List of cultural monuments in Reusa

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Location of the Reusa district in Plauen

The list of cultural monuments in Reusa includes the cultural monuments of the Plauen district of Reusa that were recorded by the State Office for Monument Preservation of Saxony until August 2019 (excluding archaeological cultural monuments). The notes are to be observed.

This list is a subset of the list of cultural monuments in Plauen .

List of cultural monuments in Reusa

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 8
(map)
1927 Designed by Enno Zimmermann for Max Herold; with influences from reform and country house style, of architectural significance. Solid ocher-colored plastered building with a high mansard roof with 1/4 fore, the upper floors integrated into the roof, Theuma slate base, covered entrance with small outside staircase and front door from the time of construction, large balcony on the gable side, shutters, on the gable window roofing in the form of curved triangles, built as a single-family house . 09247041
 
Aggregate garden city Am Weinberg
Aggregate garden city Am Weinberg Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 14-38 (straight); Am Weinberg 11–19 (odd); After Taubenberg 1–18, 20
(map)
1927-1937 Aggregate garden city Am Weinberg, consisting of 29 settlement houses (all individual monuments) in park-like grounds; The only garden settlement in the city of Plauen, with influences of the New Objectivity of the 1920s, of great importance in terms of urban planning, architectural history and urban development history. 09301807
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 14, 16
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247422
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 18, 20
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247025
 
Settlement house with shop (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house with shop (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 22
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247028
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 24
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247177
 
Settlement house, with archway as a connecting element to the neighboring house (individual monument to ID no. 09301807)
Settlement house, with archway as a connecting element to the neighboring house (individual monument to ID no. 09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 26
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247029
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 28
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247178
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 30
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Oscar Keßler according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247034
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 32, 34
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Oscar Keßler according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247035
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 36
(map)
Around 1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by master builder Paul Stöhr according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247036
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Alte Reichenbacher Strasse 38
(map)
Around 1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Paul Stöhr according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09301808
 
Material entirety of the old cemetery Reusa
More pictures
Material entirety of the old cemetery Reusa At the Lindentempel
(map)
1883 (cemetery layout, last occupancy in 1969) Former Reusa cemetery, closed cemetery with a few old tombs and old trees; local historical significance. Used since 1883 as a cemetery for the Reusa community, 0.71 hectares in area. After the construction of the nearby new main cemetery, the cemetery had become superfluous and should no longer be occupied from 1920. Individual burials in family graves until 1969. In 1980 there were 86 deciduous and coniferous trees, including 30 Norway maples, the tree of life at that time was seriously endangered, still sycamore maple (eleven in 1980). 09247042
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Am Weinberg 11
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247040
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Am Weinberg 13
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247037
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Am Weinberg 15
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247037
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Am Weinberg 17
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247037
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Am Weinberg 19
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247037
 
Wall mosaic in the stairwell of a school Am Weinberg 28
(map)
1965 Wall mosaic on the subject of "youth" created in 1965 on behalf of the Plauen City Council for the Reusa elementary school by the well-known Plauen artists Rolf Andiel and Lothar Rentsch . Both artists provided drafts for this commission, and Rolf Andiel's was then implemented. Symbolic representation of childhood, youth, work, research, space travel, the past and the will for peace. The figures were provided with appropriate symbols, arranged side by side. Your posture is static. The image is shaped by ideological guidelines from the time it was created, many of which were artistically implemented in a comparable manner in commissioned works. As a characteristic mural of the 1960s, this picture is of historical importance, especially because numerous comparable commissioned works have been lost in recent years. 09303921
 
Main cemetery in Plauen
More pictures
Main cemetery in Plauen Kleinfriesener Strasse 14
(map)
1909-1918 Main cemetery in Plauen: garden artistic cemetery design with path system, forest-like trees, avenues, rows of trees, distinctive individual trees, administrative buildings, crematorium, grave and memorial for the victims of the explosion on July 19, 1918, honor grove for those who fell in the First World War, honor grove of the Second World War, grave and memorial for the bomb victims of the air raids of April 10, 1945, small war memorial and Serbian tombstone (Allies), grave and memorial for the victims of fascism, Soviet grave and memorial, Polish collective grave, Italian memorial stone, Gravesites, gravestones and hereditary burials (see individual monuments 09301828), all historical wells, the cemetery wall (west and east of the administration building) and wooden picket fence (parts of the whole); of great historical and horticultural significance. 09247344
 
Administration building, crematorium, grave and memorial for the victims of the explosion on July 19, 1918, grove of honor for the victims of the First World War, grove of honor for those who fell in World War II, grave and memorial for the bomb victims of the air raids of April 10, 1945, Small war memorial and Serbian tombstone (Allies), grave and memorial for the victims of fascism, Soviet grave and memorial, Polish collective grave, Italian memorial stone, graves, tombs and hereditary burials as well as, since 2013, the sculptures of Minerva and Hercules from the former Kgl.  Gymnasium (individual features for ID no.09247344)
More pictures
Administration building, crematorium, grave and memorial for the victims of the explosion on July 19, 1918, grove of honor for the victims of the First World War, grove of honor for those who fell in World War II, grave and memorial for the bomb victims of the air raids of April 10, 1945, Small war memorial and Serbian tombstone (Allies), grave and memorial for the victims of fascism, Soviet grave and memorial, Polish collective grave, Italian memorial stone, graves, tombs and hereditary burials as well as, since 2013, the sculptures of Minerva and Hercules from the former Kgl. Gymnasium (individual features for ID no.09247344) Kleinfriesener Strasse 14
(map)
1913-1918 (administration); 1918 (inauguration of the crematorium); 1918–1990 (tombs and tombs); after 1918 (grave field for those killed in the First World War); after 1945 (grave field for prisoners of war and forced labor) All components of the listed main cemetery of urban history, personal history and artistic importance. Inaugurated in February 1918, the main cemetery in Plauen today covers an area of ​​28.23 hectares. With a total of 7,476 graves, including the graves of well-known personalities such as that of Erich Ohser , the natural cemetery is one of the largest and most beautiful in the region. The idyllic complex with its extensive tree population invites you to stroll and linger. Listed graves as well as memorials and honor groves provide a glimpse into Plauen's eventful history. Based on the designs of city building officer Wilhelm Goette, a plaza was created with a symmetrical axial division through extensive decorative systems. The main building, which is accessible to the visitor after leaving the gate building via an incline and a flight of stairs, is noticeable through its main portal. Initiated by the Plauen Association for Cremation, which was founded in 1901, it was decided in 1913 to build a cremation facility on the cemetery grounds. After the foundation stone was laid in 1914, the shell could be handed over by the Oskar Kessler company just one year later. For the interior design of the main hall, the colors green, blue and purple were used with the most economical use of marble, mosaic and gold. 09301828
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 1, 3
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Oscar Keßler according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247026
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 2, 4
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247027
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 5
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schoenstein according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247030
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 6
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247012
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 7
(map)
1929 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schoenstein according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247426
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 8
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247012
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 9
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto Feustel and Fritz Kohl according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247031
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 10
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247012
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 11, 13
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto Feustel and Fritz Kohl according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247032
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 12
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Otto E. Feustel based on plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247012
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 14
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247024
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 15
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schoenstein according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247033
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 16, 18
(map)
1930 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247024
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 17
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schoenstein according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09301809
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) After Taubenberg 20
(map)
1928 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built by Max Schuller according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247039
 
Reusa elevated water tank of the drinking water network
Reusa elevated water tank of the drinking water network To Waldesruh
(map)
Marked 1912 (above the entrance) Originally preserved stone building, of importance in terms of building history and technology. The rather large building made of rustic stone has a pilaster structure and, architecturally interesting, imitates a temple front. 09247043
 
Residential and embroidery buildings and embroidery machines
More pictures
Residential and embroidery buildings and embroidery machines Obstgartenweg 1
(map)
1896 (residential house); 1902 (embroidery); 1930s (embroidery machines) House, designed by Clemens Illing for Max Vollstedt, followed by an embroidery building, built for Albert Schiller, with three embroidery machines inside; technical monument, also relevance to architectural history. The house is a one-and-a-half-story plastered building (drempel), rectangular windows, door on the eaves side, horizontal window canopies, gable roof, gable dormers. The embroidery building on one floor. In 1930 the building came into the possession of the Paul Hopf company, whereupon the ten pantograph embroidery machines in the inventory were scrapped and the three VOMAG embroidery machines from the Zahn system (1932 and 1936) were installed on them. They were used for production until 1997, since then the building has been the location of the museum, production and sales area of ​​the “Plauener Spitze show embroidery shop”, where the machines and others mentioned are demonstrated. 09247453
 
Villa with period equipment
Villa with period equipment Obstgartenweg 5
(map)
1926 Prestigious villa, built for the factory director Alfred Enders according to a design by the architect Curt Prager. Two-storey plastered building with an irregular floor plan with a polygonal stand bay and massive entrance porch, terminated by a slightly protruding hipped roof. Inside, valuable equipment from the time of construction in Art Deco (gentlemen's room with wood paneling and heating cladding as well as ceiling cladding, staircase with wooden railing, panel doors, ceiling cladding). Three lead glass windows in the stairwell, also from the construction period. Due to its good original condition as well as the rich and high-quality equipment, the building gains importance in terms of architectural history. 09303923
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 13
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247429
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 15
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247430
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 17
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247431
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 19
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247432
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 21
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09247011
 
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807)
Settlement house (individual monument for ID no.09301807) Reusaer Strasse 23
(map)
1937 Individual monument of the collective garden city Am Weinberg; built according to plans by Hans Schurig; Part of the completely preserved garden city settlement Am Weinberg, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. 09301810
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 21
(map)
Marked 1925 The sophisticated row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf, executed by Bauhütte Vogtland and Emil Klix; Reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, socio-historical and, above all, architectural significance. Three-storey plastered building, the front building looks like a side elevation of the row of houses; Entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, original front door labeled 1925, segmental arch roofing, windows almost flush with the wall, framed with clinker bricks, large triangular gable with three axes; former home of Paul Wolf. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247010
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 23
(map)
1925 Erected by H. Zipfel. The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey, four-axis plastered building. Arched entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, original front door, windows that are almost flush with the wall, framed with clinker bricks, two-axis, flat roof extension. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247009
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 25
(map)
1925 The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey, four-axis plastered building. Arched entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, original front door, windows that are almost flush with the wall, framed with clinker bricks, two-axis, flat roof extension. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247008
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 27
(map)
1925 Erected by Otto E. Feustel. The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey, four-axis plastered building looks like the central projection of the row. Entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, above the front door a relief depicting mother and child as well as the inscription: “Live inward, weave outward, look down, strive up”. Windows framed with clinker brick almost flush with the wall, large triangular gable with three axes. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247007
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 29
(map)
1925 Erected by Paul Stöhr. The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey, four-axis plastered building. Arched entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, original front door, windows that are almost flush with the wall, framed with clinker bricks, two-axis, flat roof extension. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247006
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 31
(map)
1925 Erected by Paul Stöhr. The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey, four-axis plastered building. Arched entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, original front door, windows that are almost flush with the wall, framed with clinker bricks, two-axis, flat roof extension. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247005
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Röntgenstrasse 33
(map)
1925 Erected by Max Schoenstein. The row of houses designed by city building officer Paul Wolf in 1925 is sophisticated reform architecture in the shapes and colors of the 1920s, social-historical and, above all, architectural-historical significance. Three-storey plastered building, looks like a side elevation of the row of houses. Entrance area with fired bricks and reliefs, plastic above the entrance (portrayal of women with pigeons). Windows framed with clinker brick almost flush with the wall. Large triangular gable with three axes, head structure. Front garden with hedges and pyramid oaks. 09247004
 

Remarks

  • This list is not suitable for deriving binding statements on the monument status of an object. As far as a legally binding determination of the listed property of an object is desired, the owner can apply to the responsible lower monument protection authority for a notice.
  • The official list of cultural monuments is never closed. It is permanently changed through clarifications, new additions or deletions. A transfer of such changes to this list is not guaranteed at the moment.
  • The monument quality of an object does not depend on its entry in this or the official list. Objects that are not listed can also be monuments.
  • Basically, the property of a monument extends to the substance and appearance as a whole, including the interior. Deviating applies if only parts are expressly protected (e.g. the facade).

Detailed memorial texts

  1. Gartenstadt Am Weinberg :
    When the annual general meeting of the regional association of Saxon non-profit building associations, founded in 1912, took place, its chairman, Dresden's building director and architect Max Oertel, suggested that a Vogtland building company should be founded in Plauen in the Reusa district of Plauen To build a vineyard ("A garden city is a systematically designed settlement on inexpensive land that is permanently owned by the community in such a way that any speculation with the land is impossible", from the statutes of the German Garden City Society 1902). From 1928 to 1937, 43 apartment buildings with 313 apartments (today 288 apartments) were built on behalf of the Vogtländische Baugesellschaft, which has now been founded, and these were embedded in well-designed outdoor facilities. The designs of the houses come from the Plauen architect Dr. Hans Schurig. All buildings in the estate are characterized by the same design elements. The influence of the so-called New Objectivity becomes clear, the examples of which are no longer aesthetically pleasing thanks to their applied jewelry, but rather their proportions. The wall is seen as a surface. The entrance axes are more elaborate and still influenced by Expressionism. The house entrances and the stairwell windows are framed by red brick surfaces. The other windows are also framed by red clinker strips (not preserved in all houses). The original mullion division of the windows was important for the appearance of the houses. The houses are closed by saddle roofs. There are front gardens in front of the houses. The arrangement of the houses along the streets and the course of the street refer to the topography of the railing, which resulted in an interesting staggering of the height of the buildings. The development appears loosened up, the houses are sufficiently spaced from the opposite and neighboring buildings, so that healthy living conditions are created. The apartments in the multi-family houses were well lit and, thanks to their location on the outskirts of the city and the greenery of the area, had enough fresh air with less air pollution. In the 1920s and 1930s, extensive social housing projects emerged in all major industrial cities, the aim of which was to minimize the housing shortage and to create adequate affordable housing that had to meet certain criteria in terms of size, number of rooms, lighting, sanitary facilities, etc. . The "Gartenstadt am Weinberg" settlement is probably the most important settlement project of its kind in Plauen.
  2. Main cemetery Plauen :
    Historical information:
    • 1901 Foundation of the Plauen cremation association
    • 1907 Finding that the other two municipal cemeteries (cemetery I and II) would no longer be sufficient in the foreseeable future
    • 1909 Decision of the city council for the site in Reusa
    • Rising terrain from 405 m to 460 m above sea level (50 m difference in altitude), planned area of ​​37.5 ha
    • Design of the cemetery and the crematorium according to plans and under the direction of City Planning Officer Wilhelm Goette with his staff, City Planning Inspector Dolzig and the architect Wunderlich
    • 1912 Start of the horticultural design by Dr. Rudolf Bauer
    • 1913 Start of work on the buildings
    • February 1, 1918 ceremonial opening of the cemetery
    Garden monument preservation assets and vegetative assets:
    • Access:
      • Main entrances: two driveways with two entrances each and three double-leaf ornamental lattice gates from Kleinfriesener Straße as part of the administration building
      • Side entrances: Commercial access from the west (An der Suttenwiese), side entrance from the east (Sorgaer Straße and Tauschwitzer Straße)
    • Paths and places:
      • Main paths: wide asphalt paths intended as main access routes
      • Side paths: water-bound ceiling
      • Subordinate paths: very narrow paths provided for accessing the rows of graves, in the southern area (grave field VI) made of Theuma slate
      • Square-like extension south of the main entrance: middle access path with asphalt pavement, east and west of it, separated by rose beds, paths with water-bound ceilings and slate channels
      • to the south of this complex is a grave and memorial site for the victims of fascism: to the east and west of it, paths with a water-bound ceiling, of which further left and right semicircular access paths to the crematorium made of medium-sized granite pavement
      • Place in front of the crematorium: water-bound ceiling, east and west of it wide strips of medium-sized granite paving
      • Courtyard of the crematorium and rear entrance: paving made of soap plaster and clinker
      • Grove of honor for those who died in World War I, grove of honor for those who fell in World War II, grave and memorial for the victims of fascism: paths made of slate from Theuma
    • Alleys / rows of trees: forest-like trees in the entire cemetery area
      • Space-like extension south of the main entrance: column oaks (Quercus robur 'Fastigiata') planted to the east and west as a space border, planting distance approx. 6 m
      • Grave and memorial site for the victims of fascism: to the east and west, two-row avenues with oppositely arranged columnar oaks (Quercus robur 'Fastigiata'), planting distance approx. 6 m from the forecourt of the crematorium, two-row avenues of oppositely arranged summer linden trees ( Tilia platyphyllos), plant spacing approx. 6 m
      • semicircular space north of grave fields IV and V: two rows of hazel trees (Corylus colurna), planting distance approx. 5 m
      • Grave field VI: two two-row avenues running from north to south made of summer linden trees (Tilia platyphyllos) arranged opposite one another, planting distance approx. 6 m
    • Single trees:
      • intensely designed southwest corner of Grabfeld II: four winter linden trees (Tilia cordata) grouped around a fountain
      • Roundel-like system north of Grabfeld VI: in the center three magnolias (Magnolia spec.) arranged around a fourth (a fifth tree is missing), outside of the circular path 15 robinia (Robinia pseudoacacia) also planted in a circle (a sixteenth tree is missing)
      • Grave field VII: a pair of hawthorns (Crataegus spec.)
      • Grave field VIII: grove-like planting of Norway maples (Acer platanoides)
    • Hedges and shrubs:
      • Grave fields I, II, II, X, XI and XII: cut hornbeam hedges (Carpinus betulus) along the paths
      • Grave fields II and VII: Bulmalda sparrows (Spiraea bulmalda)
      • Grave field XI: the broad north-south axis of the grave field is delimited by dogwood (Cornus alba)
      • Space-like extension south of the main entrance: mighty rhododendron bushes (Rhododendron spec.) East or west of the rows of trees
      • Forecourt of the crematorium: rhododendrons (Rhododendron spec.) East and west of the access stairs to the crematorium
      • Honor grove for the war dead of the First World War: Juniper planting (Juniperus chinensis 'Pfitzeriana') as part of the entrance to the memorial
      • Soviet grave and memorial: Rhododendron planting (Rhododendron spec.) Left and right of the memorial stone
      • Grave and memorial for the bomb victims of the air raids of April 10, 1945: Juniper planting (Juniperus chinensis 'Pfitzeriana') accentuating the corner of the complex, background planting of the memorial stone made of rhododendron (Rhododendron spec.) And false cypress (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana)
    • Note: The lower part of the complex corresponds in essential parts to the design plan, while the upper part of the cemetery complex deviated from this plan because the originally planned area was no longer required.
    Structural assets:
    • Building:
      • since 2013 the sculptures of Minerva and Hercules from the former Kgl. high school
      • Crematorium: Individual monument, monumental, axially aligned building with flanking side wings, semicircular entrance porch (apse), this is flanked by larger-than-life figures (mourners), main building connected by means of open intermediate structures with side wings, plaster and stone
      • Administration building: individual monument, block-like structure, main entrance to the cemetery
      • Enclosures: part of the whole, plastered brick wall on the north side of the cemetery, wooden picket fence on the east and west side
      • Fountain: total parts, 19 historical fountains made of sandstone or Theuma slate, water extraction points within urn grove, but also the rest of the cemetery area
    • Memorial stones / war graves / memorials and memorials: individual monuments
      • Grave and memorial for the victims of the explosion in the Plauen munitions factory on July 19, 1918: grave field framed by stones with names of the dead, stone cross on grave field and temple-like building with inscription
      • Grove of honor for those who died in the First World War: Grave field for those who died in the First World War behind the crematorium, graves for soldiers who died in the Plauen military hospital, many of whom only died after the end of the war
      • Grove of honor for those who fell in World War II, military cemetery "The victims of both wars": Grave field for fallen German soldiers in World War II, stele from 1994, commemoration of 253 dead
      • Grave and memorial for the bomb victims of the air raids of April 10, 1945, memorial for the bomb victims: Stone Theuma slate with the chiseled inscription "Our dead admonish Ban the war 1944-45"
      • Small war memorial and Serbian tombstone (allies), tombstones for prisoners of war or forced labor: among other things, stone with the inscription "Here rests Serb Damianovic Aleksandar 1909–1941"
      • Grave and memorial for the victims of fascism, VDN - memorial: plaque with inscription, Theumaer slate
      • Soviet grave and memorial: stele with Russian inscription, which refers to the Russian victims of fascism and star, stele and pedestal concrete, inscription plaque bronze, near Schäfereiweg, as well as the Soviet memorial for the fallen, in Cyrillic script "Honor the fallen", simple stone with carved inscription
      • Polish collective grave: Memorial for Polish forced laborers / prisoners of war, to the right of the urn grove next to the main road
      • Italian memorial stone
      • 96 Soviet citizens rest in an area grave: 18 prisoners of war, 73 forced laborers and five children of Soviet forced laborers. On the grave monument: on a low platform a broad base, above it an obelisk with a blunted tip. Honorable text in the middle. Stone, height approx. 550 cm, erected around 1947.
    Graves and burial grounds: individual monuments
    • Grabfeld I:
      • 1. Urn grave Paul Reimann: 1921, architectural frame with flower bowl and urn, grave no. Gb 10, earth grave
      • 2. Grave of master builder Oswald Kriester: 1871–1936 and his wife, earth grave, two granite stones cut with applied writing or indented writing, in between electroplating “Blessing Christ”, life-size, personal historical significance, grave no. Ga 25
      • 3. Alma Thoss: Urn grave, 1928, sample field field 1
      • 4. Minna Greiling: Urn grave 1929, sample field, field 1
      • 5. Richard Hermann Wolf family: earth grave, column with lotus blossom, sandstone, around 1920, sample field field 1
      • 6. Prof. Friedrich Schnackenberg: 1863–1939, music director of the seminar from Plauen, tomb of Steinmetz Ballmann, earth grave, simple stone with deepened writing, significance of local history, grave no. Gb 21, I / 2
      • 7. Gravestone Wilhelm Johann Ludwig Gutmann, died 1927, gravestone with urn from the time the cemetery was built, simple stone typical of the time, grave no. Gb 58, I / 10, grave field I, upper section
      • 8. Adalbert Wöllner: Erdgrab, 1955, Plinte, above a stone cube crowned by a radial attachment, to the right of the main path below the crematorium, grave no. Pb 33
      • 9. Otto Schreiner family: family grave from the 1920s, earth grave, plinth, bronze sculpture, mourners kneeling, Otto Schreiner was a master butcher and owner of a butcher's shop at Neundorfer Str. 30, to the right of the main path below the crematorium, grave no. PC 31, II / D 7
      • 10. Karl Friedrich Matthes, factory owner, manager and owner of the company Matthes & C. Interlockweberei in Thiergartenstraße 27 B, earth grave, burial place for KF Matthes and his family: 1897–1948, tomb possibly older (around 1920), electroplating mourners almost life-size as well as granite block with recessed writing, stonemason Kretzschmar, artistic significance, grave no. Ga 79, II / D 8
      • 11. Alfred Fallot: 1878–1925, earth grave, elaborate and unusual design, oversized stone urn with four angels on the base and upper part, the lower angels with barnacles and cogwheel, the upper angels with compass and drawing scroll, travertine, grave no. Pb 24
      • 12. Prager family: 20s of the 20th century, earth grave, tombstone Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, cube with flower bowl, to the right of the crematorium, grave no. Pb 11
      • 13.Lay family: Jewish textile entrepreneur, probably built in 1921 after Richard Lay's death, family grave site, earth grave, lavish architectural layout, columns and architraves, including stone urns, in front of it a larger than life stone sculpture of a reclining mourner, copy after Michelangelo's Julius tomb, grave slabs for Richard Lay from 1921, Marie Lay from 1982, Hedwig Lay from 1942, Emma Lay from 1923, Louis Lay from 1923, location on the right below the crematorium, grave no. Pb 1
      • 14. Dr. med. Max Sturm: family grave site laid out for Johannes Sturm (died 1913), earth grave, in the middle a stone tablet with crown, this decorated with floral motifs, the tablet flanked by fluted pillars, grave no. Pb 7c
      • 15. Paul Brückner, master builder: 1859–1913, tomb for Paul Brückner and his wife, Paul Brückner was a master builder in Plauen, among other things he designed streets in the south and east suburbs, earth grave, tomb of Steinmetz Gentzsch with slightly larger than life electroplating "sitting angel “On a granite plinth, very nice design, artistic significance as well as personal historical significance, grave no. Pc 54, II / D 17
      • 16. Family L. Himmer, family grave, earth grave, grave wall with niches and urn, around 1934, chief post conductor i. R., lived at Hindenburgring 6, grave no. Pc 52, II / D 18
      • 17. Medical Councilor Dr. med. Rudolf Spitzner: 1890–1969, earth grave, simple tombstone, stonemason tailor, worthy of monument due to its personal historical importance, important gynecologist in the city of Plauen, founded the establishment of the city gynecological clinic in Plauen after 1945 and was its chief physician until 1960, grave no. Pb 32a, II / 11
      • 18. Bruno Heroldt tomb: 1910–1987, earth grave, simple tombstone, personal historical significance, Bruno Heroldt was church music director, organist, organ expert, composer and music organizer, in 1945 he was appointed cantor at St. John's Church, and since 1951 he has led the Riedel men's choir 1956 appointment as church music director, this activity he carried out until his retirement in 1981, grave no .: Pc 30, II / 13
      • 19. Grave of Georg Johannes Lehmann, Lord Mayor of the City of Plauen from 1916–1931, born 1870, Mayor Lehmann made great contributions to the city of Plauen, including the Oberrealschule, the TBC day care center in the Reusa Forest, the administrative customs building, the Commerzbank building, Voigtland milk farm, Capitol film light theater, etc., including the outdoor pools “Waldfrieden” and the outdoor pool of the Naturheilverein, earth grave, simple stone with cross and recessed inscription, personal historical significance, grave no. Pa 14, III / 20
      • 20. Urn grave Seifert: 1924, earth grave, to the right of the main path below the crematorium, grave no. Pa 10
      • 21. Gravesite Louis Unglaub (died 1941) and Hugo Münzing (died 1918): presumably a former machine manufacturer, lying tablet, earth grave, roughly hewn natural stones piled up to form a bench on which a worker with a broken gear sits, bronze, remarkable grave sculpture, artistic value , singular, grave no. Pa 1
    • Urn Grove:
      • 22. Erich Ohser : Grave site in the urn grove, Erich Ohser was a graphic artist and caricaturist from Plauen, urn grave, new gravestone set, old stone is today in front of the new grave wall, this is labeled with "Erich Ohser, 1903-1944, Christian Ohser, 1931-2001 “, With a caricature by Erich Ohser, personal historical significance, grave no. P 400, IV / D 21
      • 23. Klara and Franz Kühn, around 1923, urn grave in grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 176
      • 24. Franz Friedrich Fröhlich family between 1925 and 1930, urn grave, grave no. G 142, IV / D 25
      • 25. Lidda widowed Ebert in 1926, presumably urn grave Kraus ?, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 146
      • 26. Johannes Lange and his family: 1888–1956, Johannes Lange was the boss of Radioapparatefabrik GmbH Plauen, an important company for Plauen's industrial history, urn grave, pillow-like stones with family coat of arms and inscription, stone from 1998, personal historical significance, grave no. G 241, IV / 24
      • 27. Aline Marie Ludwig: Urn grave, 1929, grave no. G 157, IV / D 20
      • 28. Robert Ewald Liebold: Urnengrab, 1928, Liebold was a tax assistant at the Plauen tax office and lived at Röntgenstrasse 29, Grabfeld IV in Urnenhain, grave no. G 107b, V / D 29
      • 29. Family Frotscher and Listner: mid-20s of the 20th century, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 32a
      • 30. Ernst Paul Schellhorn family: 1920s, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 31
      • 31. Family Julius Schneider: Urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 26
      • 32. The Graumüller-Sämisch families, including for Paul Sämisch: 1863–1939 and Luise Graumüller: 1894–1925, Paul Sämisch was a retired Reichsbahn chief engineer. D., urn grave, urn probably from 1925, stump of column with acanthus leaf, border and urn, design significance, grave no. G 53, V / D 34, Grabfeld IV in the urn grove
      • 33. Lord Mayor Dr. jur. Max Schlotte : 1877–1952, urn grave, low natural stone wall, cover and plaques, quarter circle, location in the urn grove, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 67a
      • 34. Carl Hesse family: urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove
      • nameless grave site, pedestal with laurel wreath and urn, grave no. P 25
      • 35. Gustav Walter: Optician, 1925, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 112
      • 36. Hermann Reinhardt Huster family: 1926, urn grave, grave field IV Urnenhain, grave no. G 94
      • 37. Gustav Karl Weber: 1927, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 124
      • 38. Family builder Richard Weber: around 1927, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 124a
      • 39. Ernst Louis Ullmann: 1927, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 93a
      • 40. Werner Eschebach Ing .: 1928, urn grave, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. G 24
      • 41. Anna Bertha Hubricht: 1922, urn grave, Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff urn, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 7
      • 42. Julie Kirstein and Lucie- Otto Hübel: urn grave, column crowned by a flower bowl, with pilasters, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 12a
      • 43. Tomb, Rudolf Max Donnerhack, painter, draftsman and long-time museum director of Plauen, 1903–1980, he attended the art school in Plauen, after an apprenticeship as a decorative painter he was unemployed, emigrated to South America in 1923 and worked in Argentina and Paraguay On his return in 1927 he continued his studies at the art academy in Dresden, then worked as a decorative painter, in 1935 he passed the master craftsman's examination, after military service and prisoner of war he returned to Plauen in 1945 and worked in his profession as well as an advertising designer and became a member of the association Visual artist, from 1951 he was entrusted with the management of the Vogtland District Museum, as a museum director he gained importance for the city of Plauen, he was also known for his extensive lecture and publication activities, for guided city tours and educational hikes, in the publication “Famous Voigtländer” vol . 1 it is also listed, personal historical significance, Grave number: G 98, urn grave
      • 44. Tomb of Dr. phil. Rudolf Bauer, pharmacist and graduate chemist: 1873–1965 in Plauen, Rudolf Bauer took over the "Alte Apotheke" Plauen as owner, he was chairman of the pharmacy association of the district of Zwickau, extraordinary member of the Saxon State Health Office, pharmacy examiner in the sub-district of Zwickau, belonged to the parish council of St. Johannes and was a city councilor for many years, simple tomb with an inscribed plaque by the stonemason H. Schmeißer, meaning of personal history, grave no .: P 31A, V / 36, grave field IV in the urn grove, grave no. P 31a, urn grave
      • 45th unnamed column (opposite the Schneider family), possibly Dr. med. Gerhard Müller-Mellage ?, Grabfeld IV in the urn grove
      • 46. ​​Ernst Albert Friedrich Zuber and his family: 1868–1947, urn grave erected for his wife Alma Emma Zuber in 1925, base with recessed inscriptions over a circular floor plan or stump of a column, above a wreath and urn, design significance, grave no. G 293, IV / D 19
      • 47. Dr. med. Anton Ferdinand Kraus, Sanitätsrat: 1906–1989, doctor, including founder of the district union group of doctors after 1945, resident practitioner and dermatologist in Plauen, doctor in the polyclinic, including specialist in dermatology, his services in the reconstruction of the health system after 1945 are provided by the city of Plauen estimated, among other things a street in the residential area Plauen-Krieschwitz bears his name, he is also mentioned in the "Famous Voigtländer" vol. 2, urn grave, simple tombstone from 1989, grave no. G 294, IV / 25
    • New extension Grabfeld VI:
      • 48. Johannes Hegner: 1924–1979, painter in Plauen, lived at Gustav-Freytag-Straße 4, significance of personal history, urn grave, grave field VI / 41, grave no. G 813
    • Old extension field III West, grave field VII:
      • 49. Grave of Hans Wolfgang Sachse: 1899–1982, among other things he was theater conductor at the Plauener Stadttheater, exercised this activity until 1927, after which he led several large choirs in Plauen, he worked as a music educator and accompanist, was a member of the Association of German Composers in 1951 and Musicologist, numerous choir songs and cantatas come from his pen, urn grave, personal and regional historical significance, grave no. W 2085, VII / 43
    • Crematorium Grabfeld VIII:
      • 50. Stadtbaurat von Plauen: Urn, placed in the forecourt of the crematorium, postament 2, urn, inscription "Stadtbaurat von Plauen, builder of the town hall and the crematorium"
      • 51. Leonora Goering née Scott: Urnengrab, 1876–1922, was married to businessman Johannes Goering and lived at Bärenstraße 23, Postamentstelle 7, VIII / 45, Urne
      • 52. Otto Albert Rahmig: 1849–1922, merchant, urn grave for the Rahmig merchant family, Postamentenstelle 6, VIII / 46, urn
    • Field II upper part, XI:
      • 53. Mocker burial site for Anni Mocker: 1875–1942 and Dr. phil. hc. Arno Mocker, retired factory director (1870–1950), earth grave, cross made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff with two grave slabs, Dr. According to the address book, Arno Mocker was director of Industriewerke AG Englische curtain weaving, tulle weaving in cotton and silk, lace spout, decorative fabrics, apparatus, bleaching and dyeing works from 1926, the cross is the only one of its kind in the Plauen cemetery, of local history, design and regional significance, grave -No. Pb 66, XI / D 46
      • 54. Tomb of Sanitary Councilor Dr. med. Kurt Freiherr von Lamezan: 1886–1977 and his wife Dr. med. Baroness von Lamezan (1895–1940), earth grave, copper grave slab from 1940, Dr. med. Kurt Freiherr von Lamezan worked at the Plauen Hospital until 1924, in 1924 he opened his own practice as a specialist in internal diseases, then followed the military service, in 1945 again a practice in Plauen and part-time employed in the Plauen Land tuberculosis counseling center, when the 1. He was significantly involved in Polyclinic Plauen and made his strength available as an internist in the period from 1948–65. med. Baroness von Lamezan was the second practicing doctor in Plauen from 1924, personal historical significance, grave no. Pc 64
      • 55. Urn burial site Emana Jaeger & Lisch: laid out in 1924, earth grave, pillars with architraves, below urn, next to it stone balustrade or stone benches, grave no. Pb 57
      • 56. Tomb of Dr. med. Ernst Paschke: 1899–1967, Dr. med. Paschke was a surgeon, during the Second World War chief surgeon in the Plauen-Westend hospital, from 1945 he had a practice and clinic in Weisenstrasse, he was famous in Voigtland for his goiter and stump operations, and he also left a considerable amount of money to the local hospital Construction and expansion of the pathological institute, earth grave, simple stone with inset writing, polished granite, personal historical significance, grave no. Pb 45a
      • 57. Friedrich Struve's tomb: 1863–1936, and Johanna Luise Haupt, née Struve (1900–1929), Friedrich Struve was retired district court president, secret judge, knight of the high order, was among other things court assessor, district judge in Chemnitz, 1899 district judge, 1902 district judge , 1905 District Court Counselor in Bautzen, from there he was transferred to Leipzig, on May 1, 1920 he was appointed President of the District Court in Plauen until his retirement, earth grave, tomb probably from 1929, simple natural stone decorated with vine leaves and grapes and old German engraved writing (almost neo-Gothic), personal historical significance and artistic significance, grave no. Gb 155

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