List of listed objects in Sankt Martin im Sulmtal

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The list of listed objects in Sankt Martin im Sulmtal contains the 8 listed , immovable objects of the municipality Sankt Martin im Sulmtal in the Styrian district of Deutschlandsberg . As of 2015, it will also contain those monuments that were located in the Sulmeck-Greith community, which existed until 2014 and was affiliated with St. Martin.

Monuments

photo   monument Location description
Medieval fortifications on the Taborkogel
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Medieval fortifications on the Taborkogel ObjectID
96351
Taborkogel
location
KG: Aigen
The distinctive shape of the castle hill is easy to recognize in nature. Excavations found the outer bailey with a pointed moat and rampart with palisades and remains of paths. The summit plateau measures around 40 meters in diameter. It is surrounded by a moat. The hill of a moth (tower castle) in the northwest of the facility, where the terrain merges into the mountainous country behind, has not yet been investigated. It has a diameter of about 15 meters and is about three meters high. Finds of stove tiles on the summit plateau of the Taborkogel suggested a large tiled stove . In addition to ceramics, iron parts (crossbow bolts, horseshoes, tools, furniture fittings, knives, etc.) were found. The Peuerl family is believed to have owned the facility in the 14th century, the castle belonged to the Schwanberg rulership and a connection with the Peuerlhof in Schwanberg is assumed. At the beginning of the 15th century it is believed to have been conquered and destroyed. The results of the archaeological excavations in 1994 have been published.

Note: The site is on a plot of land EZ 11 KG 61002 Aigen.

Monguelfo Castle
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Welsberg Castle
ObjectID:  3634
Dietmannsdorf 1 KG
location
: Dietmannsdorf
A solid house with walls and moats is believed to have been at the site of the castle, and the marshy lowlands of the Sulm Valley were part of its protection. Later there was a fiefdom on the site, which was not well suited as a farmyard because of the swampy surroundings and did not bring its owners any significant income. In 1592 a castle keep "am Pergl im Sulmtal" is mentioned, which extended for half an hour (walk) in the area. In 1679 the "guettl Pergl, called anjezo Welspergl" was appointed by Hans Adam Welser to the entails of the Welser von Welsersheimb. A palace was built around 1687. In 1745 the complex burned down and was rebuilt in Rococo style under Leopold Karl Graf Welsersheimb, but not completed. The western half is not developed. On the ground floor there is a chapel with frescoes from the construction period, for which several measurement licenses had existed. For several decades the castle had its own chaplain.

A few hundred meters west of the castle on the same ridge is the also listed palaeolithic open-air station Kaiserriegel.

Note: The castle is located on a plot of EZ 190 KG 61152 Dietmannsdorf.

Catholic parish church of St.  Martin
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Catholic parish church of St. Martin
ObjectID:  3478

Location
KG: Dörfla
The church is mentioned for the first time in 1244, from 1395 until the 16th century it was a parish church, then a branch of Gleinstätten. It has been a parish church again since 1788. A baroque, north-facing church was built from 1701–1714. The tower, which was built in 1664/65, remained in place; in 1783 it was given a double-onion helmet . In the tower hall is the late Gothic portal from the 16th century of the old, east-facing church. A restoration was carried out in 1906. The large late baroque high altar was changed in 1823/24. His upper image shows St. Nepomuk . The Catherine altar is dated to the first quarter of the 18th century, the south side altar to around 1700, the pulpit to the fourth quarter of the 17th century. On the outer wall of the sacristy there are two stones from Roman times. The 14th century is said to be the date of origin of the bell.

Note: The church is located on Sulmtal Straße B 74 on a property owned by EZ 46 KG 61008 Dörfla.

Hartwald - Graschach burial mound group Upload file Hartwald-Graschach burial mound group ObjektID
8746
Graschach
location
KG: Graschach
The site documents a larger settlement area from the Hallstatt period . In addition to a number of burial mounds and ceramic pits, the remains of other facilities such as B. Wölbäckern found, which point to an early use of plows. The creation of these fields is interpreted as an attempt to loosen the generally wet and dense soil of this area and to keep it drier. No residues can be seen in nature. Whether uneven ground in the forest can be traced back to historical burial mounds, later human interventions or natural processes (erosion, etc.) cannot be distinguished without an expert guide.

Note: The site is in the Hartwald in Graschach, south of Dornach on plots with several deposit figures: Plot No. 581 on EZ 26, No. 587/1, 587/2 on EZ 150 and No. 592 on EZ 43, all KG 61153 Graschach.

Catholic parish church St. Ulrich in Greith
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Catholic parish church St. Ulrich in Greith
ObjectID:  3632

KG location
: Kopreinigg
A church at this location is mentioned in a document in 1430. It has been a parish church since 1892, before that, as a branch church ("Local Curatie") of the then Schwanberg dean's office, it had been entitled to exercise parish rights in full since 1790. In 1743 the nave was rebuilt, in 1838 the Gothic choir was dismantled and rebuilt, a restoration took place in 1960. The small remains of the foundations of the Gothic choir were archaeologically examined in 1999. The ceiling frescoes date from 1960. The facade roof turret is dated to 1765, his helmet to 1915. The north portal is dated from 1743.

Note: The church building is on a plot of EZ 43 KG 61123 Kopreinig.

Paleolithic open air station Kaiserriegel
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Paleolithic outdoor station Kaiserriegel ObjektID
130423

since 2014


KG location
: Oberhart
This archaeological site of a Stone Age open-air station is located on a knoll on the same ridge (parallel to the valley of the Schwarzen Sulm ) as the also listed Welsberg Castle, a few hundred meters east in Dietmannsdorf . In nature, on the 5.6  hectare property, no remains can be seen without an expert guide, the site extends over 100 m with two focal points. In the find report, the site is described as the first secured Upper Palaeolithic ( Late Aurignacia Period ) open-air station south of the main Alpine ridge in Austria and it is recognized as being of supraregional importance. Finds such as Knollenhornstein from the Reiner Basin also suggest a more recent (possibly Copper Age ) settlement.

Note: The location is on a piece of land with a deposit number of 81 KG 61078 Oberhart.

Grave mound group and Roman settlement area Otternitz Upload file Grave mound group and Roman-era settlement area Otternitz ObjectID
8737
Otternitz
location
KG: Otternitz
The site includes graves from the Roman Empire . In nature it can only be recognized by the uneven ground, and no details can be found without an expert guide. A notice board with explanatory texts is available.

Note: The location is located on the properties of several land registers (deposit numbers): No. 62/1 EZ 4, No. 63/1 EZ 119, No. 63/2 EZ 96 and No. 75/1 EZ 99 KG 61047 Otternitz.

Roman burial mound field Sulb Upload file Roman burial mound field Sulb ObjectID
111990
Leibenstelzl
location
KG: Sulb
The burial ground is considered to be one of the largest Noro-Pannonian burial grounds. About 40 graves are documented. The place of discovery can only be recognized by the uneven ground, a number of burial mounds have been destroyed. No details can be found without an expert guide. A notice board with explanatory texts is available. Whether hill-shaped unevenness in the ground can be traced back to the historical burial ground, to later human interference or to natural erosion, is not recognizable in nature.

Note: The place of discovery is on the properties of several land registers (deposit numbers): Property No. 183 at EZ 31 and property No. 184/2 at EZ 271, both KG 61058 Sulb.

Legend

The source for the selection of the objects are the monuments lists of the respective federal state published annually by the BDA. The table contains the following information:

Photo: Photograph of the monument. Click the photo generates an enlarged view. Next to it are one or two symbols:
More pictures available The symbol means that more photos of the property are available. They are displayed by clicking the symbol.
Upload your own photo By clicking the symbol, further photos of the object can be uploaded to the Wikimedia Commons media archive .
Monument: Name of the monument. The designation is given as it is used by the Federal Monuments Office (BDA) . The internal object identification number (ObjectID) is also given.
Location: The address is given. In the case of free-standing objects without an address ( e.g. shrines ), an address is usually given that is close to the object. By calling up the link Location , the location of the monument is displayed in various map projects. The cadastral community (KG) is indicated below this.
Description: Brief information about the monument.

The table is sorted alphabetically according to the location of the monument. The sorting criterion is the cadastral municipality and within this the address.

By clicking on "Map with all coordinates" (top right in the article) the location of all monuments in the selected map object is displayed.

Abbreviations of the BDA : BR… construction law , EZ… deposit number, GB… land register , GstNr. … Property number, KG… cadastral community, 0G … property number address

Web links

Commons : Listed objects in Sankt Martin im Sulmtal  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Styria - immovable and archaeological monuments under monument protection. (PDF), ( CSV ). Federal Monuments Office , as of February 18, 2020.
  2. Diether Kramer : The Taborkogel near St. Martin in the Sulmtal. A fortified medieval manor in western Styria. In: Archeology of Austria . Communications from the Austrian Society for Prehistory and Early History. Issue 6 Part I, 1995 year . ISSN  1018-1857 . Pp. 73-77.
  3. Christoph Gutjahr: Middle Ages. Pp. 44-45. In: Helmut-Theobald Müller (ed.), Gernot Peter Obersteiner (overall scientific management): History and topography of the Deutschlandsberg district. ( District topography ). Graz-Deutschlandsberg 2005. ISBN 3-901938-15-X . Styrian Provincial Archives and District Authority Deutschlandsberg 2005. In the series: Great historical regional studies of Styria. Founded by Fritz Posch †. ZDB ID 568794-9 . First volume, general part.
  4. Werner Murgg, Bernhard Hebert: Medieval and early modern fortifications in the district of Deutschlandsberg: recording of the soil monuments. With drawings by Stefan Karl. Contributions to medieval archeology in Austria BMÖ. Volume 10, born in 1994. Ed .: Austrian Society for Medieval Archeology, Vienna. ISSN  1011-0062 . P. 60. Location sketch p. 82.
  5. ^ Robert Baravalle: Castles and palaces of Styria. An encyclopaedic collection of the Styrian fortifications and properties, which were endowed with various privileges. Graz 1961, Stiasny publishing house. Pp. 87-88.
  6. ^ Günther Bernhard: Welsberg Castle in Western Styria. In: Gerhard Pferschy, Gernot P. Obersteiner (eds.), Meinhard Brunner (ed.): Rutengangs: Studies for historical regional studies. Ceremony for Walter Brunner on his 70th birthday. Research on the historical regional studies of Styria, Volume 54. Journal of the Historisches Verein für Steiermark, special volume 26. Graz 2010. ISBN 978-3-901251-34-4 . Pp. 364-375.
  7. ^ Kurt Woisetschläger , Peter Krenn : Dehio Handbook - Die Kunstdenkmäler Österreichs: Styria (excluding Graz). Topographical inventory of monuments, ed. from the Federal Monuments Office, Department for Monument Research. Publisher Anton Schroll. Vienna 1982. ISBN 3-7031-0532-1 . P. 614.
  8. ^ Dehio Styria. P. 470.
  9. Andreas Bernhard, Bernhard Hebert: Third and final report on the rescue excavations of the Federal Monuments Office in the Hartwald of KG Graschach in Styria. Find reports from Austria. Volume 39, year 2000. Vienna 2001. ISSN  0429-8926 ZDB -ID 213982-0 . Pp. 91-99.
  10. Bernhard Hebert, Markus Lehner: New Finds on Hallstatt Culture from Styria . In: Erzsébet Jerem, Andreas Lippert (Hrsg.): The Osthallstattkultur. Files from the International Symposium, Sopron, May 10-14, 1994. In: Archaeolingua. Volume 7, Budapest 1996. ISSN  1215-9239 ZDB -ID 1462721-8 pp. 137-140.
  11. ^ Find reports from Austria . Volume 35, year 1996. Vienna 1997. pp. 48-49.
  12. ^ Find reports from Austria . Volume 41, year 2002. Vienna 2003. pp. 727–728.
  13. Church ordinance sheet for the Seckau diocese. Born in 1892, VIII, No. 50, ZDB -ID 607471-6 , pp. 51–52: Awarding of the pastor's title to the previously named local curates, vicars, etc., independent, permanently employed pastoral heads.
  14. ^ Find reports from Austria. Volume 38, year 1999. Vienna 2000. P. 908.
  15. ^ Dehio Styria. P. 490.
  16. ^ Wolfgang Artner: Fund report . In: Find reports from Austria (FÖ). Published by the Vienna Federal Monuments Office. Verlag Berger, Horn. ISSN  0429-8926 ZDB -ID 213982-0 . Volume 52, year 2013. Vienna 2014. p. 338.
  17. Fund Reports from Austria Volume 43, born in 2004. Vienna 2005. pp 929-932.
  18. ^ Find reports from Austria. Volume 47, year 2008. Vienna 2009. pp. 588–589.
  19. § 2a Monument Protection Act in the legal information system of the Republic of Austria .