Martin-Luther-Strasse 9 (Bad Kissingen)

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Martin-Luther-Strasse 9 in Bad Kissingen

The building Martin-Luther-Straße 9 in Martin-Luther-Straße in Bad Kissingen , the major district town of the Lower Franconian district of Bad Kissingen , is one of the Bad Kissingen monuments and is under the number D-6-72-114-313 in the Registered Bavarian monument list .

history

Beginnings

The property (first Hemmerich House, later Hailmann House) was built around 1835 as a spa hotel and post office. The building was laid out in the classical style with a flat hipped roof and originally three storeys.

The construction of the property goes back to the royal Bavarian post owner Georg Eduard Hemmerich (1797-1853) from Münnerstadt , whose wife Anna-Maria, geb. Hailmann, brought a fortune of 20,000 florins into the marriage. Since the marriage remained childless, he bequeathed half of his fortune to Pastor Hohmann'schen Spital, a home for old and sick citizens founded by Pastor Hohmann (term of office in Bad Kissingen: 1647–1657).

After the death of Anna-Maria Hemmerich in 1877, her relative, Kommerzienrat Philipp Hailmann, took over the property.

Part of the Victoria Imperial Court

In 1899, Georg Liebscher, owner of the neighboring Kaiserhof Victoria , connected the property to the Kaiserhof Victoria via an extension above the entrance to the courtyard. In this context, the middle entrance of the building, overlaid by a balcony, was removed; In return, today's iron balcony structure was built.

Around 1900 the owner Eduard Hemmerich or his heir Philipp Hailmann sold the property to Georg Liebscher, the owner of the Imperial Court Victoria, which made the building part of the Imperial Court. In 1924 it was adapted to the appearance of the Imperial Court Victoria by adding a floor and adding a domed crown to the building over the entrance to the courtyard. In the period that followed, the Imperial Court Victoria was a three-part, uniform building complex. The crowning of the dome was removed after the Second World War .

After the Imperial Court Victoria

In 1914 Georg Liebscher intended to add a fourth floor to the property, but withdrew the building application on July 15, 1914.

Due to economic difficulties in the hotel business, the building was sold to the Bayerische Vereinsbank in 1936 (Edi Hahn mentions the year 1929). This used the property as a residential, bank and administrative building. Now Liebscher has already planned to add one storey to the building.

When Bayerische Vereinsback acquired the neighboring property around 1970 and built today's new office building there, the double flight of stairs from Martin-Luther-Straße 9 was removed.

literature

  • Edi Hahn: Kaiser-Kur im Grand Hotel - History and Fates , Bad Kissingen 1996, ISBN 3-925722-12-2
  • Denis André Chevalley, Stefan Gerlach: City of Bad Kissingen (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VI.75 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 1998, ISBN 3-87490-577-2 , p. 66 f .
  • Werner Eberth : Karl von Hess - The unforgettable benefactor of Hammelburg . Theresienbrunnen-Verlag, Bad Kissingen 2012, pp. 47–60

Web links

Commons : Martin-Luther-Straße 9  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Denis André Chevalley, Stefan Gerlach: City of Bad Kissingen (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VI.75 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 1998, ISBN 3-87490-577-2 , p. 66 f .
  2. Werner Eberth: Karl von Hess - The unforgettable benefactor of Hammelburg . Theresienbrunnen-Verlag, Bad Kissingen 2012, p. 59
  3. ^ A b Edi Hahn: Kaiser-Kur im Grand Hotel - Geschichte und Schicksale , Bad Kissingen 1996, ISBN 3-925722-12-2 , p. 14

Coordinates: 50 ° 11 ′ 50.57 "  N , 10 ° 4 ′ 38.35"  E