List of cultural monuments in Tettnang

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Coat of arms Tettnang.svg
Tettnang coat of arms
Memorial plaque Deutschland.svg
Memorial plaque

In the list of cultural monuments in Tettnang are cultural monuments of the Baden-Württemberg town of Tettnang in Bodenseekreis listed.

The basis is the directory of immovable architectural and art monuments and the objects to be examined from Section 26 of the Tübingen Regional Council in the version dated July 4, 2013 and the directory “Archeology of the Middle Ages”.

The list is sorted alphabetically according to localities, villages, hamlets and residential areas and within these according to streets.

At the end of the list are two former, now demolished monuments.

Monuments

Borough

City center

Object
parcel
location Year of construction
Inclusion in the list of monuments
Official name (bold)
Description
DSchG image
probably
14th century
Former city fortifications with the visible, integrated sections lying in the ground

After obtaining town charter in 1297 and confirming and expanding it to include a weekly market (1304), Count Wilhelm II of Montfort received permission from Emperor Ludwig the Bavarian in 1330 to fortify his town of Tettnang with walls and moats.
The city wall enclosed the area of ​​today's Montfortplatz, Montfortstrasse, Kronengasse, Küfergasse and Grabenstrasse; In 1633, during the Thirty Years War , the city and castle were destroyed by the Swedes; It cannot be said today whether the fortifications were subsequently rebuilt.
The former city fortification is a cultural monument in its still visible as well as with its parts that have only been handed down in the ground, the preservation and archaeological documentation of which is a public interest for reasons of local history.

  • Montfortplatz 7; see below
  • Montfortstrasse 1, 35, 37, 39, 41, 43; see below
  • Schulstrasse 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12; see below
§ 2
Bear Square
No. 1
0-104 / 1
World icon End of
17th century
Gasthof "Bären"

The "Black Bear" was first mentioned around 1580 as a sign tavern at the intersection of the old post roads from Ravensburg , Lindau , Wangen and Buchhorn (today Friedrichshafen ); that was the time when the three Tettnang hostels got their house names; Until the 18th century , the "bear" was associated with pool justice ; Since 1834, today's stately, gabled building with protruding upper floors, built by Johann Jakob Muttelsee around 1700, has been owned by the Forster family, above the central entrance with a sandstone arch of the two-storey inn their family coat of arms; the ground floor is built in stone, the upper floor in plastered half-timbering .

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Hotel Bären.JPG
No. 7
0-130 / 2
World icon after
1780
Gasthof "Krone"

In this massive, two-storey house with six window axes and a sandstone arched entrance with a barred overhang opening, owned by the Tauscher family since 1847, the last offspring of the Counts of Montfort died in 1787; Today a small, artisanal brewery is operated here, the last of the former 26 breweries in the Tettnang hop-growing region ; Inside the attractive, old Swabian pub, which has remained unchanged since its completion in 1934, the carvings of the lights and the representation of the craft guilds , outside the wrought-iron tavern bracket from 1807, should be emphasized.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Gasthof Krone.JPG
before
No. 7
0-141
World icon 1960
Crown fountain

Fountain with a bronze Madonna figure based on a design by the Kressbronn sculptor and medalist Hilde Broër (1904–1987).

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kronenbrunnen 2820.JPG
No. 8
0-130 / 1
World icon 1829 Gasthof "Torstuben"

The first building was probably not built on this site until around 1700, when a strong increase in population made Tettnang's new houses necessary outside the former fortifications; The first known resident was the butcher Anton Büchelmayer in the first half of the 18th century ; his widow sold the 'house between the Brugg and the footpath' in 1757 for 500 guilders to the Hofbeck Anton Bonenberger; Hofbeck's son, Josef Bonenberger, married Maria Anna Klara Zehender from Vorarlberg in 1786 ; ten years later she was a widow, but married the baker Gabriel Spanninger from Mochenwangen that same year ; his daughter, Antonia, married a doctor from Isny in 1829. Franz Anton Halder, who tore down the 'Haus am Tor' and had today's two-storey, massive building built with a hipped roof, central entrance, all-round cornice and corner blocks; a short time later he took over the pharmacy from the late Karl von Leo and moved it from Montfortstrasse to the new building in 1841; the new 'Haus am Tor' was sold by his children to the businessman Josef Müller in 1862; six years later the business, which also included a wax drawing , was passed on to the merchant Karl Hohloch; In 1907 the house was sold by his widow to the merchant and chemist Alois Locher; his daughter Martha took over the business, which after her death was leased to the druggist Jost Wünsche; In 1974 the house came into the possession of the Schühle family; Anton and Gertrud Schühle opened the 'Torstuben' in June 1977.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Gasthof Torstuben 02.JPG
Bahnhofstrasse
No. 12
0-208
World icon 1901 House Wiesenack

The two-story, yellow clinker building with a trimmed mansard roof and two-flight flight of stairs and cranked triangular gable was built in 1901 for the senior medical officer Dr. Finckh built by city architect Weinmann in historicizing forms; Bahnhofstrasse was upgraded in 1895 with the construction of the Tettnang-Meckenbeuren railway line ; owned by the Wiesenack family since 1935; 1937 Installation of the first central heating in a private household in Tettnang; Renovation 1979/80.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - House Wiesenack.JPG
Domain road

Gone out forest houses / Gone down Schäferhof

Since the end of the 13th century, the Counts of Montfort had appropriated a large part of the episcopal-Constance estates east of the Schussen , including the property in forest houses mentioned in the inventory book from the beginning of the 14th century as an accessory to Baumgarten Castle; the, as the name suggests, originally probably a hamlet-like settlement, which was indirectly mentioned in 1698 in connection with the field designation " Acker bei St. Anna gegen Forstenhäuser ", has appeared since 1743 under the name "Schäferhof" and at times also "Ernstruhe"; In 1852 the “Schäferhof”, which included numerous buildings, including a grinding mill with tanning and rolling mill, was converted into a royal domain . At the end of the 1970s, the courtyard fell victim to a fire.
Ernstruhe, also called the Schäferhof, 1/4 hour south of Tettnang, a very nice farm with a cheese dairy, brewery and a visited inn. You can find an excellent cattle farm here from the so-called forest field. The farm is owned by Mr. Pfister in Lindau, but recently leased. The court took the name Ernstruhe from Count Ernst v. Montfort, who created it in the previous century. He is still called Schäferhof from his first appointment. The farm also has an oil mill located on the same site.
In the area of ​​the abandoned settlement on the northern edge of an undeveloped meadow area, medieval and modern findings and finds are to be expected: The archaeological evidence broaden the knowledge of the history of this place and thus contribute to research into settlement history in the Tettnang area and the material culture of a village in the Middle Ages and early modern times. Therefore, there is a public interest in the inspection and evaluation of such land deeds that goes beyond aspects of local history.

§ 2
Friedhofstrasse
No. 3
0-668
World icon 1880
Country house

The house, known as the “Swiss House” because of its remarkable wooden block construction and architecture, was built in 1880 for Dr. Constantin Locher, senior veterinarian and founder of the "Kistenfabrik Locher", and his son Franz built; the two-storey building rises above a low base and is closed off by a flat gable roof protruding far; the street side is accentuated by a two-storey porch, the south gable wall is accentuated by balconies and the north gable wall by a söller; the two-tone facades are also richly decorated with filigree sawn-out decorative wood in a classicist, historicizing design language; all interior rooms have completely preserved wall paneling; The facade restoration, in which the German Foundation for Monument Protection also participated, was completed in summer 2004.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Schweizerhaus.JPG
No. 14
0-655
World icon 1888
to
1891
Old graveyard
  • Cemetery wall with small Gothic sculptures, 1888 to 1890.
  • Cast iron and colored cemetery cross from the middle of the 19th century.
  • Former, neo-Gothic cemetery chapel from 1891; in 1937 conversion and rededication to a morgue, renovation 1970; after the construction of the New Cemetery, from 1977 it was converted into a memorial for the citizens of the city who fell and went missing in the World Wars; Window (1979) by Ravensburger art teacher Jupp Eisele, Leuchter und Tor (1982) from the Tettnang art workshop Kober.
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - former cemetery chapel.JPG
Kaltenberger Strasse
No. 8
0-221
World icon 1904
Hop Hall

Three-storey half-timbered building with massive ground floor and half-timbered upper storeys; the hall has around 500 square meters of floor space, divided into basement, ground floor, two upper floors and an attic; in 2011 the hall became the property of the city of Tettnang.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Hopfenhalle.JPG
Won Kapellenesch
0-687 World icon 1814 Fallen memorial

Memorial to three hundred soldiers killed in the Wars of Liberation ; Rectangular, upwardly tapering memorial with a small cross, which was replaced by a copy in 1972; the original is in the Tettnang Montfort Museum.
Inscription: Memorial to the 300 warriors who returned from France wounded in 1814 and buried in this place, dedicated by 2 veterans of the city of Tettnang. Hear wanderers we died for the fatherland faithful to duty. RIP

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Memorial 2826.JPG
Kirchstrasse
No. 1
0-186
World icon 1668 Former inn Zum Lamm

A butcher's and inn has been operating here for over three hundred years; the eaves, three-storey and massive building with a facade structure from the 19th century with corner pilasters and surrounding floor cornice has served the Forster family as a residential and commercial building since 1907.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kirchstrasse 1.JPG
No. 10
0-201 / 13
World icon 1686 Former inn "Kreuz"

The stately, gable-free, three-storey, today plastered half-timbered building with a massive ground floor served the traditional Schildwirtschaft on the old Poststrasse to Ravensburg; the current exterior design including the classicist door frame was created during the renovation, probably in 1879.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kirchstrasse 10.JPG
No. 18
0-201 / 4
World icon 1879 House Lott

Created in 1879 by the chief architect Johann Baptist Rapp for the widow of the Kreuzwirt Xaver Lott; the cubic, two-storey building with a mansard roof and side bay window was redesigned in 1910 based on Art Nouveau; the elevated front gable with saints above the central projection was created; The main parts of the Art Nouveau furnishings have been preserved in the house.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kirchstrasse 18.200.JPG
No. 22
0-201 / 3
World icon 1879 House munding

1879, also by the chief architect Johann Baptist Rapp, erected for the city school Max Munding, two-storey plastered building with a high base and a full hipped mansard roof; the symmetrical, three-axis building is a typical example of the architectural concept and the development of the exit road in Tettnang in the late 19th century.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kirchstrasse 22.200.JPG
No. 24
0-225 / 3
World icon 1858/60 Parish church of St. Gallus with previous buildings

Archaeological findings and finds are to be expected in the area of ​​the parish church, which was newly built in 1858/60 on the site of a previous building. These land documents are of interest that goes beyond local history, not least because they assume that the church originated in the 9th century - indicators for this are the Gallus patronage and the mention of Tettnang in 882 on the occasion of a donation from the St. Gallens - could confirm and thus also provide material for research into early and high medieval church architecture.

Commons : St. Gallus  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - St Gallus.JPG
No. 28
0-227 / 1
World icon 1914 Rectory

Two-storey rectangular building with a large, protruding hipped roof, two polygonal corner cores and traveling bay in the central axis.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kirchstrasse 28.001.JPG
Lindauer Strasse
No. 16
0-1413 / 2
World icon 1925/26 Villa Locher

Two-storey rectangular building with original rough plaster, full hipped roof and portico, overlying balcony, vestibule and an entrance door with flanking figure niches.

§ 2
No. 19
0-58 / 2
World icon 1885 House of King

Two-storey plastered building with a high base and a fully hipped mansard roof with a symmetrical three-axis facade and a central entrance portal crowned by acroteries and a winged lion; former “office and residential building”, built in 1885 on behalf of Johann Georg König, the so-called “hop king”, by chief architect Johann Baptist Rapp; König (1842–1901) was an important timber and hops trader, real estate agent and manufacturer; the house was later owned by the district administration and has been owned by the city of Tettnang since 1987.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - House König.JPG
No. 48
0-1449
World icon 1884-1886 Former regional hospital

Built from 1884 to 1886 by the internationally recognized Stuttgart architect Emil Otto Tafel (1838–1914); As a central building, the building is one of the most architecturally advanced hospital buildings of the 19th century; thorough renovation in 1993; Today the city music school and a primary school are at home here.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Music School.JPG
Loretostrasse
No. 1
0-29
World icon Mid
19th century
Residential building

Massive, two-storey building with a high basement, symmetrical five or six-axis structure, high central entrance and full hipped roof.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Loretostraße 1.JPG
No. 3
0-1410 / 5
World icon 1851 Old barracks

First factory building in town, built in 1851 by silk manufacturer Richard Gessler; until 1894 silk weaving on the upper floor and processing of fabrics on the ground floor; after renovation from 1899 residential building for workers in the steam sawmill and crate factory of the Locher brothers; called "barracks" because of the living space in a confined space; Renovation 1985–1987.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Loretostraße 3 2554.JPG
No. 18
0-1403
World icon 1624 Loreto Chapel

The Loreto Chapel is one of the very rare buildings in the country that was built during the Thirty Years War; it was donated in 1624 by Countess Euphrosina von Waldburg-Wolfegg; frequented as a pilgrimage church, there was a remarkable expansion between 1692 and 1694 with three-sided access over profiled wooden supports; at that time the chapel received its current layout; 1900 neo-Gothic redesign.

Commons : Loreto Chapel  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - Loreto Chapel 0588.JPG
Montfortplatz
No. 1
0-3 / 1
0-15, 0-18
0-20 / 6, 0-22
World icon 1667 New castle with previous medieval buildings

In the area of ​​the New Castle, built on a ridge on the edge of the Schussental valley, and the surrounding parks, there are archaeological findings and finds, despite the far-reaching construction work of the 18th century, which removed a medieval castle that had only been in ruins since it was destroyed in the Thirty Years War not be ruled out; These give clues to the building history of the castle, which can be traced here since 1246, and deserve special attention because this is the only way to answer the question whether there was an older count's seat on the site of this Montfort castle, which is possibly connected to the Argengau county and which in documents of Friedrich Barbarossa 1154 and 1158 lived together with high-ranking witnesses named Covno comes de Tetinanc .

Commons : Neues Schloss (Tettnang)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - New Castle 030.jpg
No. 2
0-3 / 4 0-19, 0-19
/ 1
0-144, 0-147
World icon around
1720
Former guard house

Built around 1720 as a guard house of the new castle (architecturally referred to as the cavalier's house); increased in the 19th century and passed into private ownership; The doctor, local researcher and honorary citizen of the city, Hofrat Dr. Albert Moll.

  • Part of the entity “guard house”, see below
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Wachthaus.JPG
No. 3
0-154
World icon 1682 Chapel of St. George with a late medieval predecessor

Probably the oldest of the Tettnang chapels near the former castle or today's palace; seat of a chaplain since 1436; The present shape was given to the church in 1682 when it was rebuilt after the Thirty Years' War by Count Johann VIII and the citizens of Tettnang; When the castle chapel was profaned in 1828, the altar came from the workshop of Josef Anton Feuchtmayer in Mimmenhausen to the Georgskapelle; the guild poles in the Gallus Church come from St George.
Archaeological findings and finds are to be expected in the area of ​​the Georgskapelle, which stands on the other side of the medieval citizen area, whose rectangular single-nave nave with retracted, shallowly closing choir and the side rooms protruding from the new building from 1682: These provide information about the building design and the history of 1435 Chapel founded by the early measurement foundation of the Nuremberg citizen Hans Albrecht and destroyed with the city in 1633. Evidence of the beginnings of the urban settlement that developed after the castle in the 13th century cannot be ruled out in this area.

Commons : Georgskapelle (Tettnang)  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - St Georg 01.JPG
before
No. 3
0-154
World icon 1872 War memorial

Monument to the fallen of gray-green sandstone in classicist shapes with corner pilasters, triangular gables and obelisk for the seven Tettnang fallen soldiers of the Franco-German War 1870/71: Alois Brugger, Gebhard Fuchs, Ferdinand Gierer, Gustav Kramer, Roman Lanz Gebhard Osswald and Joh. Goerg Sziler; Design by the Stuttgart architect Carl Friedrich Beisbarth (1809–1878), inscriptions: “ Aus DanKbarKeit dedicated to the fallen i. Wars 1870–1871 ”,“ Woerth Metz Sedan ”and“ Strasburg Paris Champiģny ”.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - War memorial Montfortplatz.JPG
No. 7
0-152 / 1
World icon 1667 Town hall / old castle

Three-story, plastered building with a stepped gable; built in 1667 under Count Johann X. von Montfort-Tettnang (* 1627 1686) by the Vorarlberg master builder Michael Kuen. Owned by the city since 1904 and converted into a town hall by Eisenlohr & Weigele. Above the portal the alliance coat of arms of Johann X. (center) and his two wives Maria Anna Eusebia von Königsegg-Aulendorf (left) and Maria Anna Katharina von Sulz (right).

Commons : Altes Schloss  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
§ 28.12 D-BW-Tettnang - Old Castle 073.jpg
Montfortstrasse
number 1
  • Part of the entity "city fortifications"
No. 16
0-146 / 7
World icon 2nd half of the
17th century
Residential and commercial building

Eaves, two-storey, solidly built town house with a high ground floor and an old arcade with a donkey back profile on the back.

§ 2
No. 34 World icon 16th century Residence / Former "Wacht am Rhein"

The building, built in the 16th century , is one of the few that survived the fire in 1633; In the 18th century the house housed a butcher's shop, and in 1872 a restaurant was opened here for the first time, which was named "Wacht am Rhein" in those patriotic years; since 2003 restaurant "Brünnle".

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Montfortstraße 34.JPG
No. 35
  • Part of the entity "city fortifications"
No. 37
  • Part of the entity "city fortifications"
Nos. 39-43
0-185,
0-187-188
World icon 12th century Former gate and city palace with previous building and chapel

The buildings consisting of the gate tower, residential palace and palace chapel have their origins in the city fortifications built from 1330 under Count Wilhelm II of Montfort. In the middle of the 16th century they were sold to the family of the land clerk Johannes Teuthold, who rebuilt the residential building and had the chapel added to the southwest corner in 1578. It secured access to the developing city and dominated the eastern intersection of the trade routes Wangen – Friedrichshafen and Lindau – Ravensburg.
In the area of ​​the so-called gate or city palace and its early modern extensions, which were built on the highest point of the core city, medieval findings and finds can be expected. In the absence of sufficient written evidence, the source material to be expected here provides the basis for describing the time of origin and further history of this building, which was probably built as a tower-like stone house in line with the castle before the city wall.

  • Part of the aggregates "city fortifications", see above, and "gate lock"
Commons : Gate lock  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - Montfortstraße 39 and 41.JPG
D-BW-Tettnang - Gate lock 02.JPG
Ravensburger Strasse
No. 8
0-582 / 5
World icon around
1950
Gas station

The filling station on the main thoroughfare in Tettnang was built around 1950 by the German-American Petroleum Society (DPAG; today Esso Deutschland GmbH). It corresponds to the aesthetic demands that were valid after the Second World War and the formal language of 50s architecture: the gas station attendant and customer house with rounded corners and the shop window strip drawn around the corners, the thin roof skin pulled over the dispensing systems and resting on a mushroom-like column.
Since petrol stations, as technical functional buildings, have been subject to strong pressure to change and renew, especially in recent times, the petrol station, which has not changed to this day, is a rarity.
For scientific and artistic reasons, the petrol station is a cultural monument whose preservation is of public interest due to its documentary and exemplary value.

§ 2
St. Anna Street
No. 9
0-1509 / 1
World icon 1513 Chapel of St. Anna

The city's oldest sacred building, donated and richly endowed in 1513 by Ulrich VII von Montfort-Tettnang and his wife Magdalena in the hope of a male descendant; late Gothic net rib vault and coat of arms showing the genealogy of the Monforters and Öttinger over three generations; neglected in the 19th century and used as a barn and stable; 1949/52 and 1971 extensive restoration; renewed benediction in 1952.

§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - St-Anna-Kapelle - interior view.JPG
No. 12
0-1503
World icon 17th century Messmerhaus

Already in 1482 location of the infirmary and leper house of the city of Tettnang; here, far outside the city, the incurable, leprosy and plague “lepers” were housed; Today's single-storey building from the 17th century, with a protruding roof and massive ground floor, exposed half-timbered gable and elevated house entrance, has served the sacristan's apartment since 1730 ; the previously attached farm section with stable and barn no longer exists.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Former Leper House 27.JPG
St. Johann Way
No. 1
0-1435 / 8
World icon 1659 St. Johann hospital chapel with previous buildings

Location of the oldest chapel in Tettnang, first mentioned in 1364; The ruined chapel was rebuilt in 1627 by Count Hugo XVII. due to a vow after the birth of an ancestor, destruction in the Thirty Years War; Today's early baroque building from 1659 with an almost classical, sparse west facade with a striking square clock tower and, on the other hand, an almost lush round east side with choir apses on a clover-leaf floor plan; important chaplains were Michael von Jung and Adolf Aich.
Archaeological evidence can be expected in the area of ​​the former hospital chapel, because as early as 1364 the Bishop of Constance confirmed a benefice donated to the St. John's Chapel by Count Heinrich IV and the citizens . On their foundations, above the former Johann-Weiher, due to a vow of Count Hugo XVIII. A new chapel was built in 1627, but it fell victim to the turmoil of the Thirty Years' War.

§ 28.12 D-BW-Tettnang - Chapel St. Johann 0628.JPG
No. 2
0-1435
World icon around
1730
Former St. Johann Hospital (Kaplaneihaus)

The Spital zum Heiligen Geist, founded in the city in 1489, was relocated to this building around 1729 and was used as a home for the poor and the elderly as well as a hostel for sick people traveling through; after the construction of the Oberamtskrankenhaus in 1886 maternity ward until the end of the 1950s and old people's home until 1972; Contrary to today's name, the chaplains of St. Johann did not live here.

§ 28.12 D-BW-Tettnang - Kaplaneihaus 0639.JPG
Schlossstrasse
No. 2 World icon around
1720
Cavalier building

Built around 1720 on one floor as a guard house, architecturally referred to as a cavalier's house; increased in the 19th century and passed into private ownership; Café Montfort was located here at the beginning of the 20th century .

  • Part of the entity “guard house”, see above
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Kavaliersgebäude.JPG
No. 3
0-110 / 1
World icon 1775 Residential building

The only surviving late baroque house in Tettnang from the time of the Counts of Montfort; built in 1775 in a prominent corner to the castle, probably designed for a Montfort court official; The same corner house until 1871 at the end of the street, with the former Count's riding school in between until 1872.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Schlossstrasse 3.JPG
Schützenstrasse
No. 5
0-20 / 6
World icon 1902/03
Former forester's house

Built in 1902/03 as a forestry office building with official residence according to plans of the responsible royal district forest office in Ravensburg; The two-storey building on a high base with a mansard roof and central projections is structured by plastered corner pilasters and finely profiled cornices; it has been owned by the city since 2007; today motor vehicle registration office, municipal gallery and office of the support group Heimatkunde.
The associated, single-storey and plastered outbuilding served as a horse stable and carriage shed.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Former forest house.JPG
No. 9
0-20 / 7
World icon 1736
Former shooting range

In place of a garden house that burned down in 1735, the so-called shooting house - a three-axis, single-storey central pavilion with a receding wing on each side with concave curved full hipped roofs and seventeen round arches on the front - was built on the western wall of the palace garden and inaugurated on October 15, 1736.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Former shooting house.JPG
Schulstrasse
No. 4
0-152
World icon 1688
Former Montfortsches Amtshaus

Stately, two-storey, seven-axis and massive rectangular building with stepped gables; the similarities with the old castle point to the same Vorarlberg master builder Michael Kuen. Remarkable: ridge ventilation as on the old castle in the form of the count's coat of arms, the Montfort flag; Owned by the Bueble family since 1837.

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 5
0-151
World icon late
17th century
Residential building

Eaves, massive, two to three-storey building with a stepped gable and wooden box cornice and formerly large arched entrances on the high ground floor.

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 6
0-144 / 1
World icon late
17th century
Residential building

Former chaplain house of St. Anna; Eaves, two-storey, massive building with a baroque cornice as well as a horizontal roof structure, vaulted cellar and stucco-framed ceilings.

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 7
  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
No. 8
  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 9
  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 10
0-137
World icon probably
16th century
Former school house

Eaves, originally two-storey half-timbered building with high ground floor and side floor plan; German school from 1570 to 1783 on the ground floor, teacher's apartment on the 1st floor. In 1730 the apartment was extended for the organist. As a result of the introduction of compulsory schooling, the school was relocated to the gate lock building in 1783. Then sewing and agricultural school.

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Former schoolhouse.JPG
No. 11
0-136
World icon around
1600

Residential building

Small, eaves-facing, two-storey, today plastered half-timbered house with a standing roof structure

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
No. 12
0-135
World icon before
1700

Residential building

Eaves, three-storey town house with solid ground floor and now plastered projecting half-timbering on the upper floor and dormer window

  • Part of the aggregate “city fortifications”, see above
§ 2
Tobelstrasse
formerly
No. 28
World icon

Expired paper mill

In Tettnang a paper maker was named between 1673 and 1687, in 1716 the paper maker Matthäus Weber zu Tettnang was awarded the paper mill including the herb garden and Wiesplatz by Count Anton von Montfort ; the building below the lower mill seems to have been removed soon afterwards, because as early as 1736 the “old paper mill” was left to the Montfort landscape as barracks. On the area that was not built up after the house was demolished, which is still bordered by the Mühlbach coming from the former Untermühle, one can assume the existence of early modern finds. This material represents an important source of the history of the paper mill, which represents a business that is rare outside the centers of the paper industry, so that there is a public interest in documentation of such possible archaeological evidence for reasons of local history and technology.

§ 2
Wangener Strasse
No. 20
0283/3
and
0282/7
World icon ' Obermühle with Mühlkanal

The mill with the pond was first mentioned in 1393 in connection with the morning gift for Anne von Waldburg and is therefore the oldest mill in Tettnang; the two-storey building with a protruding saddle roof and the associated agricultural buildings were Montforts, later Austrian fiefs; owned by the Haug family since 1960; Mill equipment from 1843 and from the 1920s.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Obermühle 2803.JPG
Wine route
No.
40-673
World icon 1912/14
1987
Uhland school with Jahn gym

The school, built in 1912/14 by city architect Wenzler, initially housed eight elementary school classes, as well as the Latin school that had existed since 1816 and the secondary school founded in 1845; the gym building, 30 meters long and 14 meters wide, is connected to the north by a connecting passage; both buildings have baroque architectural features.

Commons : Uhlandschule  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Uhlandschule.JPG

Districts, hamlets

Object
parcel
location Built
in the list of monuments
Official name (bold)
Description
DSchG image
Argenhardt
today
1, 1a,
2, 2a-c
0-3055 / 5
0-3059
World icon 1355 Former monastery with previous buildings

In the middle of the 14th century, the Tettnang clergyman Marquard retreated to the Argenhardt forest and founded a chapel there, possibly on the site of an old hermitage, because in 1291 and 1304 'Brothers' from Argenhardt are mentioned in sales transactions; Count Heinrich III left the All Saints' Chapel “to the upper cell”. von Montfort in 1359 of the order of the Paulines founded in Hungary around 1250 ; after Tannheim am Schwarzwald and Rohrhalden near Kiebingen , Argenhardt was the third founding of the Swabian Pauline Province; In 1363 the chapel was released from its ties to Langenargen, and in 1389 a prior was mentioned for the first time; In the early 15th century a new chapel was built, in 1672 the monastery branch of Argenhardt affiliated to Langnau monastery, which was closed in 1787 and Argenhardt was sold as a farm; when the estate was divided up in 1829, the Wendelins chapel adjoining the former brotherhood building was converted into a residential and economic building.
On the entire area of ​​the former monastery, archaeological findings and finds that certainly go back to the 14th century and document the building history and the material culture of this spiritual institution can be expected. For reasons of home and church history, there is a public interest in viewing and scientifically evaluating such evidence.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Baumgarten
No. 5
0-2825 / 9
late
18th century
Small farmhouse

Eaves, single-storey and plastered single house with wide rectangular windows, solid living area and half-timbered in the economic area

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Brünnensweiler, won Erlenhölzle
0-2488 World icon End of the
19th century
Lourdes grotto

Artificial rock grotto with painted plaster figures of Our Lady and the kneeling Bernadette .

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Brünnensweiler grotto.jpg
Hagenbuchen, won Barbarabildbogen
0-3058 / 1 World icon around
1780
Wayside shrine

Wayside shrine on a bricked, plastered base with niche; therein a representation of Barbarian painted on wood with the coat of arms of the Montforters and the inscription “ St. Barbara! Oh hl. Barbara you noble bride. Be body u. Entrusted to the soul. Both in life and in death. Come to our help in our last need and give me the most holy sacrament before the end. Our Father ... "

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - wayside shrine Barbarabildbogen.JPG
Lost hermitage

In 1291 and 1304 brothers from Argenhardt are mentioned in sales transactions, it is not certain whether these first documentary mentions, which indicate the existence of a monastery cell in the Argenhardt forest, refer to the later brother house; the hermitage located about five hundred meters south of today's Hagenbuchen existed in the middle of the 14th century, because in 1359, when Count Heinrich III. from Montfort the Pauliner brought to Argenhardt, this is called the 'upper cell'; In 1426 the cell with the house and pond was bought by a Ravensburger citizen, at the beginning of the 16th century it came into the possession of those of Montfort and appeared in 1714 as a Montfortsches Schupflehen; Even in the original cadastral plan of the 19th century, the brother house, which consists of a residential part and an economy, is recorded. Medieval and modern artefacts can be expected
on the former Hofraite : These provide information about the history and material culture of one of the hermitages that existed in large numbers in the late Middle Ages, but can now only rarely be located with certainty. There is a public interest in viewing and evaluating such possible archaeological evidence from the point of view of local history.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Kaltenberg
No. 2
0-2401 / 1
World icon 1875 Villa with equipment

One to two-storey residential building with a representative entrance portal, two pointed-arched windows and a tracery rosette on the north gable as well as valuable interior features: Gothic salon, tiled stoves and cast-iron spiral staircase

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 3
0-2401 / 1
World icon 1866/67 Hopfenburg

The former hop dry building is an elongated, three-and-a-half-storey half-timbered building with a central projectile and triangular gable as well as two multi-storey corner cores, a wide central portal, roof turret-like gabled houses and narrow, vertical-format windows; The client - according to plans by foreman N. Rapp - was Israel Friedrich Wirth from Stuttgart ; on September 9, 1977, the last kilning took place here.

§ 12 Monument unknown.png
Missenhardt
at
No. 1
(12th century)
Lost Ried Castle

The Burgstall is located below the Missenhardt courtyards, about fifty meters southwest of house no. 1; it shows an irregular floor plan with a maximum width of 24 and length of 32 meters; the first owner known by name and possibly also the builder of the castle is Rupert von Ried mentioned in 1116; In the 13th and 14th centuries, the von Ried family belonged to one of the most frequently attested families in the Tettnang area and owned numerous possessions; heavily indebted, they were forced to sell half of the castle to the Counts of Montfort in 1360, the other part came to Montfort four years later via Eberhard von Aspermont ; In 1428 Count Wilhelm V of Montfort pledged the courtyard; may stand in the 16th century nor the dungeon , because the adjacent Missenhardt is referred to in a pasture dispute in 1547 as a community, "the tower".
Within the area, archaeological findings and finds that provide information about the beginnings and further history of this castle can be expected. (...) Regardless of the fact that the site is worth preserving, there is a public interest in scientific documentation of the archaeological evidence for reasons of local and regional history.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Neuhalden
No. 1/1
0-1557
World icon 2nd half of the
18th century
Ausgedinghaus

Small, two-storey building, now plastered, with a solid ground floor, external staircase on the side and exposed framework structure on the upper and top floors

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
reed
No. 6
0-2883
World icon 19th century Former Riedmühle

With the miller Kaspar Moll, the Riedmühle is mentioned for the first time around 1600, as a Montfortian fief "St. Catharina Guth “called; In 1852 the Heine family took over the mill, a stately, two-story, gable-free plastered building, and operated it until the early 1950s; After decay, restoration and commissioning of the overshot mill wheel in 1985 by the Heimatkunde support group.

Commons : Riedmühle  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Riedmühle 0604.JPG
Zimmerberg
at
No. 3
0-2715
World icon 1918
Court cross

High wooden cross with a rounded protective housing made of sheet metal and colored wooden crucifix

§ 2 Monument unknown.png

Kau village

Object
parcel
location Year of construction
Inclusion
in the
list of monuments
Official name (bold); description DSchG image
Kau, Hegenenstrasse
No. 6
0-11549
World icon 18th century
Crucifixion group

Crucifixion group in an upright rectangular case with colored wooden figures.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png

Langnau village

Object
parcel
location Year of construction
Inclusion in the list of monuments
Official name (bold)
Description
DSchG image
Apflau, Im Ösch
at
No. 50
0-2901
World icon around
1900
crossroads

High wooden cross with a decoratively designed protective housing made of wood and a colored wooden crucifix.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Apflau, won corners
probably
13th century
Lost castle

On the north-eastern edge of the Rieselsberg, about 500 meters south of Apflau , a castle hill juts out like a spur about 35 meters above the valley floor; it shows a north-easterly orientation and is divided into two clearly separated areas; the complex can probably be associated with the local nobility of Apflau, who was first mentioned in 1244 with an Ulrich as a witness of a document deal taking place at Schmalegg Castle and who appeared for the last time in 1340 with a Rudolph de Aphlow .
In the area of ​​the abandoned castle, the time of its construction, due to its type and documentary tradition, can be dated to the 13th century, one can assume the existence of medieval land documents. There is a public interest in preserving the largely undisturbed site monument itself as well as in scientific documentation of the possible land documents from the aspects of local history and castle history.

§ 2 Apflau-5951.jpg
Bath huts
No. 1
0-4158
World icon
around
1700
Gutsgasthof Badhütten
  • Main building: stately, elongated, two-storey and massive building with a large dance hall; 1846 in the rear part of the building brewery with a representative entrance portal and radial windows.
  • Mineral bath: The spring is contained in a special room called the bath hut. At the bath there is also an excellent source of the purest drinking water, which the bath owner intends to use to set up a cold water spa. The bathroom, formerly a Gräfl. Montfortsche Anstalt, was already known and visited in older times, but it was almost completely in decline, and only in more recent times has it been more industrious and visited by distant guests after its current owner, Mr Heimpel, has put it in its current state Has.

In the area of ​​the former mineral baths in Badhütten , mentioned for the first time in 1515 and existing until 1960 , settlement finds are to be expected that should date back to the late Middle Ages and that can provide information about the history of the residential area as well as the facilities related to its function as a bath.

D-BW-Tettnang-Badhütten - Gasthof.JPG
Bleichnau, won sea ​​wood
Lost castle

About 400 meters north-northeast of the hamlet of Bleichnau , in the Gewann Meerholz, directly on the steep drop into the Argental, there is an extensive castle site surrounded by ditches with a total length of about one hundred meters. It rises up to nine meters, its surface shows an approximately rectangular floor plan with a length of 21 meters and a width of nine to ten meters; There are no traces of development.
In the area of ​​this lost castle (...) one can expect archaeological findings and finds: They represent the only sources that contain statements on the dating and possibly also on the function of the early - probably no longer used since the 13th century when a denser document tradition began. to the Middle High Medieval fortification, which was called " Arnoldsburg " in the 19th century . For reasons of castle research as well as the local and regional history, there is a public interest in the preservation of the site monument itself as well as in the scientific documentation of emerging land documents.

§ 2 Arnoldsbühl-5779.jpg
Breast house
No. 2
0-629
Mid-
18th century
Residential building

Today plastered, single-storey exposed half-timbered building with a high, solid base and a segmented house entrance.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Dentenweiler
No. 14
0-1915
World icon 1706 Chapel “St. Maria"

Small, plastered rectangular building with small, flat-arched windows and segment-arched entrance with a brick cross, donated in 1706; Renewed in 1866.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Echetweiler
at
No. 1
0-1521 / 2
probably
18th century
Bakehouse

Small rectangular building built in quarry stone with a carefully squared chimney funnel inside.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Gotzenweiler
No. 3
0-1394
1696 Farmhouse

One-storey single-storey house with a two-flight flight of stairs and protruding east gable, now a plastered living area and a living room with three-part, renewed ribbon windows.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Heggelbach
at
No. 2
0-2477
0-3755
World icon early
20th century
Iron suspension bridge

Bridge over the Argen with a span of about forty meters with spiral rope cables as hanging straps and concrete abutments.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Argensteg Heggelbach.jpg
Hiltensweiler, Bleichnauer Strasse
No. 3
0-1150
around
1795
New rectory

Representative, massive, two-storey building with vertical-format sandstone-framed windows, symmetrical facade and a fully hipped roof and outstanding fittings, including door frames made of walnut with inlays; built from the demolition material of the former Langnau monastery.

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - old rectory Hiltensweiler.jpg
at
No. 11
0-1163
late
19th century
crossroads

Simple wooden cross with acroteria adorned sheet metal canopy and colored wooden crucifix.

§ 2 Hiltensweiler-5755.jpg
Hiltensweiler, Dorfstrasse
No. 3
0-1140
World icon 1516 Parish Church of St. Dionysius with previous buildings

Rectangular single-aisle building with a retracted choir closing on three sides and a medieval tower with a crippled-hip roof; Baroque style in 1736, including a walled churchyard. Archaeological findings and finds are to be expected in the area of ​​the church: These can provide information on the time of origin and the further history of the church, which was first mentioned in 1194.

Commons : Parish Church of St. Dionysius  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang-Hiltensweiler - St Dionysius.jpg
Hiltensweiler, won Hennenbühl
Abandoned local nobility seat

Arnold von Hiltensweiler , first mentioned in a document in 1100, is together with his wife in 1122 the founder of the monastic settlement in Hiltensweiler, subordinated to Schaffhausen, the " cella Arnoldi Hildiniswilare ", which he furnished with goods in nine surrounding villages; a castle site on the north-eastern outskirts (northeast of house no. 42), which is only faintly visible in the area, was probably the seat of this family; it is a place projecting into a deep brook, the original size of which may have been reduced by landslides.
Archaeological findings and finds cannot be ruled out on the area indicated here: They should provide information on the time of origin and further history of this aristocratic residence, which was probably designed as a moth . There is a public interest in scientific documentation of such testimonies for reasons of local and regional history as well as for castle-historical aspects.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Iglerberg, Won Schoos
Disappeared settlement

The settlement, located around 1.4 kilometers southwest of today's hamlet Iglerberg in Gewann Schoos, was first mentioned in 1380: at that time Count Heinrich IV of Montfort handed over the farm "uff der Schooß" to the Pauline monastery Argenhardt; In 1598, in a property register of the Argenhardt cell, a distinction was made between “upper” and “lower floor”, in 1787 the courtyard consisting of a house, barn and oven kuchel (bakery?) Was described as having no construction; canceled.
On the former court yard, which still marks a stand of ash planted shortly after the Second World War and whose filled well is still visible as a circle in the forest floor, while the terraced walls of a former vineyard have been preserved on the strongly overgrown slope to the north, one can assume the existence of archaeological evidence : These provide data on the formation and further history of a small settlement that may have arisen in the course of the medieval country development. There is therefore a public interest in documentation of such findings and findings on building history and material culture for reasons of local history.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Laimnau, Argentalstrasse
next to
No. 60
0-2031
World icon Lourdes grotto

Artificial rock grotto with painted plaster figures of the standing Virgin Mary and the kneeling Bernadette.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Laimnau, Fischerweg
No. 1
0-2006
probably
1701
Former Catholic rectory

Two-storey, massive tree with a slightly protruding, now plastered, half-timbered upper storey, protruding east gable and sandstone-framed windows on the west gable wall.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
at
No. 5
0-2005
World icon 1921 Memorial to the fallen of the First World War

Monument from the workshop of the Josef Brothers; semicircular rock scenery with praying soldiers and name boards; supplemented after the Second World War.

§ 2 Laimnau-3158.jpg
Laimnau, Peter-und-Paul-Platz
No. 2
0-2010
World icon 1834 Old school house

Stately, two-storey, elongated, massive tree with a fully hipped roof as well as a six-axis facade, vertical-format windows and surrounding wooden eaves.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No.
40-2007
World icon 1466 Parish church of St. Peter and Paul with previous buildings

Romanesque choir side tower and retracted choir closing on three sides; 1466 new buildings and renovations, redesigned in baroque style in the 17th and early 18th centuries; the nave was replaced by a new building in 1966.
In the choir area of ​​the parish church, which was the only part of the old church to be preserved in the new building apart from the tower, there are archaeological findings and finds that were sure to date back to the first half of the 13th century - in 1269 Albert von Summerau sold his Laimnau property, among other things Church patronage to the cathedral chapter of Konstanz - handing back, possible. This may also answer the question of whether the place mentioned in 769 and belonging to the early medieval settlement period - at that time the St. Gallen monastery was owned by a "Scalcomann" in "Limavvia" - had a church dating from the Carolingian period.

§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang-Laimnau - St Petrus and Paulus Church.JPG
Laimnau, Ritterstrasse
No. 5
0-2023
World icon 1726 "Zum Ritter" inn

Stately, two-story village inn with exposed half-timbering on the upper floor.
Anton Dillmann took over the house on July 2, 1917, and passed it on to his daughter Frida 21 years later; In 1968 the house came into the possession of the Tettnang family Tauscher; In 2007 the Köppl couple took over the inn and had it thoroughly renovated.

§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - Laimnau - Ritter 01.JPG
Laimnau, won Drachenstein
World icon Mid
15th century
Former weir system

Above, around five hundred meters north of Laimnau, there is a weir system around 130 meters long, which appears in documents as "Trackenstein das Burgstall" in 1480, but no sources give any information about its original function and owner; the inner surface, encompassed by ditches and ramparts, forms an approximately quadrangular plan with strongly rounded corners; its greatest width is eighteen, the maximum length 53 meters.
Archaeological findings and finds within the area cannot be ruled out: only with such sources it should be possible to more precisely date these fortifications, which were probably built in two phases, based on topological criteria, only very roughly as medieval. For these reasons, which are important for the history of the Tettnang area as well as aspects of castle history, there is a public interest in scientific documentation of such land documents.

Commons : Drachenstein  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 2 Drackenstein 2136.jpg
Laimnau, won Keßlerberg
Departed yard

The existence of a farm can be seen for the first time in the interest book of Lindau Hospital from 1454: Here the "kesslerin vff dem berg" is called. In 1523 a fief lapel was issued for the Spitalhof and estate on the Keßlerberg; the Kesslergut people are not subject to the Spital-Lindau lower court of Laimnau, but to Montfort's lower jurisdiction; In 1584 the Lindau hospital received two interest hens from the Keßlerberg, where it also had a tree garden; the courtyard buildings still appear on the maps of Johann Jacob Heber from 1701 and 1721, but were probably removed soon afterwards, because they are no longer even evidenced by the field names in the original cadastre.
In the area of ​​the abandoned farm, about 700 meters north of Laimnau on the way to Iglerberg, archaeological findings and finds are possible: These land documents represent source material on the history of the farm, which was probably built in the late Middle Ages, so that there is a public interest in securing and evaluating them for reasons of local history.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Muttelsee
No. 32
0-1422
around
1700
Chapel of St. Mary

Small, plastered rectangular building with a simple eaves cornice made of wood and a shoulder arched entrance.

§ 2
Oberlangnau, Argenstrasse
No. 6
and
No. 10
twenty
parcels
World icon 1480 Former / retired Pauline monastery

Between 1179 and 1242 Oberlangnau gained importance through the establishment of the monastery; for lack of money it was handed over to the then Vogt, Count Heinrich von Montfort , in January 1389 ; on April 24, 1405, he in turn gave the monastery to the order of St. Paul the first hermit, already represented as a cell in the region in Argenhardt (Paulines according to the Augustinian rule , actually founded by forest brothers ), who converted it to the Pauline hermit monastery . A library is documented, although the monastery itself never achieved any particular importance - for example because of the number of around twenty monastery brothers or because of outstanding intellectual achievements; Nevertheless, the place had gained in importance since the arrival of the Paulines, namely as the burial place of the Counts of Montfort; In 1525 the monastery was looted twice in the context of the Peasants' War, the monks fled for a short time while the peasant council met in the monastery itself; In February 1647, during the turmoil of the Thirty Years' War , the neighboring Lindau was besieged unsuccessfully by Swedish troops who burned the monastery down when they withdrew; in the time of Josephinism the monastery was abolished by the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II in his role as ruler of Austria; the repeal in 1786 was officially reversed during the already ongoing measure, since the ruler had no sole power of disposal for the area in the outer area; the second attempt in 1787, however, meant the end: in 1793 the parish church there was also dissolved; the demolition work was so massive that only a few objects remained.

Commons : Langnau Abbey  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§ 28 The monastery in 1790
Oberlangnau, Klosterstrasse
No. 10
and
No. 12
0-238 / 1
0-239 / 1
1777 Former economy and inn of the Pauline monastery

Once a building that belonged to a three-wing complex, today two buildings standing parallel to one another with vent arches over the windows.

§ 2
Rappertsweiler
No. 1, 1/1
0-4098 / 1
0-4098 / 2
17th century Former Kelhof of the Langnau monastery

Elongated, boarded-up single house with wide roof overhangs on the eaves, sliding windows divided by bars, painted shutters and a double diamond pattern door.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 5
0-3936
1768 Farmhouse

Single-storey, gable-independent, today plastered single house with wide roof overhangs on the eaves; Living area with high plinth, segmental arched entrance and double diamond pattern door.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 8
0-3932 / 1
0-4085
around
1700
Living part of a farmhouse

Single-storey single house with a high base, wide roof overhangs on the eaves, flat rectangular windows and south-facing gable protruding each floor.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
at
No. 11
0-4082 / 1
around
1919
Court cross

High wooden cross with a detailed, profiled protective case made of wood, a colored wooden crucifix and the initials JG

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 23
0-4089 / 3
around
1700
Former bath hut

Single-storey, today plastered, half-timbered farmhouse, originally probably with a special function as a public bathhouse; the bathroom was probably once located in the wooden beam cellar under the living area.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 29
0-4087 / 1
around
1902
Local chapel

Simple, now plastered building with a short high nave and two pointed arched windows in each of the pilaster-structured longitudinal walls as well as a polygonal choir; Gable walls with verge friezes.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Rat hamlet
No. 1
0-331
17th century Living part of a farmhouse

Single-storey half-timbered building, now partially plastered, with wide roof overhangs on the eaves and projecting east gable each storey as well as double entrance; the economy part was replaced by a new building in 1998.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
at
No. 1
0-331
late
19th century
crossroads

High wooden cross with a semicircular, decorated protective roof made of sheet metal and a colored wooden crucifix.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Rat hamlet
at 3
0-54
0-55, 0-71
0-348
0-349
World icon around
1152
"Alt-Summerau" ruin

In contrast to the name given, the castle built by the Lords of Summerau is younger than the four and a half kilometers up the Argen “Neu-Summerau” castle; it came to the Counts of Montfort in the late Middle Ages and when they were divided into the Bregenz line in 1309, it was then the seat of counts' bailiffs and in the 16th century of forestry masters; Destroyed in the Thirty Years War and used as a quarry until the 19th century, restored in 1963/66.

Commons : Ruine Altsummerau  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang - Altsummerau 0469.JPG
Rattenweiler, won Davidskäpfle
World icon Lost castle

The Burgstall, which is still clearly visible, is located on a drumlin northwest of Rattenweiler; one suspects the remains of a medieval tower hill castle on the Davidskäpfle , which has been disturbed by landslides in the north; to the south the castle was protected by a moat that is now heavily flattened; an approach obstacle outside the moat is conceivable; However, there are no definite mentions of the castle stable, reference is made to two messages that could relate to this complex: In 1366 Adelheid von Tannenfels issued Count Heinrich and Wilhelm von Montfort with a lapel in which a castle valley was mentioned in the Rattenweiler estate becomes; In 1447, a decision by Count Hugo von Tettnang also mentions a castle valley and the garden on it.

Commons : Davidskäpfle  - collection of images, videos and audio files
§  Rattenweiler-9093.jpg
Pass
No. 1
0-2670
2nd half of the
19th century
Farmhouse

Elongated, two-storey plastered building with a return, a single flight of stairs and a wide segmental arch entrance as well as an elaborate wood structure in the economic area.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Rudenweiler
No. 1
0-1722
1786 Former inn

Stately, single-storey building, now plastered, with a protruding roof, single flight of stairs and segmented arched front door.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 10
0-1661
17th century Living part of a farmhouse

Single-storey, plastered building with wide roof overhangs on the eaves and on the south gable as well as living room with plank beam ceiling; Economy replaced by new building around 1997.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Unterlangnau
No. 4
0-126 / 2
1824 House in a courtyard

Single-storey, massive building with a roof protruding from the eaves, high house entrance, two-flight flight of stairs, half-timbered gables and a small octagonal roof turret with bell.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
0-27
0-4153
0-4154
World icon after
1900
Iron hanging walkway

A bridge with a span of around fifty meters with spiral rope cables as suspension straps and a parabolic-arched concrete abutment.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Unterwolfertsweiler
No.
50-3306
World icon 18th century Farmhouse

Gable-independent, two-storey, partly massive, now plastered post beam construction with an integrated blacksmith's workshop on the ground floor.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 13
0-3405
1762 Farmhouse

One-storey single house with partially boarded north gable and now plastered residential part with high plinth.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Wettis
at
house
number 1
World icon Former early modern fortifications

On the south-eastern edge of the Höhenberg near Wettis was the weir system, secured by ditches, with an artificially fortified 56 m × 37 m interior; The structure that has been removed today will probably be a fortification that was built in the course of the early modern wars, which dominated a road leading from the Argental to Lake Constance and, if necessary, blocked it.
There is a public interest in the preservation of the site monument as well as in the inspection and evaluation of possible land documents from the point of view of the local history and the research of the war system in the early modern period.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
at
house
number 3
World icon Lost castle

On the south bank of the Degersee lies the medieval castle hill, which was secured on the sides of the field by a ditch and a 74 meter long wall; the approximately five meter high castle hill has a square floor plan with a side length of fifteen meters; Traces of buildings can no longer be seen today.
There is a public interest in scientific documentation - irrespective of the fact that the well-preserved site monument itself is worth preserving - from considerations of local history and castle history.

§ 2 Degersee-0592.jpg
Wielandsweiler
No. 4
0-515 / 1
World icon 1795 "Traube" inn

One-storey building, now plastered, with a protruding roof, visible framework structure as well as two-flight flight of stairs and segmented arched door.

§ 2 Tettnang-2838.jpg
Wiesach
No. 1
0-2662
World icon Farmhouse

The single-storey and transversely divided house with a gable roof, built in the 18th century in the typical Argenau style, is characterized by wide roof overhangs on the eaves and on the partially boarded west gable; the residential part with hallway – stable – shed – threshing floor (1838). the living area above a high base with a wooden beam cellar accessible from the outside is designed as a post beam construction; The carved lugs on the purlins and the straight house entrance with a single staircase and double diamond pattern door are preserved.
For scientific reasons, there is a public interest in the preservation of this farmhouse, which is important for the history of rural buildings.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png

Tannau village

Object
parcel
location Year of construction
Inclusion in the list of monuments
Official name (bold); description DSchG image
Biggenmoos
at 33
0-728
1936 crossroads

High wooden cross with a flat arched protective roof made of sheet metal with a colored wooden crucifix.
After surviving the fire and a tough economic situation, the property owner Remigius Altherr promised the erection of the cross out of a pious sense and as a request for God's blessing.

§ 28 Monument unknown.png
Flockenbach
No. 9
0-202
15th century Chapel “St. Anna "

Small rectangular building of medieval origin with a protruding gable roof on two wooden pillars, boarded gable and bell tower; inside a 72 centimeter high figure of Anna herself the third ; Renovated in 1933 and refurbished in 1999.

§ 28 Monument unknown.png
Hergottsweiler
No. 1
0-1131
1907 House in a courtyard

Representative, two-storey exposed brick building with a half-hipped roof, sandstone-framed windows and corner blocks as well as a central projection with a portal flanked by columns, a three-part window group and a wooden floating gable.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
at
No. 1
0-1131
probably
1907
Court cross

Court cross made of red sandstone with base, arched niche and a small wooden figure of Saint George framed in color, as well as a metal crucifix and a cast-iron decorative fence.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Wooden houses
at
No. 15/1
0-829
around
1906
Mary's Grotto

Artificial rock grotto with a praying statue of Mary made of painted plaster.
After building a new house and barn in backwood houses, Bauer Zwisler had this Lourdes grotto built from tuff stones.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 20
0-844 / 1
1905 Gasthof "Stiefel"

One-storey, elongated building with crooked hips, floating gables and large square windows as well as a dwarf-like roof extension (dance hall) above the central entrance.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Krumbach
No. 3
0-1542 / 17
1849/50 Catholic rectory

Massive, two-story building on parallel barrel vaults with a high central entrance, floor cornice and recessed parapet fields.

§ 2
No. 5
0-1531
16th century Former school and sacristan's house

In the residential part, two-storey house with a protruding upper storey; the sacristan's apartment on the ground floor, the school hall on the upper floor; the wooden structure was plastered in the 19th century.

§ 2
at
No. 11
0-1510
late
19th century
crossroads

High wooden cross with a dragon-shaped, decorated protective case made of wood and a colored wooden crucifix.

§ 2
No. 10
0-1538 / 1
World icon 1709 Parish church of St. Georg with previous buildings

One-nave nave with drawn-in choir closing on three sides and choir side tower built on to the north; In 1771, Pastor Josef Bosch commissioned Andreas Brugger's workshop to design the pictures of the Fourteen Holy Helpers and the Way of the Cross ; In 1907 the sacristy was added.
In the area of ​​the (...) Georgskirche, land documents are to be expected: These are likely to document previous buildings to the church built in 1709 and extended westward in 1899/1901, so that the time of origin and further building history of the “ecclesia” recorded in the “ Liber decimationis ” 1275, whose patronage Albert III. von Liebenau transferred it to Weingarten Monastery in 1283.

§ 28 D-BW-Tettnang-Krumbach - St Georg 02.jpg
No. 14
0-1530 / 2
1842 Former school house

Two-storey, elongated plastered building with a fully hipped roof and an elevated entrance, high-format, wood-embedded windows with folding shutters and a surrounding wooden eaves cornice.

§ 2
Krumbach, won ?
probably
12th century
Lost castle

The castle stood north of the church, on the edge of the ridge facing south-west; the complex was probably protected on three sides by a ditch; the steep castle hill, which was still recognizable as such until the beginning of the 1960s and which was heavily leveled when the site was converted into a parking lot, had stone buildings that were still used as building material in the 19th century and whose foundations were exposed during the construction work in 1962 .
Despite the massive soil encroachment, archaeological findings and finds cannot be ruled out at the former location - a significantly higher space behind house No. 15 - of the castle, which certainly dates back to the early 12th century. There is a public interest in documenting such documents relevant to the local and home history, which can also include objects of the material culture of a noble family.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Loderhof
No. 1
and
No. 1/2
0-506 / 3
507/1
1898 House and barn in a courtyard
  • Residential building: representative, two-storey tree with a half-hip roof, square ground and upper floors in exposed brickwork and surrounding cornices, striking window roofs and a stately entrance portal with porch.
  • Scheuer: Storage building with brickwork on the ground floor and half-timbered on the upper floor as well as a high entrance on the gable side.
§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Matzenhaus
No. 1
0-193
18th century Residential building

Today plastered, two-storey, originally single-storey exposed half-timbered building with a high, solid base, wide rectangular windows and a high house entrance with a two-flight flight of stairs.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Mehrenberg
No. 2
0-1383
probably
17th century
Residential building

Today, plastered, two-story, post beam construction with a massive base and wide roof overhangs as well as a single flight of stairs and a raised entrance.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Notzenhaus
No. 7
0-953
16th century Farmhouse

Single-storey post-beam construction with the living area now plastered, high base, ridge purlin roof and living room with a vaulted plank beam ceiling.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
No. 9
0-948 / 3
1699 Farmhouse

Single-storey, gable-independent, now mostly plastered post-beam construction with high plinth, segment-arched house entrance with two-flight staircase and double diamond pattern door; inside a room with a plank beam ceiling.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Obereisenbach, Kirchweg
No. 9
0-1226 / 5
World icon 1703 Parish church of St. Margaretha with previous buildings

The late medieval hall with a retracted choir closing on three sides and a high choir side tower was redesigned in Baroque style in 1703.
In the area of ​​the church, archaeological findings and finds are to be expected, documenting the time of origin and further building history of the church, which was first indirectly mentioned in 1246 via a local priest Wernher, and incorporated into Weissenau monastery in 1349.

Commons : Parish Church of St. Margaretha  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files
§ 28 File-D-BW-Tettnang-Obereisenbach - Parish Church of St Margaretha 078.JPG
at
No. 9
0-1226 / 5
around
1900
Mary's Grotto

Artificial rock grotto with a praying statue of Mary made of painted plaster.

§ 2
Obereisenbach, Siggenweiler Strasse
No. 10
0-1219
1824 Former Catholic rectory

A representative, two-storey stone building with a symmetrical, five-axis front and a steep hipped roof as well as a high central entrance, high rectangular windows and a surrounding wooden eaves cornice.

§ 2
No. 39
0-1184
19th century St. Wendelin Way Chapel

Small, massive rectangular building with a polygonal choir closure, box cornice on the gable and segmented arched entrance with two-winged door; inside an altar with a mount of olives scene .

§ 2
Obereisenbach, won Arlenholz / Schlossbühl
probably
end of
17th century
Former medieval fortifications § 2 Obereisenbach-8.jpg
Dwindling
No. 1,
No. 4
and
No. 5
0-751
1889/1901 Hofgut

Residential house with bell tower, barn with access ramp, hop storage and drying rooms, bakery with complete and intact furnishings (18th century) and chapel with colored wooden crucifix and figure of Saint Nepomuk .

§ 2 Monument unknown.png
Tannau, Neukircher Strasse
No. 16
0-83
World icon 1720 Church “St. Martin ”with previous buildings

The parish of Tannau was first mentioned in 1275. The church - a wide, single-nave hall with a retracted choir closing on three sides and a medieval choir side tower - was built in 1720 on the foundation of a chapel from 1121; Main altar and pulpit around 1720 by an unknown artist, fresco in the choir and side altar leaves by Andreas Brugger (1737–1812), font in the middle of the 16th century, painted ceiling in the second half of the 19th century; extensive restoration of the church in 1954.

§ 28 Monument unknown.png
Vorderreute
No. 6/7 World icon Abandoned moated castle with remains of the wall

On an island of today's Schwarzach (formerly Grenzbach ) stood the former aristocratic residence with a rectangular floor plan (11 m × 9 m); possibly the “H. de Ruti miles ”.
Archaeological findings and finds, together with the visibly preserved wall, represent important evidence of the architectural history of Reute Castle , the documentation of which is of public interest for reasons of local history and castle history.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png

Former monuments

Object
parcel
location Construction year
demolition
Official name (bold)
Description
DSchG image
Montfortstrasse
No. 10 World icon 16th century
9/2006
Old savings bank

The two-and-a-half-story building, which dates back to the 16th century, was destroyed by a devastating fire in the early morning of September 7, 2006; while the fire sealed the end of the tourist information office and the vehicle registration office at this location, the Sparkasse is returning to where the Oberamtssparkasse, the oldest predecessor of today's Sparkasse Bodensee , began its official business in 1825 .

§ 2 D-BW-Tettnang - Alte Sparkasse.jpg
Venushalde
number 1 World icon ?
200x
Former farmhouse

The farmhouse belonging to the end of town was demolished 200 times in the year because it was completely dilapidated.

§ 2 Monument unknown.png

literature

  • Karl Heinz Burmeister: History of the city of Tettnang . Universitätsverlag Konstanz (UVK), Konstanz 1997, ISBN 3-87940-595-6 .
  • Erika Dillmann (Ed.): Tettnang. Views of a city . 3. Edition. Verlag Lorenz Senn GmbH & Co. KG, Tettnang 1990, ISBN 3-88812-184-1 .
  • Gisbert Hoffmann: Chapels in Tettnang and Meckenbeuren . Ed .: Förderkreis Heimatkunde Tettnang (=  Heimat -zeichen . Volume 5 ). Druckhaus Müller (printing), Langenargen / Leipzig 2004, ISBN 3-00-013294-5 .
  • Alois Schneider: Castles and fortifications in the Lake Constance district . Ed .: Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg (=  Fund reports from Baden-Württemberg . Volume 14 ). E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagbuchhandlung , Stuttgart 1989, ISBN 3-510-49114-9 .

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Tettnang  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  • Oral and written information provided by Dr. Angelika Barth, City Archives Tettnang, and Ms. Vera Lang, City of Tettnang / Office for Building Consultancy and Building Management
  • Other:
  1. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36
  2. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 2; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 104/1
  3. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 3; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 130/2
  4. History of the house "Torstuben" at www.torstuben-tettnang.de
  5. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 4; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 130/1
  6. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Status: March 1988
  7. Description of the Upper Office Tettnang, Chapter B1
  8. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 84/36, Parz. 3150/1
  9. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 7; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 668
  10. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 8; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 655
  11. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 9; Status: March 1988
  12. ^ Chronicle of the Forster butcher's shop
  13. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 10; Status: March 1988; Flst.No.
  14. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 11; Status: March 1988
  15. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 12; Status: March 1988
  16. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 225
  17. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 14; Status: March 1988
  18. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 15; Status: March 1988
  19. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 16; Status: March 1988
  20. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 17; Status: March 1988
  21. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 19; Status: March 1988
  22. Article in the Schwäbische Zeitung: “ Jaquard looms equip Tettnang's first factory ”, August 6, 2013
  23. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 20; Status: March 1988
  24. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 15, 18, 30/2
  25. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 22; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 3/4
  26. St. Georg Chapel at St. Gallus Tettnang Catholic Church Community
  27. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 154
  28. St. Georg Chapel at www.tettnang.de
  29. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 24; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 154
  30. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 25; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 152/1
  31. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 27; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 146/7
  32. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 181
  33. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 187 and 188
  34. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 29; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 185, 187, 188
  35. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / TANK WPD; Editor: Lindenberg; Status: July 2000
  36. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 30; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 1509/1
  37. St. Anna Chapel at St. Gallus Catholic Church Community in Tettnang
  38. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 31; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 1503
  39. Monument Foundation Baden-Württemberg: Funding Report 2007, page 16  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.denkmalstiftung-baden-wuerttemberg.de  
  40. St. Johann Chapel at www.tettnang.de
  41. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 1435/8
  42. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No.: ?; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 1435
  43. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 33; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 19/1
  44. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 34; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 110/1
  45. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 35; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 20/6
  46. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 36; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 20/7
  47. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 37; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 152
  48. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 38; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 151
  49. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 39; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 144/1
  50. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 40; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 137
  51. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 41; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 136
  52. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 42; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 135
  53. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/36, Parz. 9/1
  54. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 43; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 9/1
  55. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 44; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 282/7
  56. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 45; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 673
  57. " Despite monument protection: multi-purpose use is planned for the gym on Weinstrasse " at schwaebische.de
  58. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 85/37, Parz. 3059, 3055/5
  59. ^ Monasteries in Baden-Württemberg, accessed on September 30, 2013
  60. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 48; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 2825/5
  61. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Status: March 1988
  62. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK 85/35, Parz. 3058/1 (NE corner)
  63. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 52; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 2401/1
  64. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 53; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 2401/1
  65. Michael Goer: The "Hopfenburg" of the Hofgut Kaltenberg - a landmark of the Tettnang hop growing , pages 312/314 in?
  66. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 83/37, Parz. 2894/1
  67. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 56; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 1557
  68. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 57; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 2883
  69. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 59; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 2715
  70. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No .: 54; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. ?
  71. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 87/37, Parz. 3075
  72. Wikisource: Description of the Upper Office Tettnang / Chapter B 6
  73. List of cultural monuments in the city of Tettnang; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 86/40, Parz. 4158
  74. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Az. 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8324, FK SO 87/41, Parz. 1328
  75. ^ Förderkreis Heimatkunde Tettnang: Plate 40, at the house
  76. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 87/40; Parc. 1140
  77. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 87/41, Parz. 1156 (NE corner)
  78. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK 86/38, Parz. 701/1
  79. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 86/39, Parz. 2007.
  80. History of the country inn "Zum Ritter"
  81. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 86/39, Parz. 2192
  82. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 85/39, Parz.?
  83. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 87/40, Parz. 113, 241, 243, 244, 245, 249, 250, 251, 267
  84. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 87/39, Parz. 349
  85. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 87/39, Parz. 307
  86. ^ Alois Schneider: Castles and fortifications in the Lake Constance district . Ed .: Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg (=  Fund reports from Baden-Württemberg . Volume 14 ). 1st edition. E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagbuchhandlung , 1989, ISBN 3-510-49114-9 , ISSN  0071-9897 , p. 638-639 .
  87. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 89/40, Parz. 750 (SO corner)
  88. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 89/40, Parz. 750 (NW corner)
  89. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / Go, March 31, 1987; Parc. 2662
  90. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 82 / 40.41; Parc. 1534
  91. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 82/40, Parz. 1539
  92. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; Ref .: 34 / ASchn; Status: March 1987; Lgb./Parz.-Nr .: TK 8323, FK SO 82/39, Parz. 1226/5
  93. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 84/39, Parz. 83
  94. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg / List of cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang, Az. 34 / ASchn, March 1987; TK 8323, FK SO 81/40, Parz. 1473
  95. Overview of the architectural and cultural monuments of the city of Tettnang; No. 26; Status: March 1988; Flst.No. 146/7