Ziller (master builder family)

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GEBR. ZILLER.
BAUMEISTER

Company sign, about 140 years old, hipped off and plastered over for a long time, today exposed again and still readable in an enlarged view
"Gebrüder Ziller" company around 1900
The "Gebrüder Ziller" company during the renovation of the church in Kaditz, 1887/1888

For four generations, from the beginning of the 19th century to the middle of the 20th century, the master builder family Ziller provided master builders , architects and other people involved in construction, with the time of their greatest influence being in the second half of the 19th century.

These include the builder of the Greek King Georg I and professor at the National Technical University of Athens , Ernst Ziller , who built the tomb of his friend Heinrich Schliemann , as well as his brothers, the brothers Moritz and Gustav Ziller , who worked in the Loessnitz near Dresden, and their villa developments of the Saxon Nice still influence today's construction companies. All three are mentioned as examples in Dehio. Gustav had already made a name for himself as a designer with his Danish teacher Theophil von Hansen in Vienna before his time in the Loessnitz home . After his time in Greece, their youngest brother Paul Ziller designed, among other things, the tomb for Karl May for his eldest brother Ernst at home . To the family in also heard Potsdam acting Schinkel -Students and Regierungsbaurat Christian Heinrich Ziller .

Live and act

The common ancestor of the three family lines relevant here is Johann Christian Ziller (1728–1812), a farm owner like many of his ancestors, court ladder and church father from the Saxon Oberebersbach near Radeburg .

His family name can be traced back to the first half of the 16th century in Ebersbach, and from the middle of that century also in the area of Freiberg and Nossen . Since it cannot be proven whether this family name is derived from Zille (boat type) or from Cella as in the nearby Altzella monastery , but possibly also from the first names Cylius or Cäcilie , the earlier origin of the family remains unclear.

First generation

Johann Gottfried

The eldest son Johann Gottfried (1762–1831) went to Kaditz northwest of the royal seat of Dresden , where he became a substitute (assistant) in 1785 with the schoolmaster and cantor Martin Bruchhold (1722–1792), whom he later succeeded . In 1786 he married his youngest daughter Rahel Gottliebe (1753-1802) for the first time.

Johann Christian

Farm No. 8 in Radebeul, back today Dreiseithof Kaditzer Straße 9 : main house from 1898

Johann Christian (1773–1838) had already completed training as a carpenter when he went to his older brother in Kaditz in 1799. In 1800 he bought farm no.8 , which a young widow had offered for sale in nearby Radebeul , which was part of the parish of Kaditz . At the beginning of 1801, Johann Christian also married the widow, Anna Elisabeth. Cheetah born Barth, who descended from local master carpenter and master mason families (see also Carl Gottlieb Barth ).

The farm owner was a master carpenter and founded a construction business on his newly acquired farm. He got a lot to do with this, as the surrounding Lößnitz towns not only suffered destruction in the Napoleonic Wars , but also burned down several times, for example Radebeul in 1813 and Kaditz on Maundy Thursday evening 1818. Evidence about Johann Christian's buildings is sparse, only those Church registers report on work on the church, the parish and diaconate building as well as on his brother's school. He also built the smokehouse and the pigeon house for the parish.

The couple were in his farm no. 8 in 1807, Christian Gottlieb, the fourth child and a Christian Heinrich born in 1810 as a child sixth, making this property the "cradle" of the Ziller Loessnitz builder was. The main building of the listed Dreiseithof , which stands there today at Kaditzer Straße 9 , was built in 1898 for the owner Friedrich Hermann Ziller (1853–1936), the son of Christian Heinrich, by his cousins ​​Moritz and Gustav and is considered the most stately homestead in the village of Radebeul.

Both Johann Gottfried and Johann Christian Ziller are buried with their families in the churchyard of the Emmauskirche in Dresden-Kaditz, where their gravestones are.

Johann Gottlob

Since the parental farm was owned by the minority , the youngest son Johann Gottlob (1778–1838) took it over, while his older brothers had to move abroad.

Second generation

Potsdam, Berlin

Neuendorfer Church from 1850-1853 in Potsdam-Babelsberg, construction carried out by Chr. H. Ziller based on the ideas of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV and designs by LF Hesse
Johann Gottfried's son Christian Heinrich

Christian Heinrich Ziller (1791–1868) was born as the second son of the schoolmaster Johann Gottfried during his first marriage in Kaditz. After receiving elementary lessons from his father, he attended the higher middle school in Dresden-Neustadt and then studied at the Dresden Art Academy with Gottlob August Hölzer . After initially working as a surveyor , Christian Heinrich went to Prussia in 1815 in order to make a living doing the border adjustments. A short time later he was able to continue his architecture studies in Berlin .

There he met the influential master builder and architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel . This entrusted Christian Heinrich in 1819/1820 the construction management of the neo-Gothic church in Großbeeren and 1821–1823 that of the civil casino in Potsdam . His other buildings include the Ratswaage on the Neuer Markt in Potsdam, the Neuendorfer Church in Potsdam-Babelsberg , the renovation of the Potsdam Commandant's House in the years 1852 to 1854 and numerous elegant residential buildings.

Christian Heinrich Ziller was married to Charlotte Böhm from 1828, who gave birth to two sons who also became architects: Carl Ernst Heinrich and Hermann. In 1829 Christian Heinrich was appointed government building inspector in Potsdam, and he was also appointed to the Royal Prussian Building School. As a result of his services, he was appointed government building officer in 1860 .

Loessnitz

Johann Christian's son Christian Gottlieb

Christian Gottlieb Ziller (1807–1873), the older son of the master carpenter Johann Christian, learned the carpentry trade from his father. At the beginning of the 1830s, following the example of his older cousin, who was meanwhile government building inspector in Potsdam, he studied architecture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden , among others with the master builder Carl August Benjamin Siegel and Joseph Thürmer .

Christian Gottlieb Ziller's design for his country house

From 1834, the master builder Christian Gottlieb built for his family and his building business on the large property on Augustusweg 4 an “Italian” house type, a country house in the Tuscan style, which was characterized by his classical training and was new for the region . With this southern building type he was five years earlier than Gottfried Semper , who built the trend-setting Villa Rosa in Dresden in 1839 . The main house was framed to the right and left by two single-storey outbuildings with a gable roof, of which the left, western one is still present today. After completing the work on the house in 1836, he moved the construction business founded by his father Johann Christian around 1800 in Radebeul and taken over by him to Serkowitz (from 1839 Oberlößnitz) on his newly built property.

The country house today with a polygonal porch, without a right outbuilding

At that time the property was on Serkowitz vineyard floor and came to Oberlößnitz when the community was founded in 1839 . Of the ten children that Christian Gottlieb and his wife Johanna Sophie geb. Fichtner were born in this house, the firstborn Ernst Moritz Theodor (1837) and Moritz Gustav Ferdinand (1838) were born in Serkowitz, all the others in Oberlößnitz. Two of the daughters died early, Sophia Alwina Johanna at the age of three and Sophie Eugenia at the age of 21. The children spent their childhood on this property and received their first apprenticeship.

From 1835 Christian Gottlieb built the Villa Zembsch in Oberlößnitz between the old Haus Steinbach and Haus Sorgenfrei . In 1854 he renewed the old school in Kaditz , where his uncle had worked for 35 years. In addition to other villas and country houses, he was involved in the building of churches in Lomnitz and Lichtenberg in Lausitz.

Johann Christian's son Christian Heinrich

Johann Christian's youngest son Christian Heinrich (1810–1857) took over farm no.8 as a minority . After the change of the municipality constitution due to the Saxon rural municipality order of 1838 he was from 1851 to 1856 municipality chair of the rural municipality Radebeul . His great-great-grandson Rudolf (1911–2001) lived in the property, which has been in the family since 1800, until the end of his life.

Johann Gottlob's son Gottlob Adam

Gottlob Adam Ziller, the eldest son of the farm owner Johann Gottlob in Oberebersbach, born in 1817, married the widow of a master mason in Radebeul. Presumably it is he who is mentioned in the building files for the church building in Lomnitz by his cousin Christian Gottlieb as the "Ziller from Ebersbach".

Third generation

Potsdam, Berlin

Christian Heinrich's sons Carl Ernst Heinrich and Hermann
Hermann Ziller: Berlin City Palace; Demolition of the houses of the castle freedom: perspective view with the castle facade from the castle bridge. Hand drawing of a design, 1886.

Carl Ernst Heinrich (Ernst) Ziller (1832–1866), the first-born son of the then government building inspector Christian Heinrich, also became an architect. The early deceased showed his artistic abilities in drawings and watercolors on an Italian study trip, which the Winckelmann Society in Stendal honored with an exhibition in 1998 . He was a second cousin of the builder, building researcher and archaeologist Ernst Ziller (1837–1923) , who was mainly active in Greece .

Hermann August (Hermann) Ziller (1848–1915), his younger brother, also became an architect. Hermann is the architect of the Berlin residential and department store Kurfürstendamm 227 built in 1887/1888 , which Herbert Noth rebuilt in 1950/1951. Some of his plans are known that show the reconstruction of the Berlin City Palace and the redesign of the Schlossplatz , but which were not implemented. In addition, Hermann Ziller wrote a comprehensive artist monograph on Karl Friedrich Schinkel.

Whether another son Eduard (* before 1848, architect), who is also said to have become an architect, actually existed cannot be traced back to the lack of other sources.

Vienna, Athens

Christian Gottlieb's sons Ernst and Moritz
Ernst Ziller and his wife Sofia Dodou, a solo pianist whom he met in Vienna

Christian Gottlieb's two eldest sons, Ernst Moritz Theodor (Ernst) (1837–1923) and Moritz Gustav Ferdinand (Moritz) (1838–1895) were both born in the house at today's Augustusweg 4 in Serkowitz and in 1839 were residents of Oberlößnitz. Both learned building master trades, Ernst mason and Moritz carpenter. They received the necessary theoretical training from their father, especially in winter when the construction work was idle. Ernst also attended the construction studio of the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden ( Semper-Nicolai-Schule ) from 1855 to 1858 , where he received a bronze medal in the second year and a silver medal in the third year.

The two brothers went to Leipzig to see their master stonemason friend Einsiedeln and wanted to go to Berlin together, where their uncle Christian Heinrich was working. However, on Einsiedeln's advice, they went to the more “solid” Vienna. Moritz quickly found work as a carpenter, while Ernst worked as a draftsman in the office of the classic Danish architect Theophil von Hansen . Just six months later, Hansen went to Greece to prepare for the construction of the Athens Academy, while the two brothers Ernst and Moritz returned to Dresden to deepen their knowledge in the construction studio of the Academy of Fine Arts in the winter . While Moritz was joining his father's master builder business in Oberlößnitz, Ernst successfully took part in an architecture competition for Tbilisi and then returned to Vienna on an offer from Hansen. From there they both went to Athens , where Ernst Ziller's actual career took place, at the end of which he built around 600 buildings for the Greek king, built the house and the mausoleum for his friend Heinrich Schliemann , and rediscovered the Panathenaic Stadium , dug it up and for it had reconstructed the Olympic Games of 1896 .

Christian Gottlieb's son Gustav

The younger brother Gustav Ludwig (Gustav) (1842–1901), born in Oberlößnitz, studied after completing his master mason training at the building school and then at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. Then he went to Vienna to his brother Ernst, where he worked for a while as a designer in Theophil von Hansen's office. From Vienna, Gustav made study trips to Rome, Florence, Venice and Tuscany , where he, a “gifted artist”, developed his artistic streak. At the urgent request of the father, Gustav gave in to family reasons and after a few delays he returned to Lößnitz in 1867 to continue the father's business with his brother.

Christian Gottlieb's son Paul

The youngest Paul Friedrich (Paul) (1846–1931) became a stonemason and architect. After his service with the pioneers in Dresden, Paul went to Athens to see his eldest brother Ernst in 1868. Starting as assistant to the site manager in the construction of the Athens Academy, Paul stayed with his brother for the next 25 years or so and did not return to Lößnitz until the mid-1890s. For his services to the Greek state during this time, Paul was awarded the Order of the Redeemer in 1910 .

Loessnitz

Marie and Gustav Ziller
Christian Gottlieb's sons Moritz and Gustav ("Ziller Brothers")
Moritz Ziller

Moritz Ziller joined his father's construction business in Lößnitz in 1859, while his older brother Ernst went back to Vienna and from there to Athens. From 1862 the local building files list "Ziller jun." And Moritz Ziller as the person responsible for the building. During these years the Albertsberg house was converted , an extension to the Mehlhorn country house and the Waldhof villa in Niederlößnitz , which many years later came into the possession of his sister Helene Ziller (1843–1918), who ran a family pension there. The unmarried Helene had run Moritz's household until his marriage in 1890. Moritz also built the castle-like mansion on Curt Robert von Welck's estate and the renovation of the villa of the chamber musician Lewy-Hoffmann .

As more and more construction companies were pushing into the rapidly growing Lößnitz region, father Christian Gottlieb wanted to hand over the company to his children as successors in good time. At his request, Gustav, who was strong in design and artistic, returned from a foreign country in 1867 in the year of his father's 60th birthday to complement his older brother, who was strong in commercial matters and specialized in the creation of gardens, outdoor areas and squares. In the same year, the construction company founded by grandfather around 1800 was renamed by the two brothers to the " Gebrüder Ziller " construction company .

Gustav built his house on the opposite side of the street, which belonged to Serkowitz , in 1869 , a large country house- like villa (Hauptstraße No. 2, today Augustusweg 3). In the following year the house for Moritz followed on the neighboring property (Hauptstrasse No. 3, today Augustusweg 5) . With the addition of a studio room and a plan archive, this residential building became the business premises of the Ziller brothers , which was also located in Serkowitz, even though the company was advertising with its headquarters in Oberlößnitz. The GEBR. ZILLER. BAUMEISTER worked most significantly in the next few decades to create built culture in the Saxon city of Nice , always in coordination with the "local building regulations" or "local building laws", which differ slightly from rural municipality to rural municipality. So they set up numerous fountains and figures at their own expense, not only on the property, but also on street entrances and squares designed by them, many of them from the Berlin company Ernst March . Moritz was also a co-founder of the Beautification Association for the Loessnitz and the surrounding area .

Gustav married Johanna Sophie Marie (Marie) (1862–1910) in 1886, a daughter of Dresden's secret councilor Otto Hennig. Of the five children, two died at childhood and two at the age of twenty (Reinhart 1917, Gertrud 1918). When Gertrud died of tuberculosis, the family set up the Ziller Foundation for the care and support of women with tuberculosis at the Bethesda infirmary in what is now Radebeul. The fifth child, Gustav Otto, later also took up the profession of architect and made a name for himself in the region.

Christian Gottlieb's son Otto
Business premises of the Ziller brothers, from Augustusweg. left the studio room, right unrenovated the plan archive
Colonial goods Otto Ziller (1903)

The middle brother Otto Heinrich (Otto) (1840–1914) did not learn a construction trade, but was to become very important for the Zillers. He took up the trade of a merchant and had a large house built on the property next to the brothers (Hauptstrasse No. 4, today Augustusweg 11 / corner of Nizzastrasse ) in 1864, in which he ran the Loessnitz warehouse , a shop for colonial goods , delicacies , Seeds and porcelain , in which Karl May also made his purchases. Otto Ziller distributed lists of goods with his offer in Lößnitz and thus combined an order and free delivery service.

Since it sometimes took over a year until the houses completed by the Ziller brothers on their own account as property developers could be sold, this was often done through "proof of rental apartments and real estate for sale for Oberlößnitz and the surrounding area by Otto Ziller, Colonialwarhandlung in Oberlößnitz, Hauptstr. No. 4. (Augustusweg 11, demolished in January 2003) ”, for example via press advertisements or via the display cases in front of the Loessnitz department store. Otto took over the flaws for the siblings if they did not build on behalf of the siblings but on their own account. Among other things, in 1895 he sold a house that had already been completed on land south of the newly built Luther Church , which became known as Villa Shatterhand under its new owner Karl May . The purchase contract for 37,300 marks for the villa, which was completed in August 1894, dates from November 17, 1895 and agreed payment in installments.

Otto's youngest son Curt Ziller (1876–1945) also became an architect and worked as a building officer in Württemberg. He was picked up during a visit to Saxony in 1945 and is missing.

Christian Gottlieb's son Paul

The youngest brother Paul Ziller returned home from Greece in the year of the death of Moritz, who was buried like his ancestors in Kaditz; However, brother Gustav only let Paul help out and continued the business of the “Gebrüder Ziller” on his own. So Paul settled in the nearby Kötzschenbroda in 1897 . When Gustav died in 1901 and was buried in the Radebeul-Ost cemetery, Paul briefly took over management of the company, but had to leave it to his sister-in-law, Gustav's widow, due to incorrect speculation. Paul Ziller then opened a “Bureau for Architecture” in Serkowitz in October 1901 , which he actively ran until at least 1912. When his most important work on German soil, the true tomb of Karl May in the cemetery Radebeul-Ost, which he in 1903 as a family burial place of the friend of his family May and Plöhn strongly inspired by the Athens Nike temple designed.

Paul lived the last years of his life in relative poverty with his sister Pauline at Rosenstrasse 20. He was buried in the Radebeul-Ost cemetery.

Karl May grave by Paul Ziller
Gustav's widow Marie

Gustav's widow Marie led the construction company "Gebrüder Ziller" for almost ten years, with the support of the employed architect Max Steinmetz as technical manager. In the year of Marie's death in 1910, the “ Gebrüder Ziller ” company was split up: the construction company with the associated building materials business went to the Radebeul master builder Alwin Höhne (1878–1940) and the design office to the architect Max Steinmetz, who had been employed there until then Year passed away. In the year of death of Gustav's younger son Reinhart, 1917, ("Accident in Russia"), the name of the construction company "Gebrüder Ziller" was deleted from the official register; the company itself was active under the name of master builder Alwin Höhne until at least the 1930s when, for example, he rebuilt the villa at Zinzendorfstrasse 17 and "simplified late-historical building details in a modernizing way". Höhne built a country house- like residential building for himself in 1926, Haus Höhne .

Fourth generation

Württemberg / Loessnitz

Otto's son Curt

The businessman Otto Heinrich's youngest son Curt Ziller (1876–1945) also became an architect and worked as a building officer in Württemberg. He was picked up during a visit to Saxony in 1945 and is missing.

Loessnitz

Gustav's son Otto
Skyscraper on Albertplatz as the skyscraper of the Saxon State Bank , around 1930
(restored by Otto Ziller after 1945)

Gustav Otto (Otto) (1889–1958) was the eldest son of Gustav Ludwig, the younger of the two Ziller brothers , and his wife Marie, who had managed the construction company "Gebrüder Ziller" until her death in 1910. After graduating from secondary school, Gustav Otto did a practical training in a construction business in Dresden and after his journeyman mason examination went to the trade academy in Chemnitz, where he received his theoretical training in the architecture department. He deepened this by four semesters at the Royal Saxon Building School in Zittau and several semesters at the Hamburg School of Applied Arts , where he studied with Richard Schmidt . After the First World War, he completed his academic training in structural engineering at the Technical University of Dresden , with Emil Högg , among others .

During this time he worked as a draftsman in the office of the Radebeul builder and architect Alwin Höhne , who took over the building activities of the Ziller brothers after Marie Ziller's death . Gustav Otto passed his master builder examination in Dresden in 1920 and two years later joined the work and living community of the Dresden and later Radebeul architect and anthroposophist Bernhard Weyrather , his wife, the artisan Gertrud Weyrather-Engau , and the sculptor Walther Kniebe , where he worked as an architect until 1926. In June 1926 he started his own business in Radebeul and in the following years mainly created residential and residential buildings. In August 1931 he joined the Association of German Architects . In the address book of 1943 he is still listed as an architect and owner, living in his parents' house (2nd floor), Bernhard Weyrather lived below.

After the Second World War, he was in charge of repairs to the high-rise building on Albertplatz in Dresden and the reconstruction for the Dresden transport company to move into. He also prepared tender documents for new farms . From 1952 he got involved in the Radebeul specialist group Heimatpflege of the Kulturbund in questions of the preservation of monuments and the "history and development of the Loessnitz localities", which his ancestors had played a key role in shaping. For this purpose, he made building files and documents from the family archive available.

In 1918 he married Johanna Rüger from Oberlößnitz. Two daughters of the three children died early, the son became a teacher like one of his ancestors and went to Vienna with the family.

Overview

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Johann Christian Ziller
(landowner Oberebersbach)
(1728–1812)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Johann Gottfried
(schoolmaster Kaditz)
(1762–1831)
 
 
 
 
 
Johann Christian
(landowner / carpenter Radebeul)
(1773–1838)
 
 
 
Johann Gottlob
(landowner Oberebersbach)
(1778–1838)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Christian Heinrich
(master builder Potsdam)
(1791–1868)
 
Carl Gottfried
(theologian Dresden)
(1790–1860)
 
Christian Gottlieb
(master builder Lößnitz)
(1807–1873)
 
Christian Heinrich
(landowner / Radebeul municipality board)
(1810–1857)
 
Gottlob Adam
(builder Radebeul)
(* 1817)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Carl Ernst Heinrich
(architect Potsdam)
(1832–1866)
 
Hermann August
(master builder Potsdam)
(1848–1915)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Friedrich Hermann
(landowner Radebeul)
(1853–1936)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ernst Moritz Theodor
(master builder Athens)
(1837–1923)
 
Moritz Gustav Ferdinand
(master builder Lößnitz)
(1838–1895)
 
Otto Heinrich
(merchant Lößnitz)
(1840–1914)
 
Gustav Ludwig
(master builder Lößnitz)
(1842–1901)
 
Paul Friedrich
(architect Athens / Lößnitz)
(1846–1931)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Curt
(architect / building officer Württemberg)
(1876–1945)
 
Gustav Otto
(architect Lößnitz / Dresden)
(1889–1958)
 
 
 
 

Burial and memorial sites

More family members

  • Carl (also: Karl) Gottfried Ziller (1790–1860), Saxon theologian and master's degree from Dresden, son of the cantor and schoolmaster Johann Gottfried Z. in Kaditz and brother of Christian Heinrich Ziller in Potsdam, from 1825 “ deacon and catechist ” at the Dresden Frauenkirche , from 1838 archdeacon at the Kreuzkirche, author of Dr. Seltenreich's life and work , 1837, April 23, 1539, or the Reformation in the city of Dresden. A contribution to the special history of the Evangelical Church in Saxony . Arnold, Wagner and Grimmer, Dresden 1839 as well as confession and communion book for Evangelical Christians before, during and after enjoying Holy Communion , 5th edition, Albrecht, Dresden 1862.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Georg Dehio ; Barbara Bechter (arr.); Wiebke Fastenrath (arr.); u. a .: Saxony I; Dresden administrative district . In: Handbook of German Art Monuments . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1996, p. 730-739 .
  2. Horst Naumann (ed.): Family name book. Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig 1987, ISBN 3-323-00089-7
  3. Friedbert Ficker; Gert Morzinek; Barbara Mazurek: Ernst Ziller - A Saxon architect and building researcher in Greece; The Ziller family . Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg i. Allgäu 2003, p. 24
  4. ^ Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 20 (Last list of monuments published by the city of Radebeul. The Lower Monument Protection Authority, which has been based in the Meißen district since 2012, has not yet published a list of monuments for Radebeul.).
  5. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 161 .
  6. ^ Georg Dehio: Handbook of the German art monuments districts Berlin / GDR and Potsdam . Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1988, table of contents
  7. ^ Frank Andert (Red.): Radebeul City Lexicon . Historical manual for the Loessnitz . Published by the Radebeul City Archives. 2nd, slightly changed edition. City archive, Radebeul 2006, ISBN 3-938460-05-9 , p. 264 .
  8. Friedbert Ficker; Gert Morzinek; Barbara Mazurek: Ernst Ziller - A Saxon architect and building researcher in Greece; The Ziller family . Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg i. Allgäu 2003, p. 30
  9. ^ Winckelmann-Gesellschaft Stendal: The Italian drawings and watercolors by Carl Ernst Heinrich Ziller . Exhibition catalog, Stendal 1998.
  10. Hermann Ziller . In: Hans Vollmer (Hrsg.): General lexicon of fine artists from antiquity to the present . Founded by Ulrich Thieme and Felix Becker . tape 36 : Wilhelmy-Zyzywi . EA Seemann, Leipzig 1947, p. 501 .
  11. ^ Hermann Ziller: Schinkel . Knackfuß artist monographs XXVIII. Velhagen & Klasing, Bielefeld and Leipzig 1897.
  12. ^ "Eduard (* before 1848, Arch.)"; from the biography of Hermann Ziller; listed in: Uwe Kieling: Berlin private architects and railroad builders in the 19th century . (Miniatures on the history, culture and preservation of Berlin monuments, No. 26; published by the Berlin district boards of the societies for local history and preservation of monuments in the Kulturbund der GDR), Berlin 1988.
  13. a b Friedbert Ficker; Gert Morzinek; Barbara Mazurek: Ernst Ziller - A Saxon architect and building researcher in Greece; The Ziller family . Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg i. Allgäu 2003, p. 27
  14. ↑ The Ziller brothers in the Karl May Wiki
  15. Thilo Hansel; Markus Hänsel: On the trail of the Ziller brothers in Radebeul. Architectural considerations . Notschriften Verlag, Radebeul 2008, p. 160.
  16. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 25th f .
  17. club for historic preservation and new building radebeul (ed.): Contributions to the urban culture of the city Radebeul (1997 ff.)
    - in particular the contribution of art in the public space of the city Radebeul , by G. Täubert, ibid., 2002.
  18. Historical forays with Gert Morzinek
  19. a b c Gert Morzinek: Historical forays with Gert Morzinek. The collected works from 5 years “StadtSpiegel” . premium Verlag, Großenhain, 2007, p. 136 ff.
  20. The “Shatterhand” villa in Radebeul
  21. Gert Morzinek: Historical forays with Gert Morzinek. The collected works from 5 years “StadtSpiegel” . premium Verlag, Großenhain, 2007, p. 72 ff.
  22. ^ A b Information from the Radebeul City Archives based on civil status research to Jbergner , 25 Aug. 2009.
  23. ^ Information from the Radebeul city archive to users: Jbergner from February 9, 2009.
  24. ^ Obituary from May 14, 1931.
  25. according to the inscription on his tombstone in the Radebeul-Ost cemetery.
  26. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 .
  27. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 320 .
  28. Bernhard Weyrather
  29. ^ Page no longer available , search in web archives: Anthroposophical villa in Bad Kötzting is known for its extraordinary architecture@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.idowa.de
  30. Hikes in Radebeul
  31. Friedbert Ficker; Gert Morzinek; Barbara Mazurek: Ernst Ziller - A Saxon architect and building researcher in Greece; The Ziller family. Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg i. Allgäu 2003, p. 49
  32. General repertory of the latest domestic and foreign literature for 1825. Edited by a society of scholars and obtained by Christian Daniel Beck . First volume. Carl Cnobloch, Leipzig 1825.
  33. Ziller, Karl Gottfried (1790-1860)
This version was added to the list of articles worth reading on February 16, 2009 .