Nagel half-timbered houses

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Itzehoe, Sandberg 47

The two Nagel'schen half-timbered houses in Itzehoe were built in 1659 and are under monument protection .

history

The two half-timbered houses were built by Lorentz Evers in 1659 on the site of the houses that were burned down by the Swedes in the Danish-Swedish War in 1657 . These could no longer be saved, especially since there was also hay and straw in the new harvest. The fire site lay fallow for two years. The previous owner Hildebrand Wittholtz left the city impoverished.

In 1704 Albert Evers took over the property. When the Great Northern War reached Itzehoe in 1712, the Swedish general Magnus Stenbock demanded 8,000 thalers in cash from the city as well as bread, meat, beer, butter or bacon, peas and grits within eight days. The second mayor Georg Bock called on the citizens to contribute money and food. Albert Evers from the Sandberg raised the second highest sum with 3,200 marks. Albert Evers will have farmed and farmed animals. As a respected, wealthy citizen he ran the business until 1739 and then handed the business over to a Lorentz Evers who ran the business until 1745. Then the houses went first to Carsten Gloyer in 1745 and later to Carsten Gloyer, probably his son, and in 1778 to Erich Marten.

Then a Tönnies Evers acquired the property. He was married to Catharina Elisabeth, nee Stange. On February 5, 1787, the couple had a son, also called Tönnies.

In addition to livestock and agriculture, an extensive grain trade, beer brewery (thin red beer) and brandy distillery were operated in the house. The Evers family must have belonged to the wealthiest and therefore most respected citizens of the city. Tönnies junior got engaged to Kristina Margareta Kock from Stördorf , whom he married on November 18, 1815. Four months before the wedding, on July 11, 1815, the bride visited her mother in Stördorf, where she gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl. The children were baptized on July 15, 1815 with the names Anna Magdalena and Tönnies Evers.

The then police chief and councilor Baron Ole Friedrich von Eggers (1800–1856) married Anna Magdalena.

The Baron Ole Friedrich von Eggers was the son of the former President Christian von Eggers in Kiel and his wife Antoinette Friederica, née de Bong. The wedding took place on February 10, 1835 in the town church of St. Laurentii (Itzehoe) and was carried out by the Consistorial Councilor Christian Martin Hudtwalcker . On September 5, 1848, the son Balthasar Friedrich Nikolaus was baptized.

After the deaths of mother Evers (61 years old) in 1848 and father Evers (63 years old) in 1850, ownership passed to twin son Tönnies Evers. He spent his twilight years in the St. Jürgen Stift, where he died on October 8, 1884.

Evers' property went to the neighboring master baker Johann Gosau for 3,000 marks . After 14 years he sold the property in 1897 to Hinrich Grefe, who ran a beer branch there.

In 1905 the property was forcibly sold to the wheelwright August Nagel (1856–1933), who gave it to them at the wedding of his son Hans Nagel (1893–1957) with Helene, née Lenk (1885–1975). The house is family owned until now.

The half-timbering is made of red clinker brick , which had to be overlaid in front of the original, crooked and cracked half-timbering that was whitewashed.

The house was revitalized in 2014/2015 and is used as a residential and commercial building.

particularities

The hall is a sight. At the end of the 18th century, the aforementioned Tönnies Evers ran a grain trade here. To the left of the hall he set up a dining room for distinguished guests, from which the Schwemme (restaurant) in the hall could be served. The guests of the beer flood had to drop their pennies and shillings through a slot in the solid oak bay window and were served beer or schnapps through a flap below. Today the hall with the special bay window, the heavy dark oak beams and the light-colored double railing of the stairs is just like in the old days.

Sandberg Gallery 47

literature

  • Rudolf Krohn : Chronicle of the houses Sandberg 47 and their history .
  • Rudolf Irmisch : History of the city of Itzehoe. 1960, published by the city of Itzehoe.

Individual evidence

  1. List of cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein (PDF; approx. 539 kB)

Coordinates: 53 ° 55 ′ 28.3 ″  N , 9 ° 31 ′ 19 ″  E

Web links

Commons : Nagelsche Fachwerkhäuser  - Collection of images, videos and audio files