List of cultural monuments in Beselich
The following list contains the cultural monuments identified in the monument topography in the area of the municipality of Beselich , district of Limburg-Weilburg , 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.
Heckholzhausen
image | designation | location | description | construction time | Object no. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residential building | Bahnhofstraße 9 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 129 |
Late 19th century |
50705 |
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Fountain | Brunnenstraße location hall: 2, parcel: 27 |
Late 19th century |
50710 |
|
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Tunnel portal | Lahrer Weg location hall: 2, parcel: 220/10 |
1905 to 1915 |
50712 |
|
|
Residential building | Limburger Straße 4 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 203/1 |
Early 19th century |
50713 |
|
|
town hall | Oberdorfstraße 3 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 6 |
1927 |
50715 |
|
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Former rectory | Oberdorfstraße 28 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 67 |
Early 19th century |
50717 |
|
Old school | Schießberg 2 location corridor: 2, parcel: 188/3 |
1825 to 1835 |
50718 |
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Protestant church | Weilburger Str./Kirchbergweg location floor: 2, parcel: 250, 251 |
1899 |
50720 |
Niedertiefenbach
image | designation | location | description | construction time | Object no. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overall system | Entire facility in Niedertiefenbach location |
50723 |
|||
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Catholic Church of St. Mary and rectory | Brückenstraße o. No. Location floor: 1, parcel: 117.119 |
1869 |
50724 |
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Residential building | Brückenstraße 17 Location floor: 1, parcel: 1 |
Early 18th century |
50726 |
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Wayside cross | Brückenstraße o. No. Location floor: 2, parcel: 13/1 |
1782 |
50728 |
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Wayside shrine | Without Address Location Corridor: 2, parcel: 03.11 |
Early 20th century |
50729 |
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Wayside cross | Dehrner Straße 2 Location hall: 1, parcel: 24 |
Early 19th century |
50740 |
||
Former school | Grabenstraße 2 Location hallway: 1, parcel: 111 |
1835 |
50743 |
||
Residential building | Grabenstraße 3 Location hallway: 1, parcel: 200 |
1725 to 1775 |
50745 |
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Apartment building | Grabenstraße 12 Location floor: 1, parcel: 126 |
Late 18th century |
50746 |
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Residential building | 7 grave road location hall 1, hall unit: 198/1 |
1725 to 1775 |
50748 |
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Wayside shrine | Grabenstrasse (at No. 7) Location hallway: 1, parcel: 143/3 |
1795 to 1805 |
50749 |
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Wayside shrine | Grave road (. In # 11) capable hall 1, hall unit: 143/3 |
1895 to 1905 |
50751 |
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Wayside cross | Grabenstraße 39 Location floor: 1, parcel: 146/1 |
1853 |
50753 |
||
Residential building | Runkeler Straße 11 Location hall: 2, parcel: 48 |
1745 to 1755 |
50755 |
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Wayside cross | Runkeler Straße o. No. (L 3022) Location hallway: 7, parcel: 85 |
1743 |
50757 |
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Residential building | Runkeler Straße 15 Location hall: 2, parcel: 45/1 |
1725 to 1775 |
50758 |
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chapel | Runkeler Straße o. No. Location floor: 2, parcel: 33 |
1825 to 1875 |
50761 |
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Residential building | Runkeler Straße 16 Location hall: 2, parcel: 53 |
1725 to 1775 |
50764 |
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Former elementary school | Schulstraße 13 Location hall: 1, parcel: 219/7 |
1931 |
50765 |
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Former Beselich monastery and pilgrimage site | Hof Beselich 1, 2, 3 able hallway: 4, plot 61, 66/1, 66/2 |
50770 |
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Former monastery church (ruin) | Hof Beselich o. No. Location hall: 4, parcel: 69 |
On the Beselicher head is the restored ruins of the basilica of a former Premonstratensian monastery, the establishment of which was confirmed by Archbishop Hillin von Fallemanien of Trier in 1163, after the priest Gottfried von Beselich had already built a small church and a tenth-vacant courtyard there. The church was built shortly after the monastery was founded, the remains of which can still be seen today. It was a three-aisled Romanesque basilica without a transept. All three naves were closed off by apses facing east and separated from each other by five columns. The entire basilica was 37 meters long and 18 meters wide.
The monastery quickly became wealthy through the entry of numerous noble daughters and the associated donations. With a fair on July 15, guaranteed no later than 1545, the monastery also played an important economic role. However, several raids followed in the late Middle Ages, after the last of which in the 15th century the monastery collapsed economically. During the Reformation at the end of the 16th century, the nuns left the monastery. The complex served as a hospital for a short time before it fell into disrepair at the beginning of the 17th century. During this time, the current buildings of the neighboring estate were built, some of which were built from stones from the monastery. In 1637 the remains of the monastery passed into the possession of the Hadamar branch of the Jesuit order, who only used the building as a quarry. Around 1660 the complex was largely in its current state, in which only the outer wall of the narthex is preserved. In 1985 the “Association for the Preservation of the Beselich Monastery Ruins” took over the listed building remains and began restoration work in the following year. The ruins of the basilica are also the starting point for scenic hiking trails. The ground floor walls of the west building (approx. 18 × 7 meters) still exist from the church. It was vaulted below and took up the nuns' gallery above. The excavation carried out in 1954 suggests a three-aisled and flat-roofed pillar basilica. It had five arcades and staggered choir apses without a transept. |
Late 12th century |
50771 |
|
Former hospital building and estate | Hof Beselich 1 position hallway: 4, plot 61, 66/1 |
1590 to 1640 |
50773 |
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Catholic pilgrimage chapel and stations of the cross | Hof Beselich o. No. Location hall: 4, parcel: 59 |
The “Maria Hilf” chapel is located on the Beselicher head. This chapel dedicated to the 14 helpers owes its origin to the initiative of a Franciscan - hermits , the Friar Leonhard (real name: Georg Niedermeier roads). He was born in 1709 and, after an extensive wandering life, built a chapel and a hermitage here on the site of the former Beselich monastery around 1760 , which were inaugurated in 1767. The interior of the chapel was renovated in 2002 through donations from the population and with the support of the Limburg diocese and partly restored to its original state and belongs to the Catholic parish of St. Agidius Obertiefenbach. Today the chapel is the destination of many pilgrims and prayers every day . From May to October there is a Eucharistic celebration every Friday at 6:30 p.m. and a Marian devotion with a sermon and sacramental blessing on Sundays at 5:00 p.m. The chapel is open all year round for prayer. On the way from Obertiefenbach to the pilgrimage chapel, there are seven small chapels to commemorate the Seven Sorrows of Mary. The neo-Gothic choir as well as the entrance side with the tower and outer pulpit come from a renovation at the end of the 19th century, suggested by Bishop Blum. Among the older sculptures there are two late Gothic reliefs of Saints St. George and St. Martin and a small Pietà (early 15th century). In the portal are tombstones, u. a. from 1623. On the facade there are terracotta reliefs and in front of it the statue of the healing Christ; around 1900. The attached gable roof house is of older origin and perhaps the former hermit's apartment. | 1767 |
50775 |
Way of the Cross Niedertiefenbach | Without Address Location Corridor: 4, 13, parcel: Hall 4: 71/1, 133/2 |
1932 |
50776 |
Obertiefenbach
image | designation | location | description | construction time | Object no. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Former wooden magazine | (.. O No) at the church location corridor 2, plot: 105 |
Small half-timbered building, which in 1833 was designated as the municipality's wooden warehouse. The building is a simple post construction with straight struts and a long, partially renewed roof. It is informative as part of the town center, which is occupied by the elementary school, the former town hall and the church, and a contrasting addition to the neighboring house at An der Kirche 13. | 1833 |
50636 |
|
Catholic Church of St. Giles | At the church o. No. Location hall: 2, parcel: 116, 121/1 |
Around 1200, the first stone-built church was built. The baroque church built on the Kirchberg in 1733 was laid down in 1886 and replaced by the current neo-Gothic church between 1886 and 1888 and consecrated in 1888. Only the 54 meter high church tower remained. The nave was rotated 90 degrees. The church is consecrated to St. Aegidius and belongs to the Catholic parish of St. Aegidius. It is an elaborate historicist church building. It was built in the neo-Gothic style. Almost blasting the old village center, this sacred building can be understood from the prosperity of the time and the old central function of the place. The freestanding tower shaft with Romanesque sound arcades on the west side dates from the second half of the 12th century. and received a delicate, steep helmet crown. The interior is a three-aisled, slightly staggered hall with high stilted cross-ribbed vaults and slender round columns. The chairs and plastic jewelry are partly from the construction period. Around the church there is a low wall with a wrought lattice. Outside the choir are some old tombstones. The new street layout of the Long Meil ( Bundesstrasse 49 ), which took place in 1816, was aligned with the top of the church tower, which can be seen from afar. | 1888 (church tower 12th century) |
50639 |
|
Residential building | At the church 9 position hall 2, parcel: 114 |
The building is known as a former rectory. It is a well-proportioned and stately half-timbered building, probably from the 17th century, with a storey overhang on all sides. The new cladding of the upper floor conceals rich half-timbering with Franconian bay windows and delicate carved decor. The bas-reliefs show fighting lions. The house is an important part of the historical town center with a church, former school and former town hall. | 1672 |
50654 |
|
Residential building | At the church 13 position hall 2, parcel: 104/1 |
The half-timbered house is in the center of the village across from the former school. It is particularly effective thanks to the ornate gable with its nested struts, a diamond at the top and good profiles. There are carved dew sticks on the corner posts, recessed mirrors and beautiful filler woods are on the eaves side. The rear half of the building was massively renewed. |
50656 |
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|
Former elementary school, now parish home | At the church 12 position hall 2, parcel: 128/3 |
The old school building was built in the town center in 1872/73 and handed over to its intended use on October 15, 1873. At the end of the 1982/83 school year, school operations in the center of the town ended on June 22, 1983. On August 4, 1983, the Obertiefenbach school children and the other Beselich pupils moved into the newly built Beselich primary school on Schupbacher Strasse. The Catholic parish of St. Agidius was able to acquire the building from the municipality of Beselich on October 3, 1985. During the extensive voluntary remodeling and renovation work, old documents and other items were found when removing the paneling in a classroom. In a document, seven schoolboys had recorded their confession as loyal supporters of the Catholic Church and their bishop Peter Joseph Blum during the time of the Kulturkampf on June 16, 1874 and also left other documents. These historical documents of the students give the school building an unmistakable historical meaning. The cultural monument is now used as a parish “old school” for various church groups. The Catholic public library and, since March 14, 1998, the Obertiefenbacher Heimatstube have been operated in this building . | 1873 |
50659 |
|
Residential building | Borngasse 1 position hallway: 3, parcel 98 |
The building was a day laborer's property with a small outbuilding made of brick. It was built around 1800/1850. The ground floor may have been made of broken stone or brick from the start. The framework is plastered above. The front door is Biedermeier. In the townscape, there is a characteristic accent due to the corner location on Steinbacher Straße. | around 1800/1850 |
50661 |
|
Residential building | Three men lane 1 position hallway: 2, plot: 99 |
The building is a corner house on Steinbacher Strasse with two front facades and a steep roof. Above the ground floor, which was renovated around 1900, there is a rich half-timbered structure reminiscent of the Westerwald. The two-zone eaves side has Franconian bay windows with baluster columns. On the gable side, three narrow zones with short stems can be seen on the neck bars. The gable itself is unchanged, but covered. The year of construction 1686 on the offset panel confirms the ancient character of the house. | 1686 |
50669 |
|
Residential building | Friedhofstraße 2 Location hallway: 3, parcel: 121 |
The gabled residential building at the entrance to Friedhofstrasse fits into the old town center. It is freely visible after the barn has been demolished. It is a well-preserved building from the 18th century. Under the slate cladding of the upper floor, the carved filler wood with scale friezes and other features are indications of the existing, undisturbed visible framework. | 18th century |
50670 |
|
Fallen memorial | Friedhofstraße (cemetery) Location hallway: 3, parcel: 130 |
Natural stone pylon with the relief of a kneeling soldier. Above are the image of Christ and a cross of honor. With this sequence of motifs and the time style of the 1920s, it is a typical fallen time in rural communities. Obertiefenbach had 32 victims in the First World War and 120 in the Second World War. | Early 20th century |
50672 |
|
crossroads | Main street (at no. 26) Location hallway: 2, parcel: 177/2 |
It is a so-called wanderer's cross. Only the gray, white-veined marble base is old with a well-profiled top and cross base. An inscription and the year 1800 can be seen. | 1800 |
50676 |
|
Residential building | Hauptstraße 15 Location hall: 2, parcel: 173 |
The building is a gable-independent residential building from the 17th / 18th centuries. Jhs. A parapet inscription is on the Franconian bay window. The peculiarity of the framework lies in its detailed decoration. It has lively profiles and noses. Delicately carved tendrils, rosettes and flowers can even be found on the baluster columns. It is a good example of rural decor art that is not based on urban buildings. | 17./18. Century |
50694 |
|
Residential building | Hauptstraße 23 Location hall: 2, parcel: 169/2 |
The gable-independent house built in 1670 bears the following parapet inscription on the Franconian bay window:
- German inscription
|
1670 |
50945 |
|
Residential building | Hauptstrasse 27, location hall: 2, parcel: 167 / 1.167 / 2 |
The Hakenhofreite from the middle of the 18th century. is openly grouped. The two-zone residential building was subsequently extended by a (plastered) section. Its regular framework has male shapes with headbands and individual, grooved decorative struts. The framing / sill timbers and the gable rafters are also finely profiled. | Mid-18th century |
50696 |
|
Residential building | Kellerweg 7 Location hall: 2, parcel: 150 |
The former Hakenhof riding in the 18th century. is located in the corner at the end of the Kellerweg. The house was apparently later provided with a jamb in equally strong half-timbering. Beautifully structured eaves side, especially due to the grouping of the parapet struts. In addition, there are exquisitely carved fillers in the profiled threshold. | 18th century |
50695 |
|
Wayside cross | Niedertiefenbacher Straße (L 3022) Location floor: 14, parcel: 28 |
The wayside cross is at the intersection of Niedertiefenbacher Straße and Auer Weg. It is a simple donor cross with a base made of black basalt. In line with contemporary tastes (around 1910), the surface is raised. The cast iron body is included. | 1910 |
50697 |
|
Residential building | Milk chamber 10 capable corridor 2, plot: 154 |
The building is a raised and set back residential building. All or part of it is one of the oldest Obertiefenbach. The old windowing with intermediate stems is visible on the clad sides. The rear side of the eaves, on the other hand, is clearly a typical stud wall with a square compartment with continuously padded bars tapped into the corners. They are design features of the 17th century. | 17th century |
50698 |
|
Wayside shrine | Schupbacher Straße (corner of Antoniusstraße) Location hallway: 2, parcel: 193 |
The object is a large, renovated wayside shrine from the 19th century. Made of plastered broken stone or brick, divided into a base, shaft and pyramid roof and has an ogival opening. | 19th century |
50699 |
|
Residential building | Steinbacher Straße 19 Location hall: 2, parcel: 155 |
The building is a clad residential building. The half-timbered building of the 18th century subsequently received a joke. It is located at the entrance to the Milchkammer and, together with the houses Milchkammer 10 and Steinbacher Straße 21, is an important part of the old town development that has been preserved in groups. | 18th century |
50701 |
|
Residential building | Steinbacher Straße 21 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 140 |
The building is a knee-high house from around 1800. Above the massive ground floor there is a so-called constructive half-timbered structure which, according to older custom, still has profiles. With Steinbacher Straße No. 19, it forms an entrance building to Milchkammer-Gasse. | around 1800 |
50702 |
|
Residential building | Steinbacher Straße 28 Location hallway: 3, parcel: 102 |
The object is a clad plastered framework from the first half of the 19th century. The block-like shape emphasizes a large mansard roof, hipped at the tips, with a slight overhang and a defining effect on the townscape. The roof type has been continuously developed from the baroque mansard roof. The two marble posts of the entrance have been preserved. | 1st half of the 19th century |
50703 |
|
Residential building | Steinbacher Straße 32 Location hallway: 3, parcel: 12 |
The half-timbered house from the 18th century. is located at the western end of the old town development and has a steep roof. Half of the lower eaves side, designed as a show facade, is covered by a later extension. Old window arrangements and also visible framework are to be assumed on the slated gable side. | 18th century |
50704 |
|
Seven chapels | Processional way Obertiefenbach Location hallway: 4, 13, parcel: hallway 13: 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 16 |
The seven chapels, which are reminiscent of the Seven Sorrows of Mary , on Betweg in the forest of Obertiefenbach to the chapel, belong to the ensemble of the pilgrimage chapel “Maria Hilf” on the Beselicher head after their completion in 1877 . Inside, the individual chapels show the following images of the Seven Sorrows of Mary: The prophecy of Simeon, the flight to Egypt, the search for the missing son, the meeting of Jesus on the Way of the Cross, Jesus on the cross, Jesus' removal from the cross, and the burial of Jesus. | 1877 |
50778 |
Schupbach
image | designation | location | description | construction time | Object no. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Monument 1870/71 | Mittelstrasse or no. Location hall: 4, parcel: 8/2 |
1871 |
50787 |
|
Courtyard | Eckerstraße 12 Location hall: 6, parcel: 130/2 |
1835 to 1885 |
50789 |
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Protestant church | Eckerstraße 14 Location floor: 6, parcel: 127/1 |
1125 to 1175 |
50791 |
|
Running fountain | Eckerstraße / Mittelstraße location floor: 6, parcel: 121/1 |
1855 to 1865 |
50794 |
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Courtyard | Eckerstraße 17 location hall: 6, parcel: 105/2 |
Early 18th century |
50797 |
||
Evangelical rectory | Eckerstraße 19 Location hall: 6, parcel: 108/2 |
1835 to 1845 |
50795 |
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|
Monument 1914/18 | Heckholzhäuser street no. Location hall: 6, parcel: 65/1 |
Early 20th century |
50798 |
|
Jewish Cemetery | Parish parcel no. Location floor: 6, parcel: 65/2 |
50799 |
|||
Residential building | Hollow 1 layer corridor: 6, parcel: 95 |
1725 to 1775 |
50800 |
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|
Former synagogue | Mittelstraße 36 Location floor: 6, parcel: 117 |
In 1816 the first synagogue was built in the village, which was expanded and renovated in 1877. The Jewish community with its branches in Obertiefenbach, Heckholzhausen, Gaudernbach and Wirbelau had around 180 members at that time. Services were held in the synagogue until the high holidays in autumn 1938. The building is a two-story, two-part solid construction made of brick masonry. In the larger part, the synagogue hall was on the first floor and the school room on the ground floor until 1904. In the smaller part to the side were the entrance, the staircase, the gallery and the ritual bath. In the interior, the change in the original windows can still be seen as unplastered masonry. The ceiling of the prayer room is still in its original state. Golden stars are painted on a blue background. The women's gallery and the mikvah are also still there. | 1877 |
50805 |
Residential building | Mittelstraße 37 Location hall: 5, parcel: 115/4 |
1695 to 1705 |
50802 |
||
Residential building | Mittelstraße 48 Location hall: 4, parcel: 16/1 |
1795 to 1805 |
50803 |
||
Residential building | Mittelstraße 56 Location floor: 4, parcel: 107/1 |
1773 |
50806 |
||
Residential building | Mittelstraße 58 Location hallway: 4, parcel: 106/1 |
1855 to 1865 |
50809 |
||
|
Former steam mill | Obertiefenbacher Straße 22 Location hallway: 2, parcel: 63/1 |
The steam mill was built around 1880 as a company of a cooperative of three wealthy farming families from the town as a large mill with an attached large bakery. The three-story, well-preserved building was made of gray rubble. The building has an “industrial look” thanks to its “functional design”, the street-side gable projections and the cornices, arches and window frames made of red bricks. | 1875 to 1885 |
50808 |
Former Finstermühle and mill bridge | Entire facility at the station 9/11 location |
1725 to 1775 |
50812 |
||
Bridge of the former Kerkerbach Railway | At the train station or no. Location floor: 13, parcel: 10/4 |
1886 |
50814 |
||
Overall system | Entire facility Christianshütte location |
1783 |
50816 |
||
Former Administration building (quarry stone construction) | Christian Cottage 1 position corridor 20, parcel: 48/1 |
The building, known colloquially as the “mansion”, was built between 1780 and 1783 by Johann Haentjens and Dick van Hees. Both were Dutch entrepreneurs from Mülheim an der Ruhr (near Cologne). They received a concession from Count Johann Christian zu Wied-Runkel to build a steel mill. The place was named "Christianshütte" in honor of the count. The coat of arms of the Haentjens family is placed above the entrance door. This building also served as an administration building for the two subsequent smelter operators, Mertens from Frankfurt and Buderus from Wetzlar. The last owner, the Kerkerbachbahn Actiengesellschaft, also used the building in the same way. After the end of the Second World War, the building was used for private residential purposes. | 1783 |
50818 |
|
former tannery, later restaurant | Christianshütte 3 location hall: 20, parcel: 48/2 |
This building is the oldest on the square. It is an elongated building with a mansard gable and small hips. Before the Christianshütte got its name in 1780, it was the only building on the square. The building was once lengthened by an equal part towards the northwest. The building was given its later appearance by later cladding and plastering. The building was used as a tannery. Large stocks of wood and lime for tanning were sufficiently available in the region. The house reaches a canal, with the help of which water was diverted from the dungeon stream. For this purpose, a weir was built a few hundred meters north in the Kerkerbach. The canal ran past the house in the open air before the house was enlarged. Shallow basins can still be seen in the basement today; these are nice references to the tannery. During the time when Haentjens / van Hees smelted ore at Christianshütte from 1783, the building was still called a tannery. The later use, especially between 1820 and 1880, when Buderus worked as a smelter, is not known. When the Kerkerbachbahn Actiengesellschaft bought Christianshütte from Buderus in 1880, the building was converted into an inn. The house has been used for private living since the end of the Second World War. | 1725 to 1775 |
50820 |
|
Villa Silva | Christianshütte 14 Location hall: 20, parcel: 50/1 |
The Kerkerbachbahn Actiengesellschaft built the Villa Silva (Latin for forest), which has always had this name, between 1890 and 1893. It is a three-story half-timbered house with brick compartments. The house has a gabled veranda and wooden balconies on the upper floors. The house was built as a so-called foreign villa as a guest house. The licensing of the station business was extended to Villa Silva in 1898/1898. Together with the so-called dining room (Christianshütte 12) built in 1905, this area formed the so-called Curpark zu Christianshütte. The site was - and is still today - largely enclosed with brick pillars. | 1890-1893 |
50821 |
|
Hut courtyard with observation tower and machine house | Christianshütte 10 Location hall: 20, parcel: 52/4, 52/8 |
Former Smelting area during the time of iron ore smelting on Christianshütte (1780–1880). The observation tower, which has since been shortened, was built towards the end of the 19th century by the Kerkerbachbahn Actiengesellschaft, when they converted the Christianshütte into a "summer resort" with railway restoration. The foundation stone with the year 1783 comes from another building, probably from the coal shed that previously stood in the same place. There was a chimney on the site for a long time, which belonged to a wind heater system. A service trench was removed at Schupbacher Bahnhof, which led up to the smelter site and operated two bellows for the charcoal blast furnace. The so-called machine house dates from the turn of the 20th century and was a workshop of the Kerkerbachbahn Actiengesellschaft. The charcoal furnace and later the three cupola furnaces were located behind the machine house, but only two of them were in operation for a short time. | 1780-1880 |
50824 |
|
|
Christiansstollen mouth hole | Without Address Location Village: 19 plot: 1 |
The Christiansstollen was a joint project of the companies Krupp and Buderus, which transported ores from the mines Hermine (Buderus) and Magnet (Krupp) from this gallery. The ores were sorted at an adjacent facility and loaded onto a railroad. The ores were transported to the nearby Christianshütte station via a private section of track belonging to Buderus and Krupp. In 1931 ore mining was stopped via the Christiansstollen. The portal has a border for a board or the like, but this was apparently never used. Today (2018) the portal is in need of renovation. | 1905-1914 |
50826 |
Web links
- State Office for Monument Preservation Hessen (Hrsg.): Cultural monuments in Beselich In: DenkXweb, online edition of cultural monuments in Hessen
Individual evidence
- ^ Franz-Josef Sehr : 250 years pilgrimage chapel Maria Hilf Beselich . In: Yearbook for the Limburg-Weilburg district 2017 . The district committee of the district of Limburg-Weilburg, Limburg-Weilburg 2016, ISBN 3-927006-54-8 , p. 137-141 .
- ^ Franz-Josef Sehr : 125 years of the parish church “St. Egidius “Obertiefenbach . In: Yearbook for the Limburg-Weilburg district 2013 . The district committee of the Limburg-Weilburg district, Limburg-Weilburg 2012, ISBN 3-927006-49-1 , p. 121-123 .
- ^ Franz-Josef Sehr : 140 years of school building in Obertiefenbach . In: Yearbook for the Limburg-Weilburg district 2014 . The district committee of the district of Limburg-Weilburg, Limburg-Weilburg 2013, ISBN 3-927006-50-5 , p. 95-98 .