Palais Woronzow (Munich)
The Palais Woronzow in Munich is a building that is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian Monument List.
Emergence
The Society of Jesus had set up seminar rooms for the Institute Sancti Gregorii Magni on the property in the area of Herzogspitalstrasse 12, which included:
- From 1694 to 1806 Neuhauser Strasse 18 with Herzogspitalstrasse No. 19 and 20
- From 1694 to 1790 Neuhauser Strasse 23 and 24 with Herzogspitalstrasse 21
- From 1739 to 1806 Neuhauser Strasse 20.
The Institut Sancti Gregorii Magni of the Society of Jesus was dissolved in 1806. The repeal of the Jesuit order was decreed in 1773 by Clement XIV . From 1802 to 1803 secularization was carried out in Bavaria .
Architecture and history
In 1807 the royal Bavarian councilor, court attorney, university tax office and poor institute assessor Jakob Ludwig had a new building built on the property and auctioned it on February 22, 1808 for 18,000 guilders.
The building was awarded in 1820 a facade in the Empire style .
The Russian envoy Ivan Illarionowitsch Voronzow-Daschkow had Jean Baptiste Métivier , as a tenant, condense the building's support system to nine fields, which meant that the first floor could be used as a ballroom .
Maximilian I. Joseph (Bavaria) was a guest in the Vorontsov Palace on the evening of October 12, 1825 and was found dead in his bed in Nymphenburg Palace the next morning . The delegation secretary Fyodor Ivanovich Tjuttschew supervised the public relations work in the Russo-Turkish War from 1828-1829 from here with Friedrich Ludwig Lindner ,
From 1830 to 1877 the Wilhelmsgymnasium Munich was housed in the building. In 1879 the building was used as an eye clinic.
The facade of the first floor is rusticated .
In the middle part, the areas between the four windows on the first and second floors are decorated with arches, female head masks and scarves from the stucco repertoire of the Empire (style) .
The outstanding poet and diplomat Fyodor Ivanovich worked in this house from 1822–1837 and 1839–1844 .
Other buildings named Palais Vorontsov
- The Vorontsov Palace in Saint Petersburg was built for Mikhail Illarionovich Voronzow (July 12, 1714 - February 15, 1767) from 1749 to 1758 according to plans by Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli .
- The Vorontsov Palace in Alupka , also known as the Vorontsov Palace , was built for Mikhail Semjonowitsch Voronzow from 1828 to 1848 according to plans by Edward Blore .
- The Voronzow Palace in Odessa was built for Mikhail Semjonowitsch Voronzow from 1830 to 1848 according to plans by Francesco Boffo .
- The Vorontsov Palace on Rustaveli Avenue in Tbilisi was built in 1868 for Hilarion Voronzow-Daschkow (born May 27, 1837 - January 25, 1916), Tsarist governor of the Caucasus , general of the cavalry, one of the largest landowners in Russia, son of Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov-Dashkov built.
Individual evidence
- ^ Andreas Burgmaier, Häuserbuch der Stadt München, Volume 3, Stadtarchiv München, R. Oldenbourg, 1962 p. 179.
- ^ Svetlana Kirschbaum Friedrich Ludwig Lindner, Fjodor Iwanowitsch Tjuttschew and the Russian press project in Bavaria in forms of power: Interdisciplinary perspectives on power in the context of young Slavic research , p. 129 ff.
- ↑ January 10, 2013, listed justice building in Upper Bavaria ( Memento from January 10, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) GIT
Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 16.26 " N , 11 ° 34 ′ 4.74" E