Obergut (Egestorf)

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The Obergut is a protected property in the Barsinghausen district of Egestorf (Deister) in Lower Saxony .

The Egestorf estate

history

The Egestorfer wood Count Hans Huldersen that the Egestorfer Untergut inhabited, had the late 16th century created on the road to a farmstead Nienstedt and paid the charges due to it. After the Untergut burned down repeatedly during and after the Thirty Years' War , his son and successor Erich Daniel Huldersen probably moved his residence to a large "Pallatium", the so-called Obergut, which had been recently built on the farm in the 1660s. Huldersen died in 1664. Legal disputes ensued when Leo Johan Schwartze, the owner of the Egestorf manor, claimed that the sub-manor had been illegally enlarged to the detriment of the commons , which a specially appointed commission confirmed in part. Huldersen's widow finally sold the obergut in 1669 for 1,300 Reichstaler and “a white Turkish horse with a saddle and stuff on it” worth a further 100 Talers. Soon afterwards, with the permission of Duke Johann Friedrich, Schwartze transferred the rights and privileges of his dilapidated manor to the acquired estate. The patronage of the Barsinghausen monastery church was associated with the manor for a long time .

description

The property enclosed by outbuildings and the manor wall

The manor house of the upper estate, built in the 18th century, may have originated from Huldersen's “Pallatium”. The high manor wall and the elongated outbuildings on both sides of the main house give the complex a closed character.

Web links

Commons : Obergut Egestorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Egestorf. www.barsinghausen.de, accessed on January 20, 2018 .
  2. Chronik 1966. in 800 years Egestorf am Deister (reading sample). www.barsinghausen.de, accessed on January 20, 2018 .

Coordinates: 52 ° 17 ′ 7.3 "  N , 9 ° 30 ′ 21.6"  E