Logenhaus (Lübeck)

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Lodge house

The lodge house in Lübeck is a listed building that was erected in 1882 and serves several lodge associations . The Logenhaus is located on the corner of Schildstrasse 22–30 / St.-Annen-Strasse 2.

history

Former box hall of the "Zum Füllhorn" lodge

In the Middle Ages, the property belonged to a number of farms on what was then Ritterstrasse . The first known owner was the cathedral dean Johannes de Campen in 1340. In 1353 Tidemann Warendorp purchased the property; later the knight Johannes Tysenhusen and Jordan Pleskow were owners. The owners also included several members of the patrician circle society such as Tidemann Steen and Heinrich von Stiten . In 1663 August Hermann Francke was born in what was then the house there .

In 1862 the Lübeck Lodge Zum Füllhorn (founded in 1772) acquired the now largely overbuilt area from Matthias Ludwig Leithoff's heirs and had its new Lodge built here in 1882. In 1926 a renovation and extension took place. After the National Socialists banned the Masonic lodges , the house had to be sold under duress on July 19, 1935. The inventory was largely lost and the colored glass windows with Masonic motifs installed in 1926 were destroyed. In the following year, the archive of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck took over the building under its director Georg Fink and had a six-storey steel warehouse installed.

The building survived the air raid on Lübeck on March 29, 1942 . Released in 1945 by the British military administration for archival purposes, the lodge, which has since been re-established, demanded that it be returned. This took place legally in 1950; In fact, however, the house could only be vacated, renovated and re-inaugurated as a box house in 1962 after the new archive building at the cathedral had been completed.

Entrance with box signs

use

While most of Lübeck's Masonic lodges had their own lodge house before 1933, the house, which is still owned by the Zum Füllhorn lodge , is now used by all lodges for their work. The Jürgen Wullenweber Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows has also had its seat here as a tenant since 1949. The house can also be rented for events and celebrations.

literature

  • Walter Hagenström: History of the Johannis Lodge "Zum Füllhorn" in Lübeck 1772–1972 , Lübeck 1972
  • Horst Wilhelm: The origin and development of the Masonic lodges in Schleswig-Holstein. Ludwig, Kiel 2004, ISBN 9783933598899

Web links

Commons : Logenhaus  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ History of building and architecture, urban development in Lübeck
  2. Jörg Fligge : Lübeck schools in the "Third Reich": a study on the education system in the Nazi era in the context of developments in the Reich. Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2014, ISBN 978-3-7950-5214-0 , p. 335
  3. ^ Wilhelm (lit.), p. 103
  4. Oddfellows.de , Oddfellows.de and Das Logenhaus  ( 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. , all accessed June 8, 2017@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.luebeck-freimaurer.de  

Coordinates: 53 ° 51 ′ 48.6 "  N , 10 ° 41 ′ 21.6"  E