List of cultural monuments in Gemünden (Wohra)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Distinctive emblem for cultural property.svg
Coat of arms Gemünden (Wohra) .svg

The following list contains the cultural monuments identified in the monument topography in the area of ​​the city of Gemünden (Wohra) , 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

Ellnrode

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Bakehouse Ellnrode, Dorfstraße
hall: 3, parcel: 12
Single-storey bakery built around 1900 at the northwest end of Dorfstrasse. The community building, made up of large, neatly chiseled sandstone blocks, is covered by a gable roof with a half-timbered gable. around 1900 79341
 
Half-timbered yard ride Ellnrode, Dorfstraße 2
hallway: 3, parcel: 6
Large-volume half-timbered courtyard, the house of which with the adjoining barn built on an L-shaped floor plan forms a three-sided courtyard, the large courtyard of which is visually closed off to the Dorfstrasse by a younger half-timbered stable. The two-storey residential building facing the courtyard rises above an almost storey-high sandstone base and is accessed via a two-flight flight of stairs in the middle of the massive ground floor. The plastered ground floor of the house built around or shortly before 1900 is structured by wide plastering flanges and corner pilasters imitating sandstone reveals. The slightly overhanging half-timbered upper floor shows a regular, double-locked framework structure that is stiffened at corner and collar studs by three-quarter struts. The narrow entablature zone is emphasized by bevelled beam heads, rounded filler timber and a profiled threshold. The entire historical building stock of the Hofreite includes the two-storey half-timbered barns in the south and west of the courtyard, which were built in the second half of the 19th century, and the half-timbered barn that was built after the First World War and forms the eastern end of the courtyard. around 1900 79340
 
Hofreite Ellnrode, Dorfstraße 4
hall: 3, parcel: 9/3
Large-volume half-timbered barn that completely covers the courtyard area from the street. The two-storey barn, built around the turn of the 20th century, rises above a stepped rubble stone base with corner blocks and a rolled layer of large sandstone blocks. The framework, which is filled with bricks, shows a simple structural structure, stiffened by storey-high struts, with a high ground floor, which houses both an entrance and a passage to the courtyard. Beginning of the 20th century 79342
 
Complete system of the historic town center Ellnrode, entire Dorfstrasse complex Although Ellnrode is mentioned as early as the 13th century, today's farmsteads were not rebuilt until after 1556, according to the information in the Salbuch of the Haina monastery. Since then, the entire property belonging to the hospital has consisted of four farmsteads, which today, with the exception of a few houses in the vicinity, make up the entire village.

The western courtyard, which is completely enclosed by the Dorfstrasse, is joined by three further, irregularly shaped courtyards between the Dorfstrasse and the Wohra flowing past to the east. To this day, the courtyards are characterized by large-volume half-timbered residential and farm buildings from the second half of the 19th century, which in the form of three-sided courtyards form the dense rural structure of the village center.

721773
 

Gemünden (Wohra)

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Gemünden railway station (Wohra)
more pictures
Train station with tree-lined avenue and toilets Gemünden, Alter Bahnhof 1, Bahnhofstrasse
hallway: 8, parcel: 1/1
The Densberg-Gemünden railway was opened in 1911. In the following year, according to plans by Alois Holtmeyer, a two-storey neo-baroque station building with a timber-framed goods shed to the north and a free-standing half-timbered toilet was completed.

The plastered reception building, enclosed by a hipped mansard roof, rises above a block of ashlar plinth raised to the height of the parapet of the ground floor windows, which is provided with an almost facade-wide, gabled dwelling on both the station forecourt and on the rail side. To the south there is a two-axis component with a very flat hipped roof, the shingled upper floor of which has two windows combined in pairs. The otherwise plastered structure is accessed in the middle via a flat flight of stairs through a wicker arched doorway flanked by windows of this type and has another door on the right, which is emphasized by a wicker arch window, and an oculus on the left. In contrast to the tall rectangular windows in the upper and attic storeys, some of which are equipped with folding shutters, all these openings are provided with sandstone reveals. The Baumallee along the Bahnhofstrasse leading to the station forecourt also belongs to the monument scope of the old station, which is now used for gastronomy purposes.

1912 130156
 
graveyard Gemünden, Am Struthweg
hallway: 35, parcel: 16/2
On the cemetery on Rosenthaler Strasse in the south of the city, there are other historical gravestones and crosses in the area surrounding the memorial for the fallen. The grave of a Russian prisoner of war was preserved here. The simple tombstone bears the inscription "Gavriilio Stremeugow from Rilsk, Kursk district, d. November 17, 1918". The deceased was buried right next to the memorial for those who died in the war. Equally extraordinary is a grave palm made of iron instead of a cross or stone. The leaves of a palm tree unfold in three dimensions over a flat trunk, carrying a cartouche with rococo shapes crowned by a cross. The cartouche is provided with inscriptions on both sides: “I want to part and be with Christ Phil 1. V. 23”, “Here lies the citizen and cantor GA Seitz, born on October 18, 1802 Gest. on November 24, 1864 ". Another tomb near the memorial is made of red sandstone and shows an open book lying on a pedestal. The pedestal is decorated with a chalice. However, the previously existing inscriptions are no longer legible. There is also a memorial for those who died in the First World War in the cemetery. In 1923 the memorial designed by Professor Prevot from Kassel was inaugurated in the cemetery. It bears the following inscription: "In memory of the heroes of the city of Gemünden ad Wohra who fell in the fight for the fatherland 1914-1918". The grave monument, erected on a square floor plan, rises on a two-tiered, round base, the inscription plates of which are flanked on each side by a Doric column and covered with a high architrave and a protruding cornice. The ädikula-like grave monument is crowned by an urn with festoons. Beginning of the 19th century 79374
 
Aumühle Gemünden, Aumühle
hallway: 33, parcel: 29/5
The mill is first mentioned in the mayor accounts of 1488, where it is referred to as "dye molle uf deme Lande". The next proof is received in 1524 in a city bill. Hintz Konnig then pays to Walpurgi "old age 1 Mött Weyzn and 1 Meste and 10 and a half Sesster vom Awmolln". 1528 appears in the city accounts of Hen Damme as "awmoller". In the oldest book fragment we learn that "the other Molenn under the place, the sant-Molnn facing, on the Awe is located". At the time of Hartmann Dammes, who held the Aumühle "hereditary and peculiar" in 1571, there was a weir for irrigation of the meadows. Still in the possession of the same family in 1621/22, the defenseless mill in front of the city gates was destroyed in the course of the Thirty Years' War. It wasn't until 1650 that a miller was found who started it up. After several changes of ownership, Otto Müller acquired the mill, and it remained with his descendants until 1807.

The two-storey half-timbered building, facing the Mühlgraben, rises above a flat base and is closed off by a gable roof. The upper floor protrudes slightly above a beam zone with rounded beam heads and filler timber. The regular framework structure is stiffened by three-quarter struts on the corner posts, which are provided with head angle timber on the upper floor. The upper floor threshold is profiled, the ground floor frame bears the inscription: "I Oda Möller bought old Mil in year 1705". Originally there was another inscription in the lintel below: "Soli Deo Gloria Johannes Möller and Anna". A third inscription "BUM Anno 1764" in a sandstone on the side of the Mühlgraben probably indicates that the building was being converted.

15th century 79346
 
Courtyard Gemünden, Ellnröder Straße 7
hallway: 9, parcel: 27/1
Spacious rural courtyard from around 1900, consisting of a half-timbered barn that closes the back of the courtyard and a partially timber-framed residential house. The two-storey house with a gable facing the street rises above a stone base and has a solid ground floor from the construction period. The ground floor is plastered with two axes towards the street and five axes towards the courtyard and is structured by brick ironwork and brick frames with rounded shaped stones on the windows and the central front door. The slightly overhanging upper floor shows a regular half-timbered structure with figures of men in the containers that are not windowed through, as well as St. Andrew's crosses in the middle of the eaves side. The barn has a ground floor made of bricks and a flush-mounted half-timbered upper floor with a constructive structure that is stiffened by steep storey-high struts. around 1900 79348
 
Historic city center Gemünden, entire complex 1 The origin of the city was formed by the castle of the Counts of Ziegenhain, built on two sides of a hill, and the church. In 1521 the enclosing wall of the castle was described as dilapidated, and in 1556 the castle itself was described in the Salbuch as "this time in ruins". In 1628 there was only a "stone hull" of the castle, but there was still a castle seat as a Hessian fief. The landgrave issued this castle loan as early as 1557 with the stipulation that "the castle in Gemonden on the Stat Gawe, so desolate, will be rebuilt and (to) used". In the following years there was a courtyard, the manor house had a massive basement from the 16th century, above which two half-timbered floors from around 1700 rose. In the course of the 17th and 18th centuries, the castle then completely fell into disrepair. Only a few remains of the wall south of the church on the grounds of the town hall have survived to the present day. An elliptical wall protected the city, which was accessed via two gates, the upper and lower gate, on the main route, the so-called stone path. The city wall was an average of 20 feet high and eight feet thick. In 1712 new guard houses were built. After a fire in 1818, the city council auctioned the wall for demolition. The gates remained in place for a longer period of time; the lower gate was finally demolished in 1935. Remains of the city wall to the west of the church and the witch's tower as the last shell tower with a ditch in front, as well as the Ober- and Unterhaingässchen, the former ramparts in the south of the city, have been preserved from the city fortifications. The stone path running in north-south direction, which formerly opened up the city through the two gates, is still the main traffic axis today. However, it is an older valley path from the 12th or 13th century was used in times before the city was founded. During excavations, an old billet dam was found about one meter below the surface. In 1538 the Steinweg was paved again and was probably given its current name at this time. The oldest cross connections are Webergasse, Hofstraße and Katzbachstraße, which connected the church and castle with the main axis of the city. The Untergasse, which runs in several arches and has several branches, is the eastern development. These streets were probably built until 1266 and can still be seen in the city plan. The city was ravaged by several fires. In 1583, 16 houses and their barns burned down in the great city fire, in 1670 and 1676 five and six courtyards respectively at the Schultheißenhof and in 1818 six houses and five barns in Untergasse. Almost 100 years later, namely in 1917, five more houses at Obertor went up in flames and in 1919 the next town fire followed. Due to these frequent fires, only a few houses from before the early 19th century have survived. Although most of the buildings on the market were not erected until the early 19th century, many of them rest on cellars that probably date back to the 16th century. In this very century the city achieved greater prosperity, which is expressed in several buildings of the time. A large fountain was built in 1523, the school was built in 1541 and a town hall was built on the market square in 1564. The first water pipe made of wooden pipes was also built in 1587. The first bridges over the Wohra from 1544 are also documented from this century. The overall picture of the historic old town of Gemünden is still characterized by extensive expansion and renovation of the city in the early to late 19th century. Almost all older buildings, with the exception of the church, the Junkernhof and a half-timbered house on Steinweg, fell victim to fires and the urge of the 19th century citizens of Gemünd to redesign their town. The older history of the city was largely erased structurally, but the older historical character of the individual streets can still be seen in the size and furnishings of the new buildings that were built in the 19th century. You can still find the largest residential and commercial buildings in the area around the market and between it and the castle or church up to Webergasse. The streets further away from the city center, such as Katzbachstraße, Hainstraße and especially Untergasse on the other side of Steinstraße, show largely a development with smaller agricultural farms and farm houses. 721777
 
City expansion Gemünden, entire complex 2 After the city wall was abandoned in 1818 after the great city fire, the settlement of the area outside the wall ring, beyond the Wohra along the road to Frankenberg, began. This urban expansion, which in the course of the later 19th century almost reached the size and character of a complete suburb, extends along Lindenstrasse and Schafhofstrasse to Ochsenbrücke, is bordered in the south by an arch of the Wohra and extends in the north to the Kraelingstrasse. The entire complex documents the various structural forms of the city expansion in the 19th century. On Kraehlingstrasse and Schafhofstrasse, farms used for agriculture were created in the second half of the 19th century. The vacant lots that were still preserved after this first building phase were then filled in with residential houses towards the end of the 19th century, which resulted in a closed development of the entire area until the First World War. 721778
 
Gardens Gemünden, entire complex 3 Gardens 1-6. When the population of Gemünden rose sharply after the end of the Second World War due to the influx of many displaced persons, there was an increased demand for affordable housing. After the first emergency had been resolved, new settlements with smaller single-family houses were created for new residents who were willing to stay. So after 1948, the Raingärten settlement, initially consisting of six houses, was built between the city and the industrial park. The buildings are four gable and two eaves, single-storey half-timbered houses. The houses built on high stone plinths all show a similar framework with double locking and figures of men on the corner posts. Steep gable roofs with dormers form the upper end. To this day, the settlement has remained largely unchanged in its heavily historicizing construction. from 1945 721779
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Hainstraße 14
hallway: 44, parcel: 139/3
Elongated half-timbered house from the middle of the 19th century facing Hainstrasse. The large-volume building rises above a stone base of different heights and is divided into five axes in the living area, the middle of which is accessible via a single flight of stairs. The right part of the building is dominated by the large entrance gate. The completely clad building still shows the original window openings and a slight overhang of the upper floor, which suggests that the framework of the building period has been largely preserved. Mid 19th century 79353
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Hainstraße 4
hall: 44, parcel: 116/1
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house on an almost storey-high stone base with three-part ribbon windows on the upper floor. The building, which was erected between 1850 and 1870 as part of a first urban expansion, is trimmed floor by floor without overhangs and stiffened by storey-high struts on the sides and short struts in the gable. The profiled corner posts are the only decoration. The house is accessed via a high flight of stairs. 1850/1870 79349
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Hainstraße 5
hallway: 44, parcel: 142/2
The regular half-timbered structure of the upper floor rises slightly over a partially plastered quarry stone plinth and a flat mezzanine floor made of half-timbering, which is crowned by a gable roof with a square turret with a tent roof. The eaves side of the building, which is slightly angled to the street, has three-quarter struts, some with headwoods, on the corner posts of the upper floor. In the entablature zone, the frame and the profiled threshold are combed over with the beam heads. A framing inscription dates the house: "Ludwig Bornmann and his wife Anna Catharina a bored Meisin, both trusted God and this building was built carpenter was George Kleim from Gemünden in 1815". In the middle of the building there is a gate that extends over the lower two floors. To the left of this is a secondary garage door, to the right is the entrance, which is flanked by two tall rectangular windows. 1815 79350
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Hainstraße 6
hallway: 44, parcel: 117/3
The eaves, two-storey half-timbered house with no overhangs was built over a storey-high plinth made of sandstone blocks and bricks, which accommodates the front door that was still built. The structural half-timbered structure from the period from 1850 to 1870, which is only stiffened with storey-high struts, is emphasized by a central, single-axis, gabled dwarf house. 1850/1870 79351
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Gemünden, Hainstraße 8
hallway: 44, parcel: 120/4
A two-storey half-timbered house rises above a flat base, completely furnished with brick sheds, with a gate passage on the right and crowned by a gabled, single-axis dwelling. Erected between 1850 and 1870, it is tiled up in storeys and only stiffened by storey-high struts. The eaves-standing building extends the street space due to its position at a slight angle to the street. 1850/1870 79352
 
Historic city wall Gemünden, Hofstrasse, Hofstrasse 9, Hofstrasse 1,
hallway: 43, parcel: 119 / 3.124 / 7.207 / 23
In the western part of the city between the extension of Katzbachstrasse and Hofstrasse, a larger piece of the historic city wall of Gemünden, which was built from 1266, has been preserved. It is a quarry stone wall that is still up to three meters high and a round shell tower, which today serves as a viewing platform. from 1266 79393
 
Evangelical Church (Gemünden / Wohra)
Protestant church Gemünden, Hofstraße 10
hallway: 43, parcel: 91.92 / 4
Whether mentions 750 and 779 refer to Gemünden an der Wohra is disputed. The church is said to have belonged to the Fronhof, the main courtyard as the original core of the settlement. The first reliable mention was made in 1223 when Pastor Heinrich in Gemünden confirmed a sale of goods to the Haina monastery. Gemünden was first designated as a city in 1253. In 1380 there was supposedly only a wooden church, probably a half-timbered building; Gottfried Graf von Ziegenhain and his wife donated the early mass altar SS. Maria and Katharina in it. Construction of the church, which was preserved in the core, began in 1431, and the bell tower was completed in 1485. The church had three altars: St. Katharina (foundation 1402 by Arnold Clüver, withdrawn in 1528), Holy Cross (the "foremost" altar, apparently in the nave in front of the choir) and St. Petrus (the "rearmost" altar in the choir) . The latter two were not removed until 1803, with the front altar belonging to the Lutherans and the rear to the Reformed. There was a mural of the Last Judgment in the choir, which was revised again in 1720. A possibly medieval stone pulpit was later replaced by a larger and higher wooden pulpit. Cracks in the vaults that appeared as early as 1797 and a damaged roof structure made renovations necessary in 1802, during which the stone vaulted choir collapsed. It was then completely demolished and the church was converted into a classicist hall by 1806 according to plans by Michael Krapf and under the direction of a master builder Ahrend. From 1803 to 1805 Johann Georg Oestreich from Oberbimbach built a new organ, which was replaced in 1845 by the one from the Haina monastery. It dates from the period between 1760 and 1780, received two new registers in 1880 and was restored in 1952. In 1886 the interior was redesigned and in 1952/53 it was restored to its classical state. Damage to the tower by lightning strike in 1904. Excavations and a redesign of the interior took place in 2007.

The church is located in the north-western part of the old town, slightly elevated above the urban development on a churchyard that extends mainly to the south and east and which was re-walled in 1834. Immediately south of the church was the castle of the Counts of Ziegenhain. In the north-west of today's building, the masonry of the excavated Salian church, probably from the 11th century, has been preserved, as well as the late medieval church, begun in 1431. Today's nave from 1803/05 is a simple longitudinal rectangle with a slightly wider base without buttresses; the building corners to the east were renewed from carefully hewn ashlars after the choir was demolished. Ashlars protruding to the west on the north-west corner and a missing cornice there may indicate a missing extension on the north side of the tower. High lancet windows without internal division in the south wall, more irregularly distributed in the north wall, probably supplemented in the east wall. Simple, small pointed arch portals to the south and north (walled up), on the south portal and on the tower there are grooves in the sandstone (cf. Rosenthal); above the south portal a walled up small rectangular window. The tower shaft is closed off by a high bell floor, the sound windows of which are provided with double tracery. The west portal is decorated with coats of arms and emblems carved flat into the sandstone. On the south side of the tower below the cornice there are two coats of arms, a six-pointed star as the coat of arms of the city's founding family, the Count of Ziegenhain, and an eight-pointed star coat of arms for Countess Eilca von Nidda. Above the heraldic shields the lion as a symbol of the Hessian landgraves, underneath the inscription made of four cuboids: "Anno domini MCCCC LXXXV". The tall and slender tower spire, transformed into an octagon, is covered with slate. In the interior, six simple polygonal sandstone consoles point to an originally existing vault, supposedly as a hall church. The deep approach could also point to a hall that is depressed in the room, probably with wooden vaults protruding high into the attic; the old ridge was higher than it is today. By the way, only the small tower door in the west wall is visible of the medieval building. The tower hall is covered by a Gothic ribbed vault with a rose keystone on pointed consoles. In the ship a simple flat ceiling with a wide haunch. The bell of Mary probably dates from the late 14th, the bell of Christ with a crucifix in relief and two depictions of bishops from the early 15th century, the small bell of St. John with a saying from the Gospel of St. John shows a date of 1483; original belfry. Presumably still a medieval altar plate. Large crucifix, possibly taken from the old church and reworked, on a simple cross board on the east gallery in front of the organ. Until 2007, the interior was oriented to the south due to the classicist furnishings. In the center is a rectangular, almost room-high tower behind the altar table, which is integrated into the southern gallery, on the ground floor accommodates the sacristy (with windows to the altar) and to which the pulpit is attached above; it is closed with a cornice near the ceiling. Irregular five-sided pulpit basket with closed fillings, which ends in a fruit umbel; the canopy with fine garlands repeats the shape of the lower pulpit segment. The room has been oriented to the east since 2007, while a large part of the surrounding galleries was dismantled on slim pillars and with closed parapet fillings, remnants have been preserved on the south and north walls. The organ work in a splendid, symmetrically flat organ face of 13 axes with carved and gilded side parts, veil boards and attachments in the Rococo style, the latter supplemented by two carved classical vases; historical gaming table. The peculiarly compact, polygonal baptismal font stands on a broad base and is provided with a hood cover.

1253, extension 1431 79356
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Hofstraße 12
hallway: 43, parcel: 231/103
At the beginning of the 18th century, two-storey half-timbered house built to the north-west of the churchyard over a high sandstone base that compensates for the rise in the terrain. At the rear of the parcel, the building, which is trimmed down on a floor-by-floor basis, shows a symmetrically constructed half-timbered structure, which is locked twice on the ground floor and single locked on the upper floor. The entablature zones have rounded beam heads, profiled filler wood and upper floor sleepers. The half-timbered structure is stiffened on the corner posts by means of struts of different heights on the ground floor and by man figures on the upper floor. There are also short struts on the upper floor and gable. Beginning of the 18th century 79357
 
Old school Gemünden, Hofstraße 6
hallway: 43, parcel: 90/5
A two-storey half-timbered house, partially clad, built over a sandstone base at the southern end of the old churchyard opposite the church, over a sandstone base to compensate for the rise in the terrain. The southern facade of the building, located on a narrow connecting path to the Zur Burg street, is emphasized by a two-storey, gabled central projectile. To the left of this, the building is accessed via an outside staircase with a long platform. The structural framework, which is trimmed in storeys with no overhangs and is stiffened solely by storey-high struts, was built in 1836–38 by the master carpenter Peter Gleim. 1836/1838 79355
 
Railway bridge Gemünden, Holzbach (Gemünden)
hallway: 7, parcel: 177
In the course of the Wohratalbahn in 1910 between the town of Gemünden and the train station a railway bridge over the Holzbach was built. Narrow, barrel-vaulted passage for the Holzbach on abutments made of natural stone with rusticated surfaces. 1910 130163
 
Jewish Cemetery Gemünden, Katzbach
hallway: 6, parcel: 51
Since the 16th century there was a Jewish community in Gemünden, whose members earned their living as traders with cattle, spices, cloth goods, potash and tar. In 1735, the baptism of a Jewish girl is recorded in the church book of the Lutheran parish. Elias Höxter even served as head of the city council around 1900. A synagogue was built at Untergasse 27 in 1823. At that time about 40 Jewish citizens lived in the city, in 1905 there were 71, in 1933 there were 44. A Jewish school is mentioned for the first time in 1848 and was run by Joseph and Willy Spier until it was closed on August 1st, 1933. When the National Socialists came to power, the Jewish people from Gemünden hardly had a chance to survive, and all but four families emigrated. In 1939 there were eleven Jewish people, only one of whom survived the deportation to the Nazi extermination camps. The cemetery is 1 km west of Gemünden in the continuation of Martin-Luther-Straße. It also served as a burial place for other communities in the area, especially Rosenthal, and was laid out as early as the 16th century. The cemetery area covers 4270 m² and has more than 100 mostly simple tombstones, most of which date from the 19th century. from the 18th century 79395
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Katzbachstraße 10
hallway: 44, parcel: 160/2
Jumping forward from the building line on the left, but at an angle to the street, the street space opens and narrows at the same time in front of the two-storey, eaves half-timbered house, which is accessed via an outside staircase with a separately suspected, slightly eccentric entrance. The half-timbered structure rises above a high rubble base made of red sandstones and is tiled in storeys without overhangs. The high ground floor, which has been massively renewed on the left side, is double-locked with a single three-quarter strut, while the upper floor, stiffened with storey-high struts, is simply locked. An inscription has been preserved in the frame: “Soli Deo Gloria Johannes Möller and his wife A. Elisabetha a gebr. Bruchheuser trusted God and built this house, the 3rd March in 1828. Petr Kleim ”. The gable roof is crowned by a central, gabled dwarf house. 1828 79360
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Katzbachstraße 3
hallway: 43, parcel: 96
Half-timbered house built in the first half of the 19th century at the gable on a branch path from Katzbachstrasse to the market square over a floor-to-ceiling sandstone ashlar plinth. Above an even older base, a zone of older half-timbering remained in the rear area, which was completely replaced by a new structure towards the end of the 19th century in the front area. The two-story, constructive framework structure is trimmed floor by floor without overhangs and stiffened on the sides by floor-high struts. The entrance is located in the middle on the eaves side. 1st half of the 19th century 79358
 
Junkernhof Gemünden, Katzbachstraße 4
hallway: 43, parcel: 262/97
This noble court was first mentioned in a document by Ludwig and Dietrich von Linsingen as early as 1266, when the two of them sold their goods, with the exception of the little church and a courtyard with a mill, and two houses to Count Gottfried V. von Ziegenhain. The court was exempt from all burdens and taxes. In 1341 Ludwig von Linsingen sold the farm to his brother Thile, who had been pastor in Gemünden since 1357. On March 11, 1359, his descendants handed the farm over to Count Gottfried VII von Ziegenhain for 900 schillings. In 1446 Count Johann II von Ziegenhain enfeoffed Johan Clauer with the castle seat in Gemünden "as his parents were blessed". This shows that the Clauer family had to be Burgmanns of the Junkernhof for at least a generation. The Clauer had several castle seats and were richly enfeoffed with lands. Carl Clauer was head of the four high hospitals in Hessen. He had his coat of arms and that of his wife affixed over the portal in 1602 when the Junkernhof was built, the substructure of which has been preserved to this day. As early as 1649, however, Jakob von Hoff, Court Marshal of Kassel and Colonel zu Ziegenhain, appeared as the owner of the farm. After the male line of the Hoffs died out, the Junkernhof was passed on to Katharina von Hoff and her husband Carl von Haddenbach, who passed the fief on to the Haddenbach family after his death in 1734. With the death of Johan Moritz von Haddenbach, the property passed to the Schwerzel through the two sisters. They sold the farm and property to citizens of Gemünd in 1877. Innkeeper Hermann Matthäi and his wife opened an inn and brewery in the Junkernhof. A plastered, two-storey stone substructure from 1602 and a completely clad, younger half-timbered upper storey have been preserved from the gable-facing residential building of the Junkernhof, built over a barrel-vaulted cellar. According to historical descriptions, the crossbars are said to have cut teeth and rope ornaments. The original access to the courtyard was through a Renaissance portal, the architrave of which is supported by Ionic pilasters, above which the alliance coat of arms of Carolus Clauers and Helena Schenk zu Schweinsbergs is embedded. The arched passage is walled up today. Twin windows with profiled frames are also preserved from the Renaissance. 1602 79359
 
Residential and farm buildings Gemünden, Kraelingstraße 5, Kraelingstraße 7
hallway: 23, parcel: 118 / 42,119 / 42
Erected at the end of the 19th century over a high quarry stone plinth, consisting of three components, two-storey residential and farm building with eaves. The half-timbered structure of the single house is trimmed in storeys with no overhangs, stiffened by storey-high struts and filled with bricks. The middle living area is accessed via a high flight of stairs through a double-leaf frame-panel door with glass skylight. The left-hand part of the barn is separated by a fire wall, the right-hand two-axle residential part is attached separately. Late 19th century 79361
 
Plastered solid construction Gemünden, Lindenstrasse 1
hallway: 44, parcel: 8/6
Two-storey, plastered solid structure structured by pilaster strips above a rusticated sandstone base, which rises set back from the street on a branch path to the lower gate. Under a gable roof with half-hips, the three-axis eaves facade facing the Wohra is accentuated by a central dwelling with a hipped roof, the rear by a three-axis central projection with half-hipped. Below the upper floor windows, the facades are decorated with frameless, rectangular cartouches with fruit baskets in relief. 79362
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Lindenstraße 13
hallway: 23, parcel: 29/5
Two-storey half-timbered house built over a flat sandstone block base at the northern confluence of Schafhofstrasse. The large-volume, three-axis, gable-facing building under a gable roof has nine window axes on its eaves side and is crowned by a half-timbered dwelling with a crooked hip, each flanked by two dormers with hipped roofs. In the 19th century, the half-timbered structure was trimmed floor by floor without overhangs and stiffened by storey-high struts on the corner posts. 18th century 79365
 
Residential building Gemünden, Lindenstraße 20
hallway: 7, parcel: 11/1
A storey made of red bricks rises above a nearly storey-high stone plinth. The eaves side of the residential building facing the street is defined by a gabled central projection with an open space, in front of which there is a platform accessible via a high flight of stairs. While the segment-arched openings in the basement are made of red bricks, those in the living area are highlighted by yellow bricks and provided with window sills made of red sandstone. The window parapets are also emphasized by brick frames. The windows on the first floor are grouped in pairs on both sides of the central risalite. This effect is enhanced by the arched shape of the cornice above these windows. 18th century 79366
 
Duplex house Gemünden, Lindenstrasse 3, Lindenstrasse 4
hallway: 23, parcel: 16/1
Above a flat sandstone ashlar plinth, opposite the street confluence Auf der Hute, a two-storey double dwelling built around 1900, the constructive half-timbered structure of which was trimmed floor by floor without overhangs. The half-timbered structure, stiffened by storey-high struts, is locked twice on the ground floor and simply locked on the flatter upper floor. The two entrances in the middle of the six-axis facade are accessed via two open staircases and accentuated by a gabled dwarf house. around 1900 79363
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Lindenstraße 33
hall: 7, parcel: 187/51
Single-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house in Heimatstil forms, with a younger extension on the right, set back from the street space. A half-timbered structure rises above a high quarry stone base, which is stiffened by male figures on the corner posts and closed by a high, double-cantilevered gable clad with roof tiles. The slightly lower extension has a gable of the same shape, but the framework is stiffened with three-quarter struts and head angle timbers. While the windows of the main building are fitted with folding shutters, those of the annex are combined to form large ribbon windows. The double-leaf entrance door with a fixed glass skylight is accessed via an outside staircase in the corner of the house. around 1900 79367
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Lindenstraße 8
hallway: 23, parcel: 55/3
At the confluence of Kraehlingstraße, a half-timbered house built on the eaves over an almost storey-high quarry stone base with corner blocks made of red sandstone. The central entrance is accessed via a single-storey loggia-like porch with a side staircase and emphasized by a gabled dwelling on the jamb floor. The symmetrically constructed framework is stiffened on the side of the paired windows by struts with neck bolts and headbands and provided with St. Andrew's crosses in the window parapets; on the gable side there are male figures with counter struts. An elongated half-timbered extension with a basement made of quarry stone adjoins Kraelingstrasse at the rear. around 1900 79364
 
Town hall (Gemünden / Wohra)
town hall Gemünden, Marktstraße 10
hall: 43, parcel: 77/1
The town hall built in 1546 on the market square was demolished in 1821. A new town hall was built on the cellar vaults of the house in 1823/24. It served several purposes; In addition to the headquarters of the administration, this also housed the tax collection office, court, ballroom and beer and brandy bar. Today it is the seat of the city administration.

The two-storey half-timbered building above a sandstone square base is aligned with its five-axis long side to the Marktstrasse, which is expanded here into a square and is closed off by a hipped roof. The structural framework is reinforced at the corners by storey-high struts. A two-armed flight of stairs leads up to the centrally located entrance, which is emphasized on the flatter upper floor by additional struts and in the roof by a dwelling with a hipped roof.

1546, demolition in 1821, reconstruction in 1823/1824 79370
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Marktstraße 16
hall: 43, parcel: 83/6
At a bend in the square-like, extended Marktstrasse to the east, a two-storey half-timbered house on an L-shaped floor plan was built over a storey-high sandstone base. The completely slated and clad building is oriented towards the eaves and emphasized on the right by a gable. The five-axis facade is accessed in the middle through a separately suspected entrance that cuts through both the base and the lower half-timbered storey. The house, trimmed down without overhangs, dates to the 19th century. 19th century 79371
 
Three-storey half-timbered house Gemünden, Marktstraße 17
hallway: 43, parcel: 9/1
Three-storey half-timbered house above a flat, plastered base from the second half of the 18th century, which compensates for the rise in the terrain. Two half-timbered storeys and a double cantilevered gable rise above the plastered ground floor, which is decorated with a tooth cut. The entablature zones have thresholds and frames with dew bars, profiled beam heads and filler wood that is carved with flowers. On the first floor, the corner posts are provided with round bar profiles and diamond coatings, on the second floor with dew bars. The simply locked framework structure is only stiffened by short struts in the window parapet fields. 2nd half of the 18th century 79372
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Marktstraße 4
hallway: 43, parcel: 16/2
At the southern end of Marktstrasse, which has been extended to form a square in front of the town hall, a three-storey half-timbered house on a flat plinth made of red sandstone blocks and standing on a cul-de-sac to Webergasse. The timber-framed floor-to-floor with a slight overhang has entablature zones with profiled beam heads and thresholds as well as rounded filler timber. The corner posts of the ground floor are notched, those of the upper floor are provided with round bar profiles ending in volutes on both sides and central nodes. The framework structure is stiffened by widely spread struts with head angle timbers and counter-rotating footbands on corner and collar posts. A recently modified shop fitting from the 19th century is accessed via a central, wide open staircase. 19th century 79368
 
Five-axis half-timbered house Gemünden, Marktstraße 6
hall: 43, parcel: 27/1
Opposite the town hall on a red sandstone base, a large, two-storey half-timbered house built without a gable. The five-axis building is accessed in the middle via a high flight of stairs. The structural framework, which has no overhangs and is double-locked, is stiffened solely by storey-high struts at the corners. The ground floor frame is provided with an inscription: "Johann Werner Kalckbrenner and his wife Gerttraut a drilled decker trusted God and this house was built on July 6th in 1831 by the master carpenter Heinrich Bolans von hier". 1831 79369
 
Hofreite Gemünden, Mühlgasse 1
hallway: 44, parcel: 11/1
Courtyard on the corner of Steinweg with this residential and commercial building from the end of the 19th century facing the eaves, as well as three L-shaped barn buildings with gable roofs with an open courtyard facing Mühlenstraße. The residential building, built on a red sandstone base, has two half-timbered storeys with no overhangs, which are stiffened by storey-high struts. A shop is located on the left side of the ground floor and is accessed via a two-armed flight of stairs. At the rear are the two-story half-timbered buildings of the barns, which are trimmed over plastered plinths without overhangs and stiffened by storey-high struts. In addition to the two high barn doors, two garages have been built into each of the building's base floors. The barns from the second half of the 19th century document the important role of agriculture in the city of Gemünden. Late 19th century 79373
 
Half-timbered yard ride Gemünden, Schafhofstraße 5
hallway: 44, parcel: 1/1
Half-timbered courtyard with a gable-independent house and a barn from the second half of the 19th century that closes the courtyard. The constructive half-timbered structure with storey-high struts at the corners of the building built on red sandstone ashlar plinths is lined with bricks. On the eaves side in the courtyard, the house is accessed via a sandstone staircase with a brick railing, which is arranged under an iron balcony. 2nd half of the 19th century 79375
 
Half-timbered yard ride Gemünden, Schafhofstraße 6
hallway: 23, parcel: 16/2
Half-timbered yard riding from the first half of the 19th century with a two-story house on the gable and a two-story barn at the rear closing off the courtyard. The structural framework of the house rises above a yellow sandstone square plinth, which is trimmed in storeys without protrusions and is stiffened at the corners by storey-high struts. The courtyard-side, flat flight of stairs opens up a separately suspected vestibule. The eaves-standing barn, the half-timbered structure of which is similar to that of the house, is equipped with two large double-door barn doors. 1st half of the 19th century 79376
 
Residential and commercial building Gemünden, Steinweg 11
corridor: 43, parcel: 11/1
Large-volume residential and commercial building built in 1908 in a prominent urban planning position at the confluence of Webergasse and Steinweg. The building, built on a flat stone plinth, has a massive, plastered ground floor, which is visually richly structured by corner blocks and sandstone window reveals. In addition to a basket-arched shop window, a group of windows with an arched window flanked by two segment-arched windows characterizes the look of the front side. The half-timbered upper storey built with a slight overhang shows a multitude of historicizing half-timbered forms based on Art Nouveau. St. Andrew's crosses cut by diamonds emphasize the window parapets, curved footbands and struts give the upper floor an attractive historicizing structure. The corner situation facing Webergasse is particularly emphasized by the sloping shop entrance and two side projections, which meet at the corner and are covered by half-hipped roofs with protruding verges. 1908 79379
 
Residential and commercial building Gemünden, Steinweg 12
hall: 43, parcel: 16/1
Large-volume residential and commercial building built around 1910 with a massive ground floor and historicized half-timbered upper floor. The building, built on an almost square floor plan, whose plastered ground floor is structured by corner cuboids and window reveals in rustik cuboid, shows on the upper floor an elaborate half-timbered structure with a dense succession of steep man figures with footbands in all non-windowed containers. The southern corner of the building is also emphasized by a polygonal corner bay with St. Andrew's crosses and curved short struts in the window parapets and a high, sloped, curved roof spire. The jetty and attic storeys omit this bay window and switch from the square to the L-shaped floor plan. For this reason, a high, overhanging half-timbered gable with a crooked hip roof will be built to the street and to the side. around 1910 79380
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Steinweg 15
hall: 43, parcel: 27/1
Narrow half-timbered house built in the early 19th century and now used as a residential and commercial building. The gabled half-timbered house with a high ground floor and slightly overhanging flatter upper floors rises above a stone base that is flat towards the street. The three-storey building, which is slated on the gable side, shows an irregular framework on the eaves side with sloping, storey-high struts, each overlaid with a stand. The entablature zones are also accentuated with profiled thresholds and frames. Around 1900 the building was given a new, flatter gable roof with a protruding verge. Beginning of the 19th century 79381
 
Three-storey half-timbered house Gemünden, Steinweg 18
hall: 43, parcel: 11/1
Large-volume, gable-independent, three-storey half-timbered house from the middle of the 18th century. A recently completely modified ground floor rises above a flat stone plinth, in which a door bar with the year 1747 and two flanking angels were installed as a spoiler. The two upper floors, slightly overhanging the gable side, show an irregular framework with three-quarter struts and wide entablature zones with chamfered and rounded beam heads, chamfered and profiled thresholds and rounded filler timber. In addition, the corner posts were carved with round rod profiles and nodes that end in pine cones at the top and stylized floral ornaments at the bottom. A steep gable roof with a crooked hip over a shingled gable forms the upper end. Mid 18th century 79382
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Steinweg 25
hallway: 44, parcel: 106/1
Probably the oldest half-timbered house in the city of Gemünden was built in the early 16th century and was one of the few buildings to survive the great city fire of 1583. The large-volume structure of the three-storey, gable-free residential and commercial building rises above a stone base that is stepped towards the rear following the slope of the terrain. In the rear area of ​​the eaves side you can still see the half-timbered construction from the 16th century with its long posts reaching from the threshold to the eaves, the wide post position, long, almost building-high struts and the ceiling beams designed as anchor beams. The front, storey-trimmed containers, like the roof, were renewed around 1900 and today shape the appearance of the house with their slated street facade and the protruding verge. Beginning of the 16th century 79383
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Steinweg 30
hallway: 43, parcel: 2/6
The half-timbered house built by Jacob Bornmann in 1820 and greatly expanded around 1900. The two-storey residential and commercial building now has two gable-facing structures that are connected by an intermediate building. The right, older part shows, above the massively modified ground floor, the half-timbered forms with rows of windows and storey-high struts, as well as a slight overhang, profiled thresholds and rounded filler wood, which were common for the construction period in the early 19th century. In the frame of the ground floor there is the following inscription: "This house was built with God's help and blessing by the headmaster Jacob Bornman Witwer and his recently deceased wife Elisabetha born Bornman in as a dowry of this house foreman Heinrich Bohland so happened on August 1st, 1820 This one built on God's good ... ". The younger part on the left, on the other hand, shows historicizing forms such as stylized man figures on the corner posts, a large overhanging floor, intricately profiled beams and a flat jamb floor. 1820 79384
 
Half-timbered house in a courtyard Gemünden, Steinweg 7
hall: 45, parcel: 11/1
In 1819 a two-storey half-timbered house in a courtyard was erected outside the upper gate directly on the street. The half-timbered house built over a stone plinth with a central access and a side cellar exit shows the ancient half-timbered forms typical of the region, which were handed down well into the 19th century. Wide wooden cross-sections and narrow post positions create a dense framework structure with man figures on the corner posts and head angle timber to stiffen the door posts. Above a wide entablature zone with carved beam heads, a profiled and grooved upper floor threshold and profiled filler wood, an upper floor with a slight overhang rises up to match the ground floor with figures of men on the corner and collar posts. Broad ribbon windows arranged in groups of three characterize the appearance of the seven-axis residential building. The following inscription can be found on the ground floor: "Heinrich Wagner and Anna Barbara his married housewife - they both trusted God and built this house in 1819 on the 7th of April by the room master Damm von Gilserberg". A half-timbered barn from the time around 1900 with a double entrance and a dense structural framework with steep, storey-high struts also belongs to the courtyard. 1819 79377
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Steinweg 8
hallway: 43, parcel: 16/1
Half-timbered house built in two parts on a continuous stone plinth, built in the second half of the 19th century. The building, which is now completely clad, has two entrances from the construction period, the right of which opens up the five-axis right component in the middle, while the left door is located directly on the left corner of the building. Both doors are accessed via outside stairs. The right part of the building is structured regularly and is covered by a steep pitched roof with a central dwelling. The left part of the building also has a slightly cantilevered box bay window which, with a slight overhang, merges into a dwelling with a steep gable roof and a crooked hip. 2nd half of the 19th century 79378
 
Struthmühle Gemünden, Struthmühle 1, company
trench floor: 32, parcel: 14.2
Today, the Struthmühle is a spacious, agricultural farm complex consisting of a two-storey house, a three-storey mill building, a two-storey barn and a large stable that closes the courtyard from the street and which also houses the passage to the courtyard. All of the buildings in this mill, which has been in use since early modern times, date from shortly before and shortly after the turn of the 20th century. All the half-timbered buildings show the typical designs of the time with floor-to-ceiling, flush woodwork and steep, storey-high struts. Some of the buildings have almost storey-high stone plinths. Beginning of the 20th century 79394
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Untergasse 16
hall: 44, parcel: 66/1
Two-storey half-timbered house built around 1800 facing the street. The half-timbered structure, which is erected on a stone plinth and decorated by storeys, shows a high, double-locked framework on the ground floor, stiffened with three-quarter struts. The upper floor, which protrudes slightly above a beam zone with profiled thresholds and partially profiled beam heads, shows the same structure as the ground floor, but here the three-quarter struts were additionally secured with ankle straps. The four-axle building is closed off by a flat gable roof. around 1800 79385
 
Half-timbered house Gemünden, Untergasse 21
hall: 44, parcel: 47/1
Two-storey half-timbered house with a very high ground floor, built in the first half of the 19th century, facing the street. The building, which was subsequently lengthened to the rear and expanded into a single house, rises above a flat stone plinth and shows a very high ground floor on the outside, which, however, encompasses the basement inside up to the level of the first chain of bars. The regular, floor-to-ceiling timber framing is stiffened by steep storey-high struts and is completely slated on the gable side. In the Traufgasse, the house still has a wooden toilet bay on the upper floor. The half-timbered barn with a cross-storey strut opposite the house is also part of the monument scope. 1st half of the 19th century 79386
 
Small half-timbered house Gemünden, Untergasse 26
hall: 45, parcel: 16/1
Very small half-timbered house from the early 19th century. The two-storey residential building, with no overhangs, rises above a flat sandstone base and is accessed via a short flight of stairs. The three-axis house, slated on the street side, documents the cramped living conditions of the lower classes in the outskirts of the city right next to the city wall to this day. Beginning of the 19th century 79387
 
Five-axis half-timbered construction Gemünden, Webergasse 3
hallway: 43, parcel: 140
Large-volume, two-storey, five-axis half-timbered building with a gable facing the street over a basement made of ashlar with a central, slightly forward access to the basement, which was previously used for utility rooms. The half-timbered structure of the two full floors of the house built in 1840 shows a regular, double-locked structure stiffened with steep, storey-high struts. The entablature zones of the house, which is lined up in storeys, only show the heads of the joist beams with walled-in spaces. A special structuring element on the gable side is the loft on the ground floor, resting on the protruding basement exit. 1840 79388
 
Residential building Gemünden, Wohraer Straße 5
hallway: 45, parcel: 44
House on the southern outskirts of Gemünden, built in the first decade of the 20th century, with an elaborately historicized design. The building, erected on a square floor plan, rises above a plastered base and is accessed from the side via an outside staircase. The ground floor, which is also plastered, is structured by corner pilasters and colored window sockets. The half-timbered upper floor rises above a short hip foot with its dense, double-locked structure stiffened with steep storey-high struts, which shows a multitude of historicizing half-timbered forms. Curved and grooved short struts and circular logs in the middle compartments on the north side are found in all non-windowed containers. The upper end of the street facade is formed by a large dwarf house on the left with a crooked hip. Beginning of the 20th century 79389
 
Gabled half-timbered house Gemünden, Zur Burg 1
hall: 43, parcel: 85/4
The large, three-storey half-timbered house facing the market was built after the great fire in 1583. From 1721 to 1934 it served the reformed pastor as an apartment. The reformed elementary school was also housed here until 1938. The house, which has been privately owned since 1970, rises above a floor-to-the-market stone plinth with a round arched cellar door and an open staircase in two steps, through which the building is accessed on the right-hand side. The framework of the two lower storeys shows a dense structure on the gable side with wide wooden cross-sections and inclined, partly curved short struts. In front of the upper floor, which overhangs only strongly on the gable side, there is a protruding three-eight bay bay on curved arches, which gives the building a representative appearance with its profiled threshold, the decorative shapes in the window parapets and the Welschen hood. Compared to the lower floors, the all-round, strongly overhanging second floor shows a simple structural framework that is only stiffened on the eaves side by steep floor-to-ceiling struts. Since the window axes do not correspond to those of the lower floors either, this floor and the flat gable roof were probably not built until the 19th century. after 1583 79390
 
Lutheran rectory (Gemünden / Wohra)
Lutheran rectory Gemünden, Zur Burg 2
hall: 43, parcel: 75/6
The deacon's apartment was located on the site of the current building until 1832. After the demolition of the house, a large-volume half-timbered house was built here, which served as an apartment for the owner of the second Lutheran pastor. After this second pastorate was omitted in 1946, the building was sold to private users. The two-story, floor-to-floor timber-framed house rises to the market side above an almost floor-to-floor stone base and, on its two full floors, covered by a flat hipped roof, shows a very regular half-timbered structure with a single lock on the ground floor and double locks on the upper floor as well as steep floor-to-ceiling struts on the corner posts . The building, which is modeled on the town hall in its classicist forms, is accessed from the street Zur Burg through a double door with diamond-coated panels. before 1832 79391
 
Residential building Gemünden, to the castle 3
hallway: 43, parcel: 86/3
Eaves, two-storey house from the late 18th century, which was extended parallel to the first by a barn after the mid-19th century. The house rises above a flat stone plinth and shows a very high ground floor on the outside, which, however, includes the basement inside up to the level of the lower chain of bars. Characteristic for the framework structure is the wide post position and the stiffening by only a three-quarter strut on the left side. The windows of the centrally accessible building form two pairs on the two outer corners of the building. A lower floor rises above the ground floor with a slight overhang with regular half-timbered structure and man figures on the corner posts. An integral part is also the two-storey barn, which was added to the building in the 19th century, and which was lined flush to the floor, with a large entrance gate on the right. Late 18th century 79392
 

Greetings

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Jewish Cemetery Grüsen, Auf den Dillenhöfen
hall: 2, parcel: 27
Jews who initially belonged to the Gemündener community had lived in Grüsen since the 18th century. The community, which has been independent since 1885, built its own synagogue in 1883 with 48 male and 24 female places. In 1905 there were 44 Jews in the village, in the 1930s there were six families, all of whom, with the exception of the Stern family, bore the name Marx. In addition to the only innkeeper in town, they were grocers or cattle dealers. The synagogue was destroyed in the night of the pogrom in 1938, but for fear of flames spreading across the neighboring buildings it was not lit.It was only released for demolition and sold by the community in the 1950s. The last Jewish fellow citizens were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942. The Jewish cemetery is directly adjacent to the Grüsen community cemetery, which is a continuation of the Oberdorf street. On the fenced, tree-lined area, which was only laid out in the 20th century, there are still twelve simple tombstones from the early 20th century, the first from 1918, the last from 1941, as well as a memorial stone for the Jewish citizens who died in the First World War Julius and Siegmund Marx. The victims of the "Third Reich" are also remembered on the inscription plate. from 19th century 79400
 
Half-timbered house Grüsen, Gemündener Straße (Grüsen) 11
Corridor: 1, parcel: 17/2
Narrow, two-storey half-timbered house facing the street on the eaves. The house, built at the end of the 18th century, rises above a high, plastered base and shows a regular, tiered timber frame, the structure of which is stiffened with three-quarter struts on the corner and collar posts. The three-axle house, which is accessible on the left-hand side and looks very tall due to its narrow width, does not show any overhangs or other decorative shapes despite its age. Late 18th century 79399
 
Grüsener Mühle Grüsen, Gemündener Strasse (Grüsen) 14, Mühlwiesen
hallway: 1, parcel: 28/3
On the northern edge of Grüsen, slightly set back from the street, is the Grüsener Mühle, a completely closed courtyard with a residential house built in 1822 facing the street, an adjoining mill building and a half-timbered barn that closes the courtyard to the east. The house, which was boarded up on the upper floor and renovated in 1961, shows on the ground floor a regular, floor-to-floor timbered framework with simple locking and steep, floor-to-ceiling struts. In the course of the renovation of the house, an inscription bar from the construction period with the following text was removed: "Where God does not give his favor, all effort and work are in vain - Eitel Moritz Metz and his wife Karoline Wilhelmine Metz née Ochse built this house on 19. July 1822 ". The ensemble of different half-timbered buildings that form the courtyard is almost completely covered on the street side by the four-storey new mill building erected in the middle of the 20th century. 1822 79861
 
Protestant church Grüsen, Gemündener Straße (Grüsen) 7
hallway: 1, parcel: 10/2
A pastor's office has been attested for Grüsen since 1057, to which a large number of other communities in Bunstruth belonged. At that time there must have been a first church in Grüsen, which was replaced by a late Gothic building in 1494. In 1718 a choir was added to this church and extensive repairs were carried out in 1741. However, the church was in such poor condition that the men's gallery collapsed in 1789. In the following period, the community began to plan the construction of a new church, which was carried out in the period from 1833 to 1837.

Initially, due to a lack of financial means, a simple hall without a tower was built, but it was soon decided to erect a square roof turret with an octagonal attachment and a flat Welscher hood. The church building itself shows itself on the outside as a simple stone building with three window axes on the narrow and five axes on the long sides. It is optically divided into two floors by a double, circumferential cornice strip, which are designed with different window shapes, on the ground floor with flat lintels, on the upper floor with round arches. The building, which is accessible on three sides through narrow double doors, is covered by a flat hipped roof, which underlines the strict classicist basic shape of the building. Above the doors there are inscription panels with the following texts: "Erbauet 1833", "Luc. II. V.28. Blessed are those who hear and keep God's word", "Pslm. 26. V. 8. Lord I love the place of yours House and the place where your honor dwells ". The interior of the simple church space is only structured by the three-sided gallery, which rests on bevelled stands and is provided with a simple, coffered parapet. In the east that remains free is the simple, cubic altar hall, behind which a high pulpit with a sound cover rises. Next to the pulpit, the only relic of the old church was an altar crucifix from the second half of the 15th century. The western part of the gallery, which also houses the two entrances, is occupied by the organ built in 1833 by the organ builder Faust from Raasdorf and converted in 1843 by the organ builder Zieße from Heckerode with its three-part façade decorated with tendrils. Two inscriptions are carved into the prospectus: "To the glory of God", "Built in 1843".

1494; Predecessor building older about 1057 79398
 
Historic town center Greetings, complete system 1 The core of the historic town center of Grüsens is the church at the intersection of Gemündener Strasse and Unterdorf, which has been documented since 1057. Starting from the church, the building developed between the Unterdorf and the Bachstraße and on the opposite side of the Gemündener Straße in the vicinity of the junction of the Oberdorf. After the devastation of the Thirty Years' War and the bad times that followed, the village only reached its current size in the 19th century in the areas south of the Bachstraße, north of the lower village and in the western parts of the upper village. Even today, Grüsen shows itself as a rural clustered village that is grouped around the church. Courtyard rides of different sizes and irregular shapes, with their building stock largely dating back to the 19th century, determine the appearance of the historic village center to this day. 721830
 
Gemündener Strasse Greetings, complete system 2 At the turn of the 20th century, four residential buildings were built outside of the village on the road to Sehlen, which still form a closed group of buildings today. The half-timbered houses erected on the eaves facing the street have floor-to-ceiling rubble stone bases and show a regular, dense framework that in some cases cites historical half-timbered forms. Numbers 17 and 18, which are closer to the village and were built in 1904, have two storeys and are double-floored, while the two further outlying houses are only single-storey. The entire assembly documents the first phase of the village expansion outside the old town center in the period around and after 1900. 721831
 

Lehnhausen

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Former forester's house Lehnhausen, Forsthausstraße 1, near the Forsthaus
hall: 13, parcel: 14 / 4.14 / 5
The Forsthaus settlement is located north of Lehnhausen at the intersection of the roads from Frankenberg to Gemünden and from Rosenthal to Sehlen. In 1838 the Haina Hospital had a house with a small stable built for the forester Christian Schneider. The other two houses in the small settlement were built in 1910 and 1929.

The large-volume, eaves-side, today shingled, otherwise slated, half-timbered house was built in 1838 by the Haina Hospital and expanded shortly after 1900 for use by two families. It was sold to private owners in 1980. The former five-axis, now seven-axis, two-storey residential building was extended around 1900 by a risalit-like porch facing the street on the right side of the building. The scope of the monument also includes a bakehouse built after 1910 made of quarry stone with a segmental arched window and a central door in the gable end.

1838/1900 79404
 
Residential building Lehnhausen, Forsthausstraße 2
hallway: 8, parcel: 5/3
In 1911, five-axis building with half-timbered upper storey was built as the residential house of a resettler's yard facing the courtyard. Above a high, plastered plinth, the house shows a ground floor built in red bricks with segment-arched windows that are surrounded by rounded shaped bricks. Access is via a single flight of stairs, which was provided with a vestibule in the middle of the 20th century. The slightly overhanging upper floor shows a dense half-timbered structure with man-figure-like struts and St. Andrew's crosses in the parapet fields of the windows. The wide entablature zone consists of rounded beam heads, between which a double row of slightly overhanging bricks was walled up. The residential building shows a mixture of modern and historicized building forms typical of the early 20th century. 1911 79405
 
Complete system of the historic town center Lehnhausen, entire system of the historic town center The oldest evidence of structural changes in Lehnhausen is the report of a major fire in 1664 in which the place burned down completely. A century later, the cadastral regulations of 1778 described the houses in Lehnhausen as “partly good and newly built, partly also old and dilapidated, but the Hofreyden except for a few very narrow and uncomfortable to enter”; In general, the village is “exposed to some flooding and kidnapping of the dung because of its low lying location during strong thunderstorms and floods.” Today, the village extends along Kreisstraße 99, which was built in 1970, and several old half-timbered barns were demolished for the purpose. The area on both sides of the junction of Bergstrasse is still characterized by rural farms, the fabric of which goes back to the early 19th century. 721835
 
Yard Lehnhausen, Hauptstraße 1,
hallway: 3, parcel: 16/1
The yard at today's Hauptstrasse 1 is probably one of the oldest in the village of Lehnhausen. Since 1556 at the latest, a mill has belonged to this courtyard, which was leaning towards the monastery of Haina. This water mill, later called the village mill, which drew its water from the Holzbach flowing past the village, was separated from the main courtyard in 1680 and given away as an independent fief. In the 1960s, grinding was stopped and the mill ditch was filled in.

The village mill still appears today as a closed building ensemble with a recently rebuilt and plastered half-timbered house, a half-timbered barn and a half-timbered stable from the late 19th century and a brick barn from the 20th century that closes the courtyard.

Mid 16th century 79402
 
Niederholzhausen farm Lehnhausen, Hof Niederholzhausen
hallway: 7, parcel: 7/2
The Niederholzhausen court appears for the first time in a property register of the Haina monastery in 1240. The landlord was the Count of Ziegenhain, the feudal lordship was with the monastery. In the year 1556 the proven four farms belonged to the hospital in Haina, in whose Salbuch it says: “Dis Dorff Nidernholzhausen is encompassed with everything and belonging, that is, housing or other farms, fields, gardens, meadows, wood, velt, water, waidt, Zinß zehentgrundt und Boden nothing seperated everything from the Heina Hospital ... “Attempts by the hospital to have the farms run by four farmers failed in the 17th century, so that all farms were given to one farmer. The last loan from the Niederholzhausen estate to the hospital was issued in 1831. Until 1835 the farm had the status of its own municipality; It was not until this year that Niederholzhausen was united with Lehnhausen. In the following years the farm was divided, soon reunited and many times sold until it came into the possession of the Schmittmann family in 1912, whose descendants still live here. Today the courtyard appears as a spacious square of residential and farm buildings. Large-volume half-timbered barns on stone ground floors form the boundary of the courtyard on three sides. At the end of the courtyard facing the street is another, free-standing, built and simultaneous half-timbered barn from the early 20th century. The older residential building facing the street is located inside the courtyard after the courtyard was expanded in the early 20th century. The two-storey house built in the late 18th century rises on a high stone plinth and shows a regular, tiered timber-framed structure with widely spread man figures on the corner posts. The entablature zone is formed from a profiled frame and overlying ceiling beams combed over by the upper floor threshold. The corner posts are carved with round rods, horns, nodi and floral motifs, a wooden head corner bears the initial "M". On the first floor threshold of the house, which was provided with a protruding half-timbered project in the early 20th century, the following, partially concealed inscription can be found: “... no evil has happened and see me in shame and harm. Father's favor today ". The whole of the courtyard also includes an earth cellar on the opposite side of the street. from 1240 79406
 
Old school house Lehnhausen, Schulweg 6,
corridor: 10, parcel: 15/6
In the years 1913 to 1916, the community of Lehnhausen had a new school building built on the western edge of the town, despite the simultaneous stresses caused by the First World War, the half-timbered upper storey and the roof were largely made of beams that came from parts of the demolition of the church in Asel. The lower, massive area originally served as a classroom, while the teacher's apartment was on the upper floor. The building was sold to private users in 1965.

It rises above a high stone plinth facing the valley and shows a simple, plastered ground floor with sandstone-framed arched windows. The upper floor and the overhanging gable consist of a half-timbered structure that is now clad. In front of the building is a protruding risalit that houses the entrance and the central ridge point of which is raised by a high, octagonal roof turret.

1913/1916 79403
 

Schiffelbach

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Former castle mill Schiffelbach, Am Stockborn 5, Im Unterdorf, Auf den Hofäckern
corridor: 4.5, parcel: 103.104 / 2.34 / 3.34 / 4.76
In the middle of the 19th century, a spacious, two-storey half-timbered house was built in the rear area of ​​the stately castle mill. The five-axis Ernhaus rises above a high stone plinth bearing the inscription "Johannes HKLM 1846" and is accessible via a single flight of stairs in the middle of the eaves side, corresponding to its regular axial structure. The half-timbered structure, erected in storeys with no overhangs or decorative forms, shows a framework structure that is double-locked on both storeys and stiffened with steep storey-high struts. The only decorative element of the otherwise strictly classical form of the house is the two-winged front door with bat skylight. Mid 19th century / 1846 79408
 
Half-timbered barn Schiffelbach, Am Stockborn 9
hallway: 4, parcel: 27
Two-storey half-timbered barn built in the late 19th century. The barn erected in the rear area of ​​the parcel rises above a stepped rubble stone base and shows a regular framework structure with storey-high struts on the corner and collar studs. The high, double-locked ground floor houses a gate entrance on the left. Late 19th century 79409
 
Half-timbered yard ride Schiffelbach, Am Zinn 1,
hallway: 4, parcel: 68
A spacious half-timbered courtyard built in the late 19th century consisting of a half-timbered barn, a stable and a free-standing half-timbered house, which together enclose the courtyard open to the street on three sides. The barn, built over a flat quarry stone base, shows a regular half-timbered structure with a high ground floor, which houses two gates of different heights and is stiffened by storey-high struts. The stable on the upper floor, which closes off the courtyard at the rear, is solidly bricked and plastered on the ground floor.

The residential building, which rises above a flat stone plinth and has recently been massively renovated on the ground floor, preserves half-timbering from the construction period around 1800 on the upper floor. Above the narrow entablature zone with profiled beam heads and filler wood as well as a profiled threshold, there is a dense framework with figures of men with ankle bands Corner and collar stands.

around 1800 79411
 
Half-timbered barn Schiffelbach, Borngasse (Schiffelbach) 4
hallway: 4, parcel: 41
Towering half-timbered barn built in the late 19th century at the intersection of Borngasse and Stockborn. The ground floor of the barn, which is accessed on the right with a gate, was made of quarry stone with carefully crafted corner blocks. It is structured by segmented arched windows with sandstone reveals. Above this ground floor are two timber-framed storeys, whose simply locked structure is stiffened by steep storey-high struts on the corner and collar studs. The barn, which is lined flush with no overhangs, is covered by a recently replaced gable roof. 19th century 79410
 
Half-timbered barn Schiffelbach, Erbsengasse 1,
hallway: 4, parcel: 57/2
Large-volume half-timbered barn built on an L-shaped floor plan in 1877. The barn, which delimits the courtyard on two sides, has a ground floor built in ashlar, the doors and windows of which are provided with sandstone reveals. On the right-hand side, the longer wing of the barn is accessed through two gate entrances arranged side by side. The framework of the upper part of the ground floor with the upper floor shows a regular structure with double locking and storey-high struts. On the frame of the first floor there is the following inscription: "I Joh. Heinrich Henkel and my wife Elisabeth, born Trümmer, trust God and built this building in 1877. The master carpenter was Matthäus Amreihn from Lischeid ... trust God so I have no need .. . " 1877 79412
 
Half-timbered stable Schiffelbach, Erlenring 3 Floor : 4 , Parcel
: 7
Half-timbered stable built around 1900 as the rear end of the courtyard. The one-and-a-half-storey, storey-by-storey building, which has now been converted for residential purposes, rises above a quarry stone base and shows a regular structural framework with steep storey-high struts and simple locking. A high jamb floor projecting strongly at the rear forms the upper end of the former stable. around 1900 79413
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Schiffelbach, Erlenring 7
hallway: 4, parcel: 14
Built around 1900, two-storey half-timbered house facing the street, on an almost storey-high stone base, renewed in bricks in the rear. The dense half-timbered structure of the house, which is timbered in storeys without protrusions, is double-locked on both floors and stiffened with steep storey-high struts. By converting the windows on the street side, the former five-axis house was transformed into a three-axis building. around 1900 79855
 
Historic town center Schiffelbach, complete system 1 The core of the historic village is in the area between Marburger Strasse, Borngasse and Erbsengasse. The outermost points of the original settlement form the castle mill, assigned to the seat of the local rulers, the von Schleier family, and the church at the other end of the village. The areas between Marburger Straße and Am Zinn and the area between Borngasse and Am Stockborn are added to this core. Erlenring and Heimbacher Straße, which today are also an integral part of the historic town center, were only settled in the more recent past, probably since the 19th century. In the village center itself, the historical route with its curved streets, narrow junctions and the absence of intersections have largely been preserved. The irregular courtyards with their dense buildings and the courtyards open to the streets are still characteristic today. With the exception of a few buildings, the structure that defines the present-day townscape dates from the 19th century and shows a half-timbered structure typical of the construction period. 721841
 
Vaulted cellar Schiffelbach, Hofgärten
hallway: 14, parcel: 18
To the east of the village, above the castle mill, a large vaulted cellar has been preserved on the round hilltop of the castle hill, which probably originally belonged to the castle complex of the Schleier family, which has been documented since the 13th century and died out in the 17th century. From the castle, which has been decaying since then, only a large cellar vaulted with a flat segmented barrel barrel has been preserved, which is accessed through a pointed arched gate that is surrounded by the remains of a stone wall. 13th Century 79420
 
Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße
hallway: 4, parcel: 67/4
Half-timbered barn built in 1835 in a prominent position at the beginning of Heimbacher Strasse. The building, which was used as a drive-through barn up until the construction of the courtyard at Marburger Straße 25, rises above a high stone base and shows a structure with man figures on the corner posts, double on the high ground floor and simply locked on the slightly overhanging, flatter upper floor. The largely unchanged building has the following inscription in the frame of the first floor: "... Wilhelm Lingelbach and his wife Anna Magrta drilled Amrein have trusted God and this barn was rebuilt in 1835 on the 22nd of May. The master carpenter was Adam Hahn in Lisscheid Deo Gloria" 79419
 
Old school Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße 13
hallway: 19, parcel: 28/3
Since 1802, Schiffelbach had its own school. Due to a lack of space, the community had a new school built on the western edge of the village in 1916. The old school is a two-storey, solidly bricked and plastered building on a flat stone base. The schoolhouse, built on a square floor plan, is a building that is independent of the gable facing Marburger Strasse and has a half-timbered upper storey, partially slated, the slightly overhanging structure of which is stiffened by man-figure-like struts. On the east side of the eaves side of the house there is a gabled risalit that takes up the entire width of the building and accommodates the entrance and various ancillary rooms. The only decorative elements on the facade are the sills and the roughly embossed window lintels made of red sandstone. A coat of arms of the Schleier family from the 16th century was built as a spoiler on the west side. 1802 79415
 
Half-timbered house Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße 16
hallway: 4, parcel: 14/3
Around 1900 in the rear part of the large parcel, facing the courtyard, two-storey half-timbered house. The structure of the regular, five-axis house resting on a stone plinth shows a dense structure with double locking on both floors, St. Andrew's crosses in the window parapets and figures of men in the containers that are not windowed through. A jamb floor with a flat gable roof forms the upper end of the house, which is timbered flush with no overhangs. around 1900 79416
 
Protestant church Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße 18
hallway: 4, parcel: 26/4
After the Schleier family died out, Schiffelbach was awarded to the Hessian Colonel Johann ufm Keller. The new church was built on his initiative in 1701. The simple hall church was built as a half-timbered construction with a smooth finish in the east and a solidly brick, recessed tower in the west. The three-storey tower is slated on the upper floor and has a double-staggered, octagonal tower with a high Welsch hood. The actual church building rises above a flat quarry stone base and was erected as a post construction with four-fold locking and the entire height of the facade on the corner posts and door posts without any visible division of floors. The conclusion is a steep gable roof with a crooked hip on the east side. In front of the church are two red sandstone tombstones with scenes of the crucifixion, one for Joh. Jost Ballzar 1677-1742, the other for Joh. Ochs, who died in 1691.

The simple, whitewashed interior, renovated in 1906, opens to the west through a triumphal arch in the form of a parabola to the chancel in the tower, which also houses the organ gallery. The actual church space with its coffered ceiling resting on a long girder supported by a bevelled stand and curved headbands is structured by a double-sided gallery on simple stands with different coffered parapets. The galleries, stalls and pulpit and prieces date from the renovation period in 1906, the altar crucifix still belongs to the original construction period. In the interior of the church there are three elaborately designed tombstones of the Schleier family. The almost fully sculptured grave slab of Herr von Schleier and that of his wife Anna were placed under the gallery. In the east is the stone created in 1604 for Otto Helmrich Schleier, which is adorned with inscriptions, heraldic panels and an inscription panel surrounded by scrollwork. The inscriptions read: "In 1579, on the 4th of September at 6 o'clock, the strict, noble and venerable H .... n Schlei zu Schoffelbach in Got fell asleep". ".... on February 19th the noble and virtuoso Fraw Anna Schlerin was born from Lerbach in Got christian and the goose fell asleep ...". "Anno 1603 the II. Martii is Otto helmerich Schlein of the noble and most honorable Christoffel Schlein little son in the Heren asleep of his age 2 iar - The righteous Selen are in God's hands and no onval ruret them. Amen".

1701 79417
 
Under mill Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße 2, in the ground
hall: 1, parcel: 26/3
Generous mill complex, consisting of a half-timbered barn built on an L-shaped floor plan and a mill building that closes off the courtyard at the rear. The property, which is still used for agriculture today, received its current building stock in 1853 and was operated as a mill until 1972. The barn and house rise above high stone plinths and now have solid, brick-built ground floors. The upper floors show a regular constructive framework structure with steep storey-high struts. 1853 79421
 
Half-timbered barn Schiffelbach, Marburger Straße 21
hallway: 4, parcel: 19/2
Large-volume, two-storey half-timbered barn built in 1836. The building, facing the street, rises above a high stone plinth and has recently been converted for residential purposes in the rear area. The half-timbered structure, which is double-locked on the high ground floor and single-locked on the slightly overhanging, flatter upper floor, is stiffened in the younger, slightly sloping area towards the street by steep storey-high struts. The older upper floor still has a wide entablature zone with rounded beam heads and filler wood as well as man figures on the corner and collar posts. In the frame of the first floor there is the following inscription: "... Lischeid Jesu lives in this house, but never again from it 5th May 1836". 1836 79418
 

Sehlen

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Complete system of the historic town center Sehlen, complete system of the historic town center The village of Sehlen, which has existed since the early Middle Ages, had 130 residents at the end of the 16th century. Due to the severe devastation of the Thirty Years' War, the number fell sharply and could not reach the pre-war level again until the middle of the 18th century. The number of inhabitants rose to 216 by 1856 and is only 260 today. Since the village has hardly experienced any growth in size, the historical quality of the village center in the area of ​​the intersection of Hainaer Strasse and Sehlener Strasse has been preserved. Even today, rural farms on irregular parcels shape the appearance of the village, the structure of which was built in the course of the 19th century. Eaves and gable half-timbered houses as well as courtyards arranged differently to the street space determine the streetscape of Sehlen. 721856
 
Fallen honor Sehlen, in the village
hall: 1, parcel: 14/3
A memorial erected in the early 1920s for the fallen soldiers of the village of Sehlen. The pillar-like cube rises above a profiled base and shows a coffered central medallion above the shaft with inscriptions. In the medallions there are helmets with oak leaf wreaths and Wilhelm crosses with the year 1914. A stylized grave slab forms the upper end. The inscription reads: "1914-1918 the fallen of the world war the community Sehlen 1922". 1922 79429
 
Two-storey half-timbered barn Sehlen, Klingelbachstraße 1
hallway: 1, parcel: 20/3
Two-storey half-timbered barn built by Johann and Conrad Schneider in the second half of the 18th century. The barn, built over a flat quarry stone plinth, shows a regular framework structure with three-quarter struts on the corner and collar posts as well as an infill with building-time earth staking. The entablature zone between the high ground floor and the slightly overhanging upper floor is formed by rounded beam heads and filler wood. 2nd half of the 18th century 79423
 
Gabled half-timbered barn Sehlen, Klingelbachstraße 2
hallway: 1, parcel: 26/4
Two-storey half-timbered barn with a gable facing the street from 1795, which was later extended at the end of the 19th century. The barn, erected on a flat quarry stone base and shingled on the gable side, shows a regular framework structure with three-quarter struts on the corner posts as well as a wide entablature zone with rounded beam heads and filler wood. The wide doorway is protected from the weather by a canopy. 1795 79424
 
Former mill Sehlen, Mühlenstraße 4, Mühlgraben
hallway: 2, parcel: 15/6
Spacious former mill facility in the form of a three-sided courtyard. The mill, documented since 1302, shows itself today as an ensemble of two half-timbered barns from the early 20th century and a residential house built at the same time. The two-storey residential building, built in historicizing forms facing the courtyard, has a base and ground floor combined with stone masonry with corner blocks and segment-arched windows with brick framing. The upper floor was built as a half-timbered construction with steep storey-high struts on the sides and storey-high cross struts in the middle of the courtyard side and provided with a jamb floor and a central dwelling with elaborate half-timbered strut figures. from 1302 79425
 
Dreiseithof Sehlen, Sehlener Straße 15
hallway: 1, parcel: 20/3
Spacious courtyard originally in the form of a three-sided courtyard, consisting of four half-timbered buildings of different ages. The oldest component from the second half of the 18th century from the time of the first known owner, Johannes Röse, is the two-storey half-timbered barn opposite the residential building with a high ground floor over a flat stone plinth and an upper storey overhanging a wide beam zone with combed beam heads. Both floors show a regular structure with man figures with footbands on the corner and collar posts. Of two other stable buildings with massive ground floors, partly made of quarry stone, partly made of brick, as well as simple half-timbered upper floors stiffened with storey-high struts, which were added around 1900 to complete the courtyard, the rear bounding the courtyard collapsed recently. The end of the courtyard is the two-storey half-timbered house from around 1800. The building has a basement made of rubble, the ground floor has recently been massively renewed, but the upper floor still preserves the half-timbered structure with regular, dense half-timbered structures with man figures on the upper floor Corner and collar studs as well as a wide, slightly overhanging entablature zone with rounded beam heads and similar filler wood. 2nd half of the 18th century 79426
 
Half-timbered barn Sehlen, Sehlener Straße 16
hall: 1, parcel: 26/4
In 1868, newly built, two-storey half-timbered barn facing the street with a gable end. The barn, which is erected over a high stone plinth and shingled on the gable side, shows a regular half-timbered structure with steep storey-high struts and a narrow entablature zone with grooved and rounded beam heads, rounded filler wood and a profiled threshold with the following inscription: "Gott mit uns Jacob Röse and his wife born Garthe trusted God and built this building with the help of their parents Hartmann Röse and his wife, born Vackiner, in 1868 on July 8th. The master carpenters were the Koedding brothers from here. " 1868 79427
 
Old school Sehlen, Sehlener Straße 21
hallway: 1, parcel: 26/3
Until well into the 19th century, the children from Sehlen had to go to school in Grüsen. It was not until 1896 that Sehlen also got its own school, on a hill outside the village. The school was used as a camp for Russian prisoners of war from 1914 to 1918, increased in 1927 according to plans by August Melzer and closed in 1965 after the establishment of the central school in Haina.

The school building is an elongated, single-storey structure made of greywacke, which is only structured by the brick-framed, segment-arched windows. The four-axis, plastered, middle section of the building, built in the form of a heavily elevated dwelling, was added in 1927.

1896 79428
 

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmäler in Gemünden (Wohra)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

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 .