List of cultural monuments in Rosenthal (Hessen)

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

Cultural monuments according to districts

image designation location description construction time Object no.
Two-storey half-timbered house Roda, Christenbergweg 5
hallway: 4, parcel: 242/1
At the end of the 18th century, a two-storey half-timbered house built on the street facing the street. The storey-by-storey building with a top floor overhang on all sides rises above a high stone plinth and shows a dense framework of strongly dimensioned woods. The simply locked storeys still preserve the original window openings that have been walled up in the meantime and are stiffened on the corner posts with differently dimensioned man figures, on the upper storey additionally with opposing footbands. A double-overhanging half-timbered gable forms the end of the street. Late 18th century 79874
 
Historic town center Roda, entire complex 1 Hauptstrasse 15, 18-22; Kirchweg 1-5, 6-10. The settlement core of Roda is still clearly visible today in the town plan. In the area between the Kirchweg and the main street, as well as in the direct connection to the two streets, the oldest buildings in the village can be found in the vicinity of the church. Farms of different sizes with single houses or hooked courtyards still characterize the townscape on both sides of the main road between the confluences of the Kirchweg and north of the latter. The teacher Heinrich Wilhelm Homburg reported about the construction of the farmhouses in Roda in 1856: “The houses are two-story, but there are also some one-story, partly made of clay stones, partly of felt stone, only the lower part of the houses is solid. In most houses, the house, barn and stables are under one roof, only in 12 houses are barn and barn separated. The houses are covered with bricks, only 2 with slate and 3 still with straw ”. 721675
 
Complete system 2 Roda Roda, complete system 2 At the confluence with Waldstrasse, several small farms with buildings from the second half of the 19th century have been preserved to this day. Directly following this, a row of larger barns from the late 19th and early 20th centuries extends along the western side of the forest road. Together, these agricultural buildings indicate an expansion phase of the village after the mid-19th century. 721676
 
Gable-independent residential building Roda, Hauptstraße 15,
hallway: 4, parcel: 178/4
Two-storey, gable-independent residential house of a rural courtyard, combined from two parts of different ages. The front living area of ​​the building shows a constructive half-timbered structure with storey-high struts and floor-by-storey carpentry with a wide entablature zone. The rear part of the building was added around 1900 as an economic part, shows similar half-timbered forms, but with double locking instead of the single one of the front building. Inscription on the front building: "Konrad Albrecht and his four children trusted God and built this house. The installation of this house was done by the carpenter Jesberg from Röddenau on May 5th, 1825". 1825, extension around 1900 79254
 
Gable-independent half-timbered house Roda, Hauptstraße 18,
hallway: 4, parcel: 163/1
At the end of the 18th century, a two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house built as a single house on a flat stone base. The building, which is timbered by storey, shows very different half-timbering on the two floors. On the ground floor, thin woods with wide spacing and straight three-quarter struts predominate, which indicate a replacement of the original half-timbering in the late 19th century. Above the wide entablature zone, the frame and threshold of which are decorated with block friezes, an upper floor rises with a slight overhang with a denser framework structure, which is stiffened in addition to an ancient post bracing with angled wooden legs through wide struts, in some cases with wooden head corners on the corner and collar studs. The business section is now used as a garage. Late 18th century 79255
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Roda, Hauptstraße 7, Friedhofstraße 2,
hallway: 4, parcel: 124 / 2,132 / 1
In the second half of the 19th century, a two-storey half-timbered house on an almost storey-high stone base was built as a rear courtyard closure. Above the basement, used as a stable, rises a timber-framed framework with steep, storey-high struts. The middle of the house, flanked by two window axes, is particularly emphasized by the entrance and floor-to-ceiling cross bracing. The house, the windows of which it was originally built, was extended by a barn around 1900. 1900, extension in the 2nd half of the 19th century 79253
 
Protestant church Roda, Kirchweg 5, in the village
hall: 4, parcel: 170 / 4,171 / 3
The first mention of Roda comes from 1343. Between 1528 and 1885 the village belonged to the deanery of Kesterburg and was a subsidiary of Münchhausen (district of Marburg-Biedenkopf). A chapel was then in a different place than it is today. A cadastre from around 1720 does not name a chapel or church in Roda, but the church and churchyard are mentioned in 1784 in the warehouse, piece and tax book. The bell, cast by Johann Melchior Derck in Münchhausen in 1782, speaks for a church building at the current location immediately before, of which the tower has been preserved. The parish was merged with the parish of Rosenthal in 1885. Preparations for the new building have been made since 1893, in 1897 the old church was demolished except for the tower and was rebuilt by 1898, presumably according to designs by District Building Inspector Hippenstiel from Frankenberg. In 1912 a new organ was installed, which organ builder Konrad Euler had probably bought from the seminary in Münster. Modern sacristy extension on the south side of the choir.

The church is roughly in an east-west orientation between Hauptstrasse and Kirchweg, immediately east of a courtyard with a restaurant. The churchyard is south of the church on the main street. The nave and lower basement of the tower are made of red sandstone broken in the area, the remaining areas of the tower are made of slated timber. The tower is designed for a much smaller church: a wide, two-story base floor, the middle section continued as a square tower shaft and closed off by two stepped octagonal floors with a flat hood. An inscription stone above the tower portal says "CMEWSTL / VOR R 1789". The exterior of the ship rises above a slightly protruding base, but without any further structure; Three arched windows each open on the long sides. Short, recessed choir, the east window with a tracery-like interior division. The interior of the ship is closed off by an open collar beam roof structure with ridge purlins. The four containers (two of which are free-standing) lie on stem beams with head struts on the side walls. In the choir a simple wooden barrel to close off the room. The bronze bell from 1782 bears the following inscription: "SUB FRIEDERICO THE 11TH THIS GKOCKE WAS CASTED BY IOHANN MELCHIOR DERCK IN MÜNCHHAUSEN IN FRONT OF THE COMMON RODA ANNO MDCCLXXXII". The pulpit comes from the Melsung city church; a simple polygonal basket on a pedestal, the panels decorated with cassettes and arched panels, probably from the 18th century. Octagonal, compact baptismal font based on a design by Hippenstiel, the basin with two short arched diaphragms in each field between strong, circumferential double bulges. The three-axis organ prospect with a high substructure, the raised central field is closed with a gable, the pipe fields are framed by neo-Romanesque columns. Outside next to the church there is a memorial stone with almost illegible writing, apparently placed in 1768 for a teacher. Another heavily washed out tombstone with a crown and angels dates back to the 18th century.

around 1782 79256
 
House of a large yard Roda, Kirchweg 8
hallway: 4, parcel: 66/2
Large-volume residential building in a large courtyard opposite the church. The high, two-story half-timbered house rises above a stone base and shows a dense half-timbered structure. The basement of the house extends beyond the base to the lower chain of bars of the framework and is therefore visually combined with the first floor. The resulting high lower storey shows man figures on the corner posts and flat three-quarter struts on the two middle collar posts. The upper floor rises above this floor with a larger overhang with its dense, regular half-timbered structure with widely spread man figures on corner and collar posts as well as diagonal struts in the parapet fields of the windows. A steep gable roof with crooked hips forms the upper end. On the frame of the ground floor there is the following inscription: "Rely on the Lord with all your heart and do not rely on your intellect but rather remembered him in all your ways so he will guide you right. Proverbs Solomon on 3 Capti VI on 5 and 6 - Johan Conrad Fess and Anna Catharina, a married housewife, trusted God and built this house on the 11th day of Sept. Anno 1748 ". 1748 79257
 
Half-timbered house Roda, Waldstraße 1,
hallway: 4, parcel: 120/4
Set far back from the street, erected, eaves-standing, two-storey half-timbered house on an almost storey-high stone plinth. The house, built in the first half of the 19th century, shows a simple constructive half-timbered structure with steep storey-high struts and a wide beam zone with rounded filler wood under the slightly overhanging upper floor. 1st half of the 19th century 79258
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Am Dammrasen 12
hallway: 30, parcel: 131
Two-storey, eaves half-timbered house from the late 19th century, which marks the junction of the Seigertshausen Weg in terms of urban planning. The floor-to-floor residential building rises above an almost storey-high brick base and is accessed from the eaves via a long, single flight of stairs. It shows a simple structural framework with small wooden cross-sections and storey-high struts. Late 19th century 79130
 
Half-timbered residential and farm buildings Rosenthal, Am Pfädchen 1
hall: 29, parcel: 109
Soaring, two-storey half-timbered residential and farm building from the early or mid-18th century at the entrance to Rathausplatz, which is important in terms of urban planning. The building consists of two different components arranged parallel to the ridge. To the south, a two-storey residential building rises above a basement made of ashlar, walled in layers, facing the street. The floor-to-floor building shows a dense half-timbered structure of a simpler structure with curved floor-to-ceiling struts on the ground floor that ends in a wide beam zone with a profiled upper floor threshold and filler wood provided with dew tapes. With a slight overhang, an upper floor rises above it with a dense half-timbered structure made of strongly dimensioned wood and widely spread male figures on corner and collar posts. At the rear there is a two-storey farm section with a side wall that can be accessed from Rathausplatz. In contrast to the residential building, the commercial section has been decorated as a post-and-beam building with a very high ground floor, which is stiffened with long, slightly curved struts. Mid 18th century 79131
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Am Pfädchen 2
hall: 29, parcel: 101/1
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house at the southern entrance to Rathausplatz on an almost square floor plan. The building rests on a high rubble stone plinth and shows a very high ground floor with three-quarter struts and an irregular structure. The upper floor of the house from the later 18th century, which is timbered by storeys, rises above the entablature zone, which is emphasized by rounded beam heads and filler wood. Here, too, the irregular framework structure is stiffened with three-quarter struts, which were additionally provided with head angle timbers. Late 18th century 79132
 
Five-axis single house Rosenthal, Am Rathaus 1
corridor: 29, parcel: 110/1
Erected, eaves-standing, broad, five-axis single house in a prominent urban location opposite the main entrance of the town hall, which visually closes the square to the south. The two-storey half-timbered house, which is timbered by storey, rises above a flat stone base and shows a very regular, dense framework with steep storey-high struts under a gable roof. Wood cross-sections and woodwork assign the residential and farm building to a construction period in the middle of the 19th century. Mid 19th century 79133
 
town hall Rosenthal, Am Rathaus 2
corridor: 29, parcel: 128
When the first town hall was built on this site is no longer known, as the city was largely destroyed in the Thirty Years' War. It was not until a few years after the end of the war in 1654 that the city began to rebuild today's town hall. The builder Johannes Möller has immortalized himself in the lintel beam above the door. A major renovation of the house took place in 1770 under the carpenter Leonhard Rückert. Then in 1870 the bay windows and the plastering were removed and the building was given a simpler exterior. In its current state, which is partly historicizing, the town hall was moved in 1922 under the direction of the Marburg architect Dauber, who also had the multi-storey loft added to the east side of the house.

The building, which stands free on all four sides on the Rathausplatz, rests on a rubble stone base with corner blocks and is accessed on the south side through a formerly arched door. Above the base rises a high, two-storey ground floor with a dense framework structure, which is stiffened by long, curved three-quarter struts. The upper floor was erected as a multi-storey building over a wide beam zone with a large overhang. The two angular bay windows of different depths were renewed in 1922 after they were removed in the 19th century and provided with a tent roof or a curved Welschen hood. A steep gable roof with double overhanging gables closes the representative building at the top. On the east side, a three-storey, floor-to-storey loft was added in 1922 to plans by the architect Dauber, with slight cantilevered floors and a group of three tall rectangular windows. The inscriptions on the building read: "Johannes Möller Meister Anno 1654.", "Advice after action comes too late", "Renewed in 1922", on the extension: "Work is the citizen's adornment, the blessing of the effort".

around 1654 79134
 
barn Rosenthal, Am Rathaus 7,
hallway: 29, parcel: 129/1
Barn of a former farm opposite the town hall. The barn building, which was built in a prominent urban planning position at the end of the 19th century, optically closes the square west of the town hall to the north. The ground floor of the right part of the barn was built from large blocks of non-layered sandstone, the street front of which is regularly divided by two segment-arched windows and a central door. The upper floor and the left part of the barn with the gate entrance was built in a simple structural framework with steep, storey-high struts. Late 19th century 79166
 
Eichhof Rosenthal, Eichhof, In den Weinwiesen
corridor: 8.9, parcel: 24 / 20.5 / 7.5 / 8.30 / 2
The field name Eichmühle, which was previously called Hof zur Eiche, has existed since early modern times. The name Eichhof has appeared since around 1750. The mill and farm were sold to the city of Rosenthal in 1451, which they sold on to Krauss, the Franconian bailiff in 1626. The mill on the Eichhof went under by 1774. In 1763 the head of the hospital in Haina had acquired the Eichhof. It has been privately owned again since the 19th century.

The property today consists of a large, two-storey main house that closes the courtyard to the former mill pond. The plastered brick building, built in the form of New Objectivity in the 1920s, rises in parts on an older, high stone plinth. The off-center entrance, which can be reached via a flight of stairs with a canopy, is emphasized once more in the flat hipped roof by a triangular gable with a triangular window. Otherwise, the simple building is only structured by corner pilasters and a flat parapet cornice on the upper floor. Towards the driveway, the courtyard is closed off by an elongated half-timbered barn built at the end of the 19th century, which shows a simple constructive framework under a flat saddle roof with a wide canopy facing the courtyard. Opposite the main house there is a stable from the early 20th century facing the courtyard. The large-volume structure, which was built in brick with corner blocks, window reveals and a sandstone base, was provided with a flat half-timbered upper floor for hay storage and a steep hipped roof. A barn that completely closes off the courtyard has recently been demolished due to its disrepair. An integral part of the Eichhof is the arched bridge made of large sandstone blocks. The bridge, built in the early 19th century, spans the Bentreff with a flat segment arch. The iron railing is clamped between building-time sandstone pillars with rectangular cartridges and flat diamond-coated cover plates.

15th century 721592
 
Fallen honor Rosenthal, Fischrasen
hall: 39, parcel: 26/1
In 1921 the community had a memorial erected behind the community hall for those who fell in the First World War. According to plans by the Marburg architect Dauber, a cubic memorial stone with a protruding base and an antique entablature zone was created on a four-way stepped, circumferential base. The obverse shows a Wilhelm cross in an oval cartouche framed with scrollwork and foliage on an oak leaf festoon. An inscription was removed from between the oak leaf garlands. In the lower part there is the following text: "1914 The fallen in honor of the memory, the living in memory". The reverse is adorned with the following inscriptions: “Built by Pfeifer from Marburg”. Reverse: “Join the fatherland to the expensive. Hold on to this with all your heart. Erected in September 1921. “The upper end of the monument is formed by a lion resting on a two-tiered base, holding a sword in its paws and looking around remindingly. 1921 79146
 
Rosenthal, Fischtor 3,
hallway: 29, parcel: 104/2
A two-storey half-timbered house in a small hooked courtyard, built in the early 18th century, facing the street facing the street. The building, which rests on a plinth that has been rebuilt several times, was trimmed in the back part of the post construction and stiffened with long, small struts. The front container, however, was erected in a multi-storey construction and shows a wide entablature zone with rounded beam heads and filler timber as well as a profiled upper floor threshold with a slight overhang towards the street. The structure of the four-axis building, stiffened with flat three-quarter struts, is regularly structured on the upper floor, but has been redesigned several times on the ground floor. The rest of a profile frame from an earlier basement was left on the middle post above the recently replaced threshold. The half-timbered barn from the 19th century is also part of the monument scope. Beginning of the 18th century 79135
 
Two-storey half-timbered house Rosenthal, Fischtor 8,
hallway: 29, parcel: 215/32
Eaves facing the street, a small, shared courtyard with no. 6 at the rear, two-storey half-timbered house. The house, which was built on the former wall, to the side of the fish gate, was built in 1741 according to the inscription on the gable side: "Anno 1741 ZM Casbar Meister". The centrally accessible residential building rises above an almost storey-high base, which has recently been largely modified, and has been tiled up by floor. A wide entablature zone separates the flush storeys, which show very different structures. While the ground floor is dominated by a simple construction made of wide woods, the upper floor was provided with a structure made of smaller-sized woods, which is stiffened by wide man figures on corner and collar posts. 1741 79136
 
Forester's house Rosenthal, Forsthaus 1
hallway: 45, parcel: 1/3
On the road from Rosenthal to Roda in 1890, a two-storey residential building with a gable-free, single-storey extension attached to the left, which is closed off by a gable roof above the jamb. The house with three axes on the gable side and two-axis on the eaves facade rises with its plastered, massive ground floor above a rusticated sandstone plinth. The upper floor with its regular half-timbered structure, which is stiffened on the sides with storey-high St. Andrew's crosses, rests on beam heads protruding on all sides. In a historicizing manner, the gable of the flat saddle roof is boarded up and the segmental arched windows on the ground floor are fitted with folding shutters. Late 19th century 79535
 
Historic city center Rosenthal, complete system 1 The old center of the town of Rosenthal, founded around 1340, is still bordered in the south and east by the Rodebach and the Fischbach. Within this angle of two streams, which also served as a ditch in front of the city walls, the city with its rectangular floor plan stretched in a west-east direction. Three gates were used for the development, the Obertor, the Dammtor and the Fischtor. Fischtor and Dammtor connected the north-south axis of the city, which bent slightly to the east and was largely congruent with today's Fischtor and Marburger Strasse. In the southern area this main axis widened to the Gänsemarkt, which at the same time forms the confluence of the road from Obertor, which is only slightly curved. In the area north and east of the main axes, the three rulers of the city emerged at different times. In the far north-west, the archbishops of Mainz had a castle built for their bailiff, which was initially abandoned over the centuries after the city passed to Hesse and then gradually fell into disrepair. Today only the official building, which was built in the Hessian era around 1699, points to the castle, the walls of which have been completely leveled. In a square of streets south of the castle, the church was built soon after the city was founded in the late 14th century, directly north of the street to the Obertor. Despite frequent damage and extensive destruction during the Thirty Years' War, the church has been preserved in its cubature to this day. The youngest of the town-forming buildings was not built until later under Hessian administration on the eastern approach to the castle, roughly halfway between the castle and the fish gate. After the destruction of the Thirty Years' War in 1657, the first town hall was replaced by the current building in place of the previous building. From the beginning it was located in the middle of the market square, which could be reached via today's Zehntstrasse from the east and the path from Gänsemarkt. From the upper gate and the church only narrow paths led directly to the market square, so that in the 19th century a clear separation was still visible between the western part of the city with the castle and church and the eastern, bourgeois part of the city. These central areas of the city were connected to districts in the south, north and east by surrounding streets, the outer buildings of which bordered the ramparts. Due to the severe destruction of the Thirty Years' War, only the town plan was preserved except for the church. Almost all buildings, including the castle, were destroyed and only gradually replaced by new half-timbered houses. Aerial photos from the early 20th century clearly show that the economic recovery only led to brisk construction activity since the late 18th and especially in the 19th century. Around 1845 a new poor house was built on Dammrasen (No. 24), which consisted of the remains of the half-timbered chapel built in 1703 from the old cemetery, which was then abandoned.

In 1938, Rosenthal still showed itself to be a pure half-timbered town with court rides of different sizes on the edges and residential buildings in the city center. All of the buildings point to the period around and after 1800 through their structural forms and at that time formed the image that shaped the city until the far-reaching interventions after the end of the Second World War. At the same time as these new buildings, the city also grew beyond its old ramparts. These were largely abandoned as early as the 18th century and the three city gates also disappeared at the end of the century. New court rides were created that reached to the two streams in the south and east and also went beyond Fischtor and Marburger Strasse. The area of ​​greatest increase in area, however, is in the west of the city, where the old demarcation to the surrounding area was completely overbuilt by ramparts and upper gate and completely new building blocks were created, which reached as far as the junction of the roads to Roda and Frankenberg. This extension, together with the city center, forms today's overall facility. After the end of the Second World War, especially since the 1960s, parts of the old town changed dramatically. The historical development south of Hintergasse was largely replaced by new commercial buildings. The areas north of the fish gate and between the three arms of Straße Im Sack east of Marburger Straße were also largely renewed. Overall, however, the historical structure of the city can be read both from the street layout and from the still numerous historical buildings.

721552
 
Dreihausen Rosenthal, complete system 2 The entire facility extends along Dreihäuser Strasse north of the old town. It is structured by a row of, but loosened up, eaves-standing half-timbered houses. Behind a residential building, a single house rises at some distance, behind which there is a residential building, opposite the old fire station. All buildings were built in the late 19th century in historicizing half-timbered forms. 721553
 
graveyard Rosenthal, Hinter dem Totenhof
hall: 11, parcel: 2/1
In 1838 the city of Rosenthal laid out a new cemetery on Kirchhainer Straße, just outside the city, which is still in use today. The structure of the cemetery, which has since changed significantly, still shows three grave monuments from the early period. In the back is the monument of the canvas dealer Jacob Schneider, who died in 1850, which consists of a cubic base with inscription cartouches. Above it rises a fighter plate resting on broad profiles, which serves as a base for a stepped obelisk, which shows a cherub on each side and is crowned by a vase. The inscriptions read: “This memorial commemorates Jacob Schneider, Bürger u. Who is resting in this new cemetery. Canvas = dealer in Rosenthal. Born in Rosenthal on June 18, 1775, died there on September 18. 1850. Text Matth. 25 V. 14 29. - The resting place is set up by contemporary mayor Heinrich Rückert. - Sp. Solomon 10 V. 7. The memory of the righteous remains in the blessing Psalm 90 V. 12. - Teach us to be concerned that we must die so that we can become wise. ”In the middle of the cemetery stands the grave monument of the bricklayer Heinrich, who died in 1883 Mohr, who had the stone set up in 1863. The monument shows a column drum ending in a spherical segment, which is divided into three parts by different cogwheels. The upper part has two eight stars and two flower tendrils, the lower part contains the following inscriptions: “Died April 23, 1883. The mason Heinr. Mohr born on July 11th, 1809 married to Gertrude Rückert, thought of death and Gerict, prepared this tombstone and set it on March 10th, 1863. - But we know that our earthly house of these huts is broken, that we have a building from God built, a house not made by hand that is eternal in heaven. "The third historically valuable monument is located in front of the mourning hall and shows two pillars with Gothic inscription cartouches, which over broken combat plates a Moorish-looking, more than semicircular arch with the inscription" To your loving parents ”. The tombstone was erected in 1863 by Conrad Schleiter for his parents Johann and Catharina Schleiter. around 1838 79147
 
barn Rosenthal, Hintergasse
hall: 30, parcel: 99
From the formerly closed stock of barns of different sizes, an eaves-standing, two-storey half-timbered barn from 1737 remained in the back alley. The almost square building rises above a flat base made of carefully hewn, layered masonry stone, was lumbered in storeys and stiffened with three-quarter struts and head angle timbers. Above the high ground floor, an upper floor with a regular, simple half-timbered structure rises above a wide beam zone with rounded filler timber and a profiled threshold, which is covered by a steep gable roof. The following inscription can be found on the ground floor: "Johann Jost Ballzer and Ana Cattarina Maria, his married housewife trusted God and built this building in the year of Christ 1737 the 10th of June". 1737 79137
 
Former synagogue Rosenthal, Im Sack 1
hall: 29, parcel: 41/1
In a population list from 1834, 51 Jews are named in Rosenthal, compared with 68 in 1890. They had had their own synagogue since the middle of the century. The half-timbered house acquired in 1855 and converted into a synagogue, which housed a carpenter's workshop in the 20th century, has been massively renovated on the ground floor. The half-timbered upper floor is still largely preserved and clad with fiber cement panels. Mid 19th century 79138
 
Farm buildings Rosenthal, Im Sack 17,
hallway: 29, parcel: 63/2
Narrow farm building made up of two barns of different sizes and ages. The northern, older part was built around the middle of the 18th century as a three-story building. Broad beams with grooved beam heads and rounded filler timber structure the floors, which are timbered with a relatively large overhang, the structure of which is simply locked and stiffened by man figures on the corner posts. The rear part, erected in 1829, has the same basic shape as the older part, just simpler and with smaller wooden cross-sections. The following inscription can be found on the newer component: "Built in 1829 1 May by Adam Mengel and his wife Helena Schmitten the master carpenter was Johannes and Ludwig Rückert." Mid 18th century 79141
 
Half-timbered property Rosenthal, Im Sack 6, Im Sack
Hall: 29, Parcel: 57.59 / 1
The half-timbered property built on a narrow parcel consists of a row of barns of different ages, arranged parallel to the ridge, which is closed off by a residential building towards the fish gate. First, in the early 18th century, a large-volume half-timbered barn was built in post-and-beam construction, the framework of which was changed many times. In particular, the middle part of the barn still shows unusually large cross-sections of wood, which form a dense structure. Towards the fish gate, a small, two-storey residential building made of constructive half-timbered frame construction was added to this building in the early 19th century. It rests on a low stone plinth and is accessed from the side via a short flight of stairs. At the rear of the older barn, forming the end of the ensemble, a first-parallel barn was added in the late 19th century, whose regular framework, stiffened by steep, storey-high struts, rests on a flat stone base. In contrast to the older barn, which is still largely infilled with loam stacks, the compartments here were already bricked during the construction period. Beginning of the 18th century, expansion at the beginning of the 19th century 79139
 
House of a Hakenhof Rosenthal, Im Sack 8, Im Sack
Hallway: 29, Parcel: 60 / 1.60 / 2
Towards the street, high-rise residential building of a hooked courtyard. The three-storey house from the middle of the 18th century, timbered by storey, rises above a regularly walled stone plinth and shows a high ground floor on the outside, which, however, still forms an above-ground cellar inside up to the level of the first lock. All floors have a similar, regular framework with man figures on corner and collar posts. The only adornments of the large-volume house are the wide beams with their grooved beam heads, the rounded filler timber and the profiled thresholds. The scope of the monument also includes the half-timbered extension added at the end of the 19th century and the half-timbered barn without a number that closes the courtyard. Mid 18th century 79140
 
barn Rosenthal, Im Wall
Flur: 30, Parcel: 59/2
Half-timbered barn built at the end of the 19th century over a flat stone plinth. The two-storey building, which is lined up in a multi-storey construction, has a constructive, flush-lined structure with long, storey-high struts. The building, which faces the street with a wide canopy, is closed off by a gable roof with overhanging verges. Late 19th century 79144
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Im Wall 1
hall: 29, parcel: 136
In the area of ​​the former northern city fortifications, in the middle part of the street Im Wall, which has several kinks, half-timbered house built on the eaves facing the street. The residential and farm building, erected in the early 19th century as a multi-storey building, has a basement made of non-layered stone under the living part and boarded timber frame of the business part. The entire base area was formerly used as an economic part, above which the residential floors rise. The framework shows a regular structure with three-quarter struts and a wide, floor-dividing entablature zone with a profiled threshold, rounded beam heads and filler wood. At the end of the 19th century, the Einhaus was extended parallel to the first by another two-storey stable extension made of half-timbered. Beginning of the 19th century 79142
 
Parish hall Rosenthal, Kirchhainer Straße 1
hallway: 39, parcel: 27
Single-storey half-timbered house, which was completed before the outbreak of the First World War, in a prominent urban position directly outside the former fish gate. The structure of this very early representative of the community building type rises above a flat, regular stone plinth and shows a simple, regular half-timbered structure with three-quarter struts on its main floor, where the community hall is located. Particularly emphasized is the entrance situation facing the city, which is located in a risalit-like porch in front of the gable side. The loggia-like staircase is housed in an open container, the outer stand of which shows a flower capital and the stiffening wood at the top of the head is carved with tendrils. This component is also particularly emphasized by a large, four-part arched window with a centrally curved transom and garland-like sprout in the skylight. The entire building is provided with a two-storey, very steep gable roof, which on the street side shows a slated, mansard-roofed dwelling. On the door there is the following inscription: "Meeting house built in 1914. God bless this house and all who come and go." around 1914 79145
 
Residential building Rosenthal, Marburger Straße 2
hallway: 30, parcel: 94/2
In the early 18th century, next to the Dammtor, which has since disappeared, a residential building with a younger barn at the rear was built on the Marburger Straße. The two-storey half-timbered house, which is timbered by storey, rises above a high stone plinth and shows a dense structure of differently dimensioned woods. On the ground floor, man figures on the corner and collar posts stiffen the construction; on the upper floor, very inclined, almost storey-high struts take on this function. The slightly overhanging floors are visually and structurally separated by wide entablature zones with rounded and beveled beam heads as well as profiled filler timber and thresholds. The building, which visually marks the confluence of Hintergasse, was extended around the middle of the 19th century by adding a two-storey half-timbered barn and today forms a significant part of the southern edge of the Hintergasse. Beginning of the 18th century 79148
 
Residential building Rosenthal, Marburger Straße 3
hallway: 29, parcel: 70/1
The large-volume house of a large courtyard was built in the late 19th century to replace an older courtyard building. The three-storey half-timbered house rests on a flat stone plinth and shows a regular half-timbered structure with small timber and steep storey-high struts on all three storeys, which are lined up flush. The five-axis structure, which is very regularly divided towards the street, is closed at the top by a flat hipped roof over a wide, profiled eaves cornice and reveals a late Classicist design language. The barn, which was built at the same time and directly adjoins the residential building, completes the courtyard complex, which is located somewhere between classic building tradition and the historicizing sense of form of the late 19th century. Late 19th century 79149
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Marburger Straße 5
hallway: 29, parcel: 72/5
In the early 20th century, two-storey half-timbered house in a courtyard was built in historicizing forms on the eaves facing the street. A solid ground floor with three axes facing the street rests on a flat stone plinth, above which a half-timbered floor with a historicizing structure rises with a slight overhang. Man figures stiffen the construction, large wooden corner pieces structure the window parapets and a wide porch, which serves as a vestibule on the ground floor and as a loggia on the upper floor, create the rich facade structure of the house, which is enclosed by a steep pitched roof over a flat jamb floor. Beginning of the 20th century 79150
 
Neumühle Rosenthal, Neue Mühle
Hallway: 9, parcel: 19.22 / 1.23 / 1
The Neumühle, located southeast of Rosenthal an der Bentreff, consists of a massive house, which has now been largely rebuilt, a large-volume mill building and an elongated quarry stone barn. The most noticeable component is the large mill building, a two-storey, multiple-expanded half-timbered building on a high stone base. The half-timbered timber framing from around 1800, each storey with a slight overhang, shows a regular, simply locked framework on the ground floor with widely spread male figures for reinforcement. The upper and attic floors were renewed around 1900 and show a double-locked structure with three-quarter struts. The defining element of the building is the multi-storey mansard roof, whose mighty half-timbered gable looks far into the Bentreff valley. around 1800 79860
 
Protestant church Rosenthal, Obertor 12
hallway: 30, parcel: 68.70 / 6
Even after the city was founded in 1327 by Archbishop Matthias von Mainz, the parish of Rosenthal belonged to the church in Bentreff. It was not until 1427 that Rosenthal became an independent parish. The core of the choir from the 14th century was preserved during the great city fire in 1495, which also destroyed the church. The inscription on the tower from 1518 should mark the end of the reconstruction work. Lutheran in 1527, Reformed between 1604 and after 1650, whereby a small Reformed congregation remained in the village, which merged with the Lutheran in 1820. The church was destroyed in 1641 except for the tower; the enclosing walls remained, but the vaults collapsed and were not replaced. Reconstruction in 1646/47, which was completed in 1655 with the spire. Plans to rebuild the church in 1829 were not carried out. Already for reasons of monument protection, a renovation and extension was carried out in 1888 according to plans by the architect Hermann Raabe in Kassel by building contractor Johannes Bieker from Cölbe and under the supervision of the district building inspector Rosskothen in Frankenberg. The church was widened to the north by a side aisle, a sacristy was built, the half-timbered upper floor of the tower was removed and the spire was renewed. The core of the organ in the choir polygon, which was probably built directly after 1647 and was later expanded, the carved pulpit with canopy and the double galleries with partly lavishly painted parapet panels that extend into the choir were demolished. The organ of the Euler brothers from Gottsbüren was built in 1888 using older registers; it has been replaced by a new one.

The church is elevated on the north side of the street "Obertor" not far from the market square with the view side to the south and southeast. The nave was originally vaulted in three bays with a somewhat retracted, stilted choir and west tower. The south wall of the outer building is structured with relatively short buttresses, suspected to have tracery panels on the end faces, which are at a 45 ° angle at the corners. In the middle yoke there is a pointed arch portal with a rich drapery made of intersecting bars and with vertically furrowed stone blocks on both sides (cf. Gemünden). The ashlar of a buttress with a carved sundial. The north wall of the nave was originally undivided, without buttresses and window openings, it was designed in 1888 to match the south wall and supplemented by a series of small windows to illuminate the space under the galleries. The exterior of the choir dispenses with buttresses and is finished with a profile cornice. Two-storey sacristy extension from 1888 with a door but no window in the north wall. The windows in the nave and choir have two lanes, the couronnements in the choir are made up of pointed, standing quatrefoils, and in the south wall of the nave they are in the form of the fading Gothic (added in the west window). The tower is divided by three horizontal cornices into two storeys with corner buttresses and two further storeys above, the top one with a narrow pointed arch window on each side. Simple portals lead into the tower from the north and south, and on the north side a porch and stair tower were added in 1888. Above the south portal a sandstone with a coat of arms inscribed in a wreath of roses and the inscription: "Anno d [o] m [in] i M CCCCC XVIII / [con] structa est hec eccl [es] ia." The slated tower spire is provided with four projecting gables, from the center of which an eight-sided pointed spire grows. The interior was originally vaulted with three oblong bays as a hall construction, perhaps also a two-aisled, symmetrical hall church with a row of central pillars. Now the flat ceilings complete the choir and nave, in the main nave with longitudinal girders on a hanging truss in the roof truss. The north wall of the nave was opened in 1888 with three high pointed arches on slender pillars without capitals, the north wall above the sacristy with two high pointed arches coupled over a column (originally an organ gallery). The choir, which is slightly higher than the nave, is connected to the nave in a wide arch. The consoles in the polygon corners perhaps for a wooden vault that existed until 1646, another, simple console next to the sacristy door. The open tower hall is adorned with carved capitals: lilies, heraldic shield, braided ribbon and head. Sacrament niche built into the north wall of the choir with profile frame and grille, the upper part of which was probably removed in 1888. In the south wall of the choir there is a lava niche with a protruding basin, next to it a wall niche with a wrought iron grille. From the time after the completion of the church around 1520, the late Gothic triumphal cross (now altar cross) with body of the three-nail type and cross board ends with evangelist symbols in quatrefoils, as well as the squat octagonal baptismal font in chalice form, whose upper edge with tracery frieze, probably also a shaft piece between the foot and removed from the basin decorated with four heads. The four late Gothic standing figures on consoles (the plinths of the figures are larger than the consoles) are probably not originally part of the choir: James, John the Baptist, Peter and Paul. In the choir there are two more grave slabs, in the north wall for "tax master" Burkhard Konrad von Fersa († 1568) with a magnificent double coat of arms and in the north-east wall for Christovel († 1643), son of mayor Wigand Waltschmit, with a portrait of the nine-year-old in a praying pose and coat of arms. The lower, simple gallery balustrades of the old furnishings were apparently reused in 1888 and additional ones were added. Wide wooden plaque for pastors and councilors, first half of the 18th century. The rest of the furnishings date from 1888, including the polygonal wooden pulpit on a sandstone base in simple Gothic-style shapes, probably made using parts of the Baroque pulpit. The surviving, partly badly damaged tombstones from the old cemetery, which was laid out around 1600, are placed on the south and east side of the churchyard, often used on both sides. They date between 1620 and 1843.

14th century, then various extensions and reconstructions 79155
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 14
hallway: 30, parcel: 75/2
Two to three-storey half-timbered house built around 1700 in the immediate vicinity of the church square. The ground floor, which is very high on the outside, rises above a flat stone plinth, which formerly housed the basement, which has now been converted into a shop, up to the level of the second lock. The irregular construction is stiffened by struts of different lengths and head angle timbers. A further storey with a cantilever was added over the present two lower storeys, which are combined in the post-and-beam construction. This shows a more regular framework with man figures on the corner posts, a wide entablature zone and corner posts carved with a round bar on a volute base and mask capital. In 1870, the right part of the building was added in a similar basic shape, which is still accessible today via a double door from the construction period. around 1700 79156
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 17
hallway: 30, parcel: 90/1
Two-storey half-timbered house built after the middle of the 19th century. Resting on a flat stone plinth, the building, which is trimmed down by floor, shows a regular half-timbered structure with three-quarter struts, which have additional ankles on the upper floor. The floors, which are flush with the timber framing, are divided into wide beams. Mid 19th century 79157
 
Rosenthal, Obertor 18
hallway: 30, parcel: 49/7
803608
 
Half-timbered house of a Hakenhof Rosenthal, Obertor 19
hallway: 30, parcel: 92/2
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house of a hook courtyard with a barn extension from the late 19th century, built after 1800. The residential building rises above an almost storey-high stone plinth and shows a regular half-timbered structure with man figures on corner and collar posts. The floors are structured by wide beam zones and trimmed flush. The half-timbered barn built in the late 19th century turned the building, which was originally a single house, into a hooked courtyard. 19th century 79158
 
Three-storey half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 2,
hallway: 29, parcel: 100/2
Three-storey half-timbered house built around 1700 with a former Deele accessible via the gable end. The towering, large-volume building dominates the northern side of the former Gänsemarkt and protrudes north of the confluence of the Obertore into the street area of ​​Marburger Straße coming from the south, so that the beginning of the Fischtor is visually narrowed. The timber-framed house rises above a flat stone base and shows three cantilevered floors, which become lower towards the top. The very high ground floor, stiffened by man figures on corner and collar posts, is accessed on the gable side via a wide flight of stairs and in the area of ​​the lower eastern compartments contains the basement protruding above the base; the western part was formerly used as a Deele. The upper floors also show a regular, dense half-timbered structure with man figures, which is slated on the gable of the second floor and the steep gable field. The most striking feature of the house are the filler wood carved with flowers and tendrils in the entablature zones between the floors. around 1700 79151
 
Earth wall Rosenthal, Obertor 22
hallway: 30, parcel: 38/9
In front of the courtyard of house No. 22 is the lower part of a courtyard wall made of large sandstone blocks with an inscription cartouche: "To God alone, the honor of Ludwig Klingelhofer and his wife Maria, née Rükert, they trusted God and built this building in 1882 20th June the MM was August Theis a. Grüsen " 1882 79159
 
Hofreite Rosenthal, Obertor 31
hallway: 30, parcel: 128/3
The large courtyard, built in historicizing forms in the early 20th century, consists of a residential house facing the street, a barn slightly set back to the side with a passage to the courtyard and two other barns of the same construction time in the rear courtyard. The buildings were built on low, layered stone plinths and have ground floors in red brick masonry. The five-axis residential building with segment-arched windows is accessed in the middle via a short, slightly drawn-in flight of stairs. The house and ancillary buildings show half-timbered upper floors with a regular structure and man figures (house) or inclined three-quarter struts (gatehouse) on the corner posts. The outbuildings are closed off with steep gable roofs, the residential building with a high mansard roof. Beginning of the 20th century 79160
 
Four-axis half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 5
hallway: 30, parcel: 79/1
Towering, gable-independent, three-story, four-axis half-timbered house. The large-volume building, erected after the middle of the 19th century, rests on a flat stone plinth and shows a regular constructive half-timbered structure with steep, storey-high struts on all storey-by-storey woodwork. The upper end of the flush trussed framework forms a gable with a crooked hip and a wide classicistic verge profile. Mid 19th century 79152
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 7
hallway: 30, parcel: 80/1
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house from the early 17th century. The building, which rests on a stone plinth, was erected in a post-and-beam construction and stiffened on the two floors by means of curved struts. In front of this ancient construction, a floor-by-storey timbered container was erected as the main facade facing the street. The house, comparable to the Frankenberg half-timbered houses from the reconstruction period after the great fire in the early 16th century, faces the street with a dense, elaborately carved structure with man figures on the corner posts, whose curved struts extend far, especially on the upper floor. The center of the building is also accentuated by three fire rams on the upper floor and carved head angle wood on the center posts on all floors. The wide entablature zones, between the floors slightly overhanging the street, are particularly emphasized by profiled thresholds, heavily profiled beam heads and fill boards with dew bars. The corner posts are also carved with scale bands and volute bases as well as capital-like masks. The head corner woods are also decorated with carved rosettes. Beginning of the 17th century 79153
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Obertor 9
hallway: 30, parcel: 81/1
Large-volume, three-story half-timbered house with a plastered street facade, built in the second half of the 19th century. The four-axis residential building on the right-hand side has a simple plaster look, but still has the original windows and a wide, classical eaves cornice under a flat hipped roof. On the sides, the building shows a structural framework that is lined up by floors. 2nd half of the 19th century 79154
 
school Rosenthal, Schulstraße 5
hallway: 30, parcel: 45/7
The second school house in the city of Rosenthal was built in 1841 by the carpenter Ludwig Ruckert according to plans by the city architect Happel. The structure, which faces the schoolyard, consists of three regularly structured components that rise above a common stone base. In addition to the two-storey, central, eight-axis half-timbered building with its regular structure stiffened with steep storey-high struts, two similar, single-storey half-timbered extensions were built, the main storey of which is higher than the ground floor of the central building. All three are closed with hipped roofs and their regularity forms a visual and structural unit. 1841 79161
 
Old school Rosenthal, Schulstraße 7,
corridor: 30, parcel: 45/10
The oldest still existing school building in the city of Rosenthal was built in 1831 by the master carpenters Johannes and Ludwig Ruckert under the city architect JG Schleiter. It is an elongated, two-storey timber-framed building on a low, now plastered base, facing the schoolyard. The six-axis building is accessed via an open staircase in the middle of the ground floor. It shows a simple half-timbered structure with flush timbered storeys, narrow woods and steep storey-high struts. 1831 79162
 
Corner building Rosenthal, Zehntstraße 1,
hallway: 29, parcel: 105/1
Large-volume corner building, which consists of a component at the gable end of the fish gate and a component at the rear, at the gable end of the Zehntstrasse. The two-storey building, which is decorated by floors, rests on a stone plinth made of large cuboids and is set back from the street area of ​​the fish gate, creating a small, square-like extension. Both components show a simple constructive framework structure with steep storey-high struts in both storeys, which are timbered flush. The rear transverse building serves as an economic part and is accessed through a driveway in the basement made of ashlar. 18th century 79163
 
Office building Rosenthal, Zehntstraße 12,
hallway: 30, parcel: 24/25
Half-timbered house built in 1699 as the official residence of the local representative of the Landgrave. The two-storey building, carved up by storeys, rests on a flat stone plinth and faces the eaves side of the former entrance to the castle. The two full floors of the large-volume building show a dense framework structure with slightly curved three-quarter struts on the corner posts. The upper floor cantilevers slightly over a narrow entablature zone and a profiled threshold. The stately home is closed off by a steep hipped roof and is completely slated on the gable side. A half-timbered barn with a half-hipped roof facing the courtyard and a two-storey intermediate building built as a post construction in the 19th century also belong to the property of the official building. 1699 79167
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Zehntstraße 2
hall: 29, parcel: 23
At the confluence of the street Im Wall with Zehntstraße, a courtyard to the north closes off, in the early 18th century a three-storey half-timbered house built on the eaves facing the wall. The residential building, which is erected in storeys over a flat sandstone cube base, which compensates for the slight rise in the terrain, shows a regular, dense framework structure with man figures on the corner posts and storey-high struts on the central collar posts on the eaves side. The building, which is accessible on the eaves and gable sides, protrudes slightly in the wide entablature zones with their filler wood carved like a dew band and profiled thresholds. The towering building, erected on an acute-angled floor plan, characterizes the square-like extension at the confluence of the streets Im Wall and Zehntstraße with the Fischtor. Beginning of the 18th century 79143
 
Half-timbered house Rosenthal, Zehntstraße 5,
hallway: 30, parcel: 65/3
The towering, three-storey half-timbered house was built at the end of the 16th century at the entrance to the castle, which has now disappeared. The building consists of two storeys combined in a post-and-beam construction, resting on a high stone plinth, above which a raised storey rises with a large overhang under a steep hipped roof with a double overhanging gable. The building, which is accessible on the eaves side, shows a dense half-timbered structure with sometimes very large timber, which is stiffened at the collar posts with widely spread man figures. Since windows were originally attached to the corner posts, only short diagonal struts were placed in the parapet fields. The most striking feature of the four-axis residential building on the gable end of the ground floor and formerly six-axis on the upper floors are the wide entablature zones with their rounded filler timber and the thresholds carved with dew tapes. End of the 16th century 79164
 
Forestry Office Rosenthal, Zehntstrasse 7,
hallway: 30, parcel: 24/17
The Rosenthal Forestry Office, established in the middle of the 19th century, today forms a closed courtyard situation together with the old school and the old office building. The structure of the half-timbered house, which faces the courtyard eaves, but is flush with the timber framing, with its purely structural structure rests on a flat stone plinth and is accessed slightly off-center on the courtyard side. The eaves side is divided into six window axes, the right three of which are grouped together. Mid 19th century 79165
 
Three-axis half-timbered house Willershausen, Bergstrasse 3
hallway: 2, parcel: 20/2
In the rear area of ​​the large courtyard facing the courtyard, free-standing, today three-axis half-timbered house is arranged on the eaves. The two-storey building from 1824 rises above an almost storey-high rubble stone plinth with corner blocks, walled up in a wild association. The timber-framed structure is stiffened by man figures on the corner posts and on the upper floor also on the collar posts. On the frame of the first floor there is the following inscription: "Soli Deo Gloria The widow Anna Elisa Bubenheim and her son Tobias Bubenheim trusted God and built this house in 1821 - The master carpenter was George Kleim from Gemünden. With God's help and blessings and hard work Zimmerleit through Hauen and Saagen built this house ". 1821/1824 79260
 
Residential building Willershausen, Burgwaldstraße 2
hallway: 2, parcel: 17
The house built by Adam Dersch in 1720 as part of a courtyard was replaced by Johann Dersch in 1866. Beyond the sandstone block plinth, the basement continues into the half-timbered structure of the ground floor, but there it has been massively renovated in parts. The half-timbered structure is trimmed in storeys with a slight overhang and stiffened by storey-high struts. The entablature zone shows rounded beam heads and filler wood as well as the following framing inscription: "God alone honor. Built in 1866 on May 26th by Johannes Dersch and his wife Maria Katharina, born Mengel. Whoever trusted God built in heaven and on earth. Whoever relies on Jesus Christ should become heaven. Christoph Kötting von Sehlen was the master carpenter ". With the three-axis gable facing the street, the building is accessed from the courtyard on the eaves side. 1720, rebuilt in 1866 79261
 
Forest house Willershausen Willershausen, Forsthaus Willershausen 1
corridor: 42, parcel: 7/2
To the west of the location of Willershausen in the Rosenthaler district at the edge of the forest rises the building corresponding to the typical features of Prussian forest houses from the period between 1870 and 1900. It consists of a single-storey barn extension with a wood-clad jamb floor, which is preceded by a two-storey head building. The stable and ground floor of the house were built over a base made of plastered brickwork made of regular sandstone blocks and divided into the living part with a regular row of segment-arched windows. The upper floor of the house, which is now clad, is designed as a half-timbered construction projecting slightly over profiled beam heads and is covered by a flat gable roof. 1870 to 1900 79869
 
Complete system of the historic town center Willershausen, entire complex of the historic town center Only in the last two centuries did the formerly sovereign estate develop into a village. This development was also reflected in the ground plan of the place, which has barely grown since the early 18th century. Even in the 18th century, the land register clearly showed the estate's character. The buildings of the individual tenants are arranged more or less parallel or at right angles to one another on an almost square floor plan. At that time there were no individual parcels, only the entire district. As recently as 1853, the town's twelve residential buildings were "not fenced in, but closed to themselves due to the associated barns and stables". The paths in the village were paved in 1855 and the only access road to the village, the road to Rosenthal, was not expanded until 1908. The village center, which was built in the 19th century, consists of a slightly offset intersection, around which the farms are grouped. To this day, the farmsteads are only loosely and irregularly built on. 721683
 
Two story barn Willershausen, Torstrasse 1,
hallway: 2, parcel: 28/6
The large, two-storey barn from 1808, facing the gable facing Torstrasse, rises at a prominent urban development point, visually dominating the south-eastern area of ​​the main crossing stiffened on the corner posts. The lower storey storey is trimmed flush on the gable ends and built on the eaves to form an entablature zone with a slight overhang and stiffened with man figures. On the courtyard side there is a bar inscription: "Johann Adam Mengelgericht schoph and his wife Anna Catharina and his son Christian Mengel they trusted God and built this Scheur. The master carpenter was Jacob Feisel von Bottendorf on July 14th, 1808". 1808 79262
 

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmäler in Rosenthal (Hessen)  - 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 .