Marktkirchhof 5 (Quedlinburg)

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Marktkirchhof 5

The house Marktkirchhof 5 is a Grade II listed building in the town of Quedlinburg in Saxony-Anhalt .

location

It is located in the historic old town of Quedlinburg, north of the city's market square. The building registered as a residential building in the Quedlinburg monument register is located on the south side of the Marktkirchhof. Its back faces Hoken Street. There is a small passage next to the house.

Architecture and history

The half-timbered house was built around 1525, other information indicates the time around 1540 or around 1560, and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site . What is remarkable about the appearance of the house is a staggered, strongly protruding bay construction. The building, which was built in the Renaissance style , has, as a further ornamentation, ship throats , carved knobs and ankle bands. The ceiling beams are provided with pear rod profiles. The construction was carried out in a mixed construction of multi-storey and multi-storey construction . In Quedlinburg, this type of construction can only be found in the houses Neustädter Kirchhof 7 and Konvent 20 , as well as in the formerly non-preserved building at Schmale Straße 53 . In the middle of the 18th century, the house was carefully renovated. The post construction of the multi-storey construction with mortise locks in the four containers on the second floor was preserved on the south side until around 1900, but was then torn down.

To the east is a younger baroque half-timbered house , built around 1730 , the gable of which faces the street.

While the front side of the house faces north towards the Marktkirchhof, the back towards the street Hoken presents itself with a very lively, small-scale design of the structure.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. CC Hennrich, B. Stöckicht in Fachwerk Lehrpfad, A tour through Quedlinburg from the Middle Ages to the 19th century , Deutsches Fachwerkzentrum Quedlinburg eV, Quedlinburg 2011, ISBN 3-937648-13-5 , page 27
  2. Falko Grubitzsch in: Georg Dehio : Handbook of German Art Monuments . Saxony-Anhalt. Volume 1: Ute Bednarz, Folkhard Cremer and others: Magdeburg administrative region. Revision. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich et al. 2002, ISBN 3-422-03069-7 , page 754
  3. State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony-Anhalt (ed.): List of monuments in Saxony-Anhalt. Volume 7: Falko Grubitzsch, with the participation of Alois Bursy, Mathias Köhler, Winfried Korf, Sabine Oszmer, Peter Seyfried and Mario Titze: Quedlinburg district. Volume 1: City of Quedlinburg. Fly head, Halle 1998, ISBN 3-910147-67-4 , page 175
  4. CC Hennrich, B. Stöckicht in Fachwerk Lehrpfad, A tour through Quedlinburg from the Middle Ages to the 19th century , Deutsches Fachwerkzentrum Quedlinburg eV, Quedlinburg 2011, ISBN 3-937648-13-5 , page 27
  5. CC Hennrich, B. Stöckicht in Fachwerk Lehrpfad, A tour through Quedlinburg from the Middle Ages to the 19th century , Deutsches Fachwerkzentrum Quedlinburg eV, Quedlinburg 2011, ISBN 3-937648-13-5 , page 27
  6. Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 56

Coordinates: 51 ° 47 ′ 23.7 "  N , 11 ° 8 ′ 32.9"  E