Im Wiesenhof (Rennerteh) 3
hallways: 1, parcel: 57/1
Rennertehausen belonged to the parish of Battenfeld, so that all residents had to go to church in Battenfeld for centuries. Only in 1711 is a chapel in Rennertehausen mentioned in the official hall book of Battenfeld, where weddings and funerals were held. Following the Battenfeld parish chronicle, the chapel in Rennertehausen was built in 1609 and received its own bell in 1616. The building was always used both as a church and as a tithe barn. The rectangular church standing inside a building block rises with three half-timbered floors above a sandstone base. Three sides are slated, the east facade is half-timbered. The dense structural framework is single on the lower two floors, which are combined in a post-and-beam construction, and double-locked on the upper floor and stiffened by floor-to-ceiling struts. The only decorative elements are the profiled thresholds. While there are only two flaps on the higher, upper floor in the east, the other facades are provided with irregular windows. The church is accessible in the middle of the facades in the south and west. Double cantilevered gables support a gable roof with a slate, square roof turret with a pointed helmet on the western part of the roof. The three-storey structure, visible from the outside, is divided on the inside into the two lower storeys that form the church space with a three-sided gallery and a storage storey. The church interior is closed off by a beamed ceiling with a central girder. The ceiling beams are decorated with a sandstone block imitating painting and flowers. On the right opposite the entrance, an octagonal support carries the pulpit, which is accessed via a sandstone staircase in the church stand on the right. The following inscription is on the pulpit: "Anno domini 1609 HMOGK P.Anno aetatis 41 22 Septembris". In 1878 the interior of the church was rebuilt and iron posts in the form of simple or fluted columns with capitals were added for the galleries. Further renovations are carried out in 1960 and 1966. In 1961, an organ by Wolfgang Böttner from Frankenberg was installed opposite the entrance. The ceiling of the storage room is supported by three beams, the middle of which is from the construction period, the two flanking ones are more recent and probably support the tower. After the church in Wagenfurth an der Fulda, the Rennertehäuser Church is the second oldest half-timbered church with a storage floor in Hesse. from 1609 79120
 
Bakehouse Rennertehausen, Im Wiesenhof (Rennerteh) 9
hallway: 1, parcel: 63
The last of three bakery houses in the village, which was built from layered sandstone at the beginning of the 19th century, facing the street. Arranged in the center is a soffit made of chamfered sandstone blocks, above it a segmented arch made of bricks. The furnace was renewed in 1935. Coming from Mühlenstrasse, the bakery narrows the street space and represents an optical closure at the bend in the street. Beginning of the 19th century 79121
 
Half-timbered yard ride Rennertehausen, Mühlenstraße 19
hallway: 1, parcel: 375/14
Half-timbered courtyard consisting of a two-storey, gable-end dwelling set back far to the left edge of the courtyard and a freestanding, eaves-mounted, also two-storey barn arranged at right angles to it. By positioning it on the plot, the courtyard opens up to the street and visually expands the street space. The house is built over a flat, plastered plinth floor by floor with a large overhang; the ground floor in the rear area has been massively renewed. While the gable side is slated, the eaves side shows a strongly dimensioned half-timbered structure of the 18th century with struts of different heights for stiffening. The entablature zone has rounded filler timber and beam heads, which are emphasized by pearl bars in the profiled upper floor threshold. The barn rises as a three-zone post structure above a flat sandstone base. Long bars are pegged into the structural stand on the sides, and in the middle there is a lintel bar set higher for the door, the opening of which is provided with a surrounding frame profile. 18th century 79127
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Mühlenstraße 1b
hallway: 1, parcel: 347/4
Opposite the confluence of the street Im Wiesenhof, built in the middle of the 19th century, two-storey half-timbered house on a high, solid base. The house, built at a bend in Mühlenstraße, has a visual effect on the street space with its eaves side as well as with the gable side and, together with its recently heavily rebuilt, corner barn, forms a square-like extension of Mühlenstraße. The five-axis residential building on the eaves side has a dense structural framework with steep storey-high struts and a central access accented by a two-flight flight of stairs. Mid 19th century 79124
 
Half-timbered house Rennertehausen, Mühlenstraße 5, Mühlenstraße 5a
hallway: 1, parcel: 352/1
In the second row behind the plot of Mühlenstrasse 7, a two-story half-timbered house with sturdy wood. The almost storey-high plinth is provided with younger polygonal masonry and on the eaves side contains the access to both the cellar and the living area. While the ground floor only has three-quarter struts and head angle timbers on the corner posts and above the entrance, the upper floor, which cantilevers over an entablature zone with rounded beam heads as well as profiled filler timbers and thresholds, is dominated by male figures with counter struts. The also overhanging, slated gable bears the inscription: "Anno 1745". 1745 79125
 
Half-timbered yard ride Rennertehausen, Mühlenstraße 8
hallway: 1, parcel: 10/7
At the confluence of the street Im Wiesenhof built half-timbered courtyard with a residential building on the eaves. The narrow, elongated, two-storey half-timbered house from the 18th century rises above a plastered base and has been extended by three containers parallel to the first. Access is on the courtyard side via a younger vestibule in front of the completely slated facade. The completely symmetrical framework with evenly windowed windows is stiffened on the corner posts by wide curved struts with head angle timbers. The notched corner studs on the ground floor and the entablature zone at the transition to the upper floor, which is provided with rounded filler wood between beveled beam heads, which are emphasized in the profiled threshold by pearl bars, are remarkable. The wide eaves cornice, which is specifically suspected on the gable, is particularly noticeable. The tall rectangular windows in the gable, which are combined to form a pair, are flanked by small windows fitted into the eaves corners and crowned by wooden head angles and former pigeon openings. Behind the house, the younger two-storey barn, built as a frame construction, is almost at right angles, which is characterized by several doors and flaps. Attached to it is a stable with a solid, plastered ground floor and half-timbered drama. The courtyard still has original cobblestone paving, which is also part of the monument scope. 18th century 79126
 
Rennertehäuser mill Rennertehausen, Rennertehäuser Mühle, Auf der Mühlwiese
Corridor: 26, Parcel: 106,213
The first dated documentary mention of a miller at Rennertehausen took place in 1584 in connection with a baptism. The mill ditch of the grinding, beating and cutting mill, initially separated by a shrub weir to the Eder, was given a stone weir in 1865 by the miller Alexander Wickenhöfer and his wife, which could better withstand the floods of the Eder. An energy system for direct current built in 1916 supplied the electricity for the first electric light in Rennertehausen from 1917 until it was connected to the Frankenberg district network in 1922. In 1969, a generator was installed to operate the existing turbine and the electricity generated has since been fed into the power grid. The current mill building on the plant south of the village, which was operated as a mill until 1968, was built in 1927. The three-storey brick mill building, divided horizontally between the storeys by simple brick bands, is closed off by a mansard roof. The completely preserved technical equipment is remarkable. The scope of the monument also includes the two-storey residential house, which closes off the courtyard at the rear and whose half-timbered upper floor rises above a massive ground floor, as well as the single-storey half-timbered building in front of the mill building. circa 1584 79863
 
Road bridge Rennertehausen, Unterste Steinfeld
hall: 25, parcel: 252/1
A single-arched road bridge built from red sandstone blocks over the operating ditch of the Rennertehäuser Mühle with a flat parapet made from two layers of sandstone blocks. 79864
 

Osterfeld

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Forester's house Allendorf, Forststraße 3,
corridor: 19, parcel: 10/3
In 1774 three Allendorf citizens received permission from the Landgrave in Darmstadt to settle on his land in Osterfeld on inherited estates. The settlement grew only gradually and in 1895 only had 32 inhabitants. A few years after this first registration of the residents, a massive forester's house was built on the edge of the village in 1903, the economic part of which burned down in 1942 and was rebuilt. At the rear of the low, five-axis residential part is an economic part, also built on a flat stone base, consisting of a barn and a stable. In order to make the business section accessible for hay wagons, a truss floor was added. Part of the facility is a brick masonry stable opposite the main house with a flat truss and a steep pitched roof. 1903, reconstruction in 1942 79180
 

literature

  • Roland Pieper, Antje Press, Reinhold Schneider: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Hesse, Waldeck Frankenberg II district . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Hessen. Theiss, Darmstadt 2015, ISBN 978-3-8062-3054-3 .

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmäler in Allendorf (Eder)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files