Regensburg court
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c7/Wien_Lugeck_alter_und_neuer_Regensburger_Hof_1897_Franz_Poledne.jpg/220px-Wien_Lugeck_alter_und_neuer_Regensburger_Hof_1897_Franz_Poledne.jpg)
The Regensburger Hof on Lugeck was for centuries the storehouse and Einkehrgasthof the Regensburg merchants in Vienna .
history
The building, which dates from the 14th century and has been rebuilt many times, was, among other things, the site of a historical meeting between Emperor Friedrich III. and the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus in February 1470. It was demolished in the course of the Wilhelminian urban redevelopment in 1896 despite numerous protests. The successor building built in 1897 (Lugeck 4), a commercial building by the architect Neumann, tries to take up the formal language of the destroyed historical building, but purely externally and on a roughly double scale.
The old and new Regensburger Hof used to be the location of the C. Genersich & Orendi carpet store , which was an imperial and royal purveyor to the court . From 2008 the Little Buddha Bar was located there. The “Lugeck” inn of the Figlmüller gastronomy dynasty has been operating at this location since 2014.
literature
- Peter Csendes , Ferdinand Opll : Vienna: From the beginnings to the first Turkish siege of Vienna (1529) , Böhlau, 2001, especially pp. 118, 169.
- Manfred Wehdorn , Mario Schwarz , Susanne Hayder, Christian Chinna: Vienna, a guide to the UNESCO world heritage sites , Birkhäuser, 2004, ISBN 3211408630 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Isabella Ackerl, Harald A. Jahn: Unknown Vienna - hidden beauty, shimmering splendor . Pichler Verlag, Vienna 2010, ISBN 978-3-85431-513-1 , pp. 26th f .
Coordinates: 48 ° 12 ′ 34.9 ″ N , 16 ° 22 ′ 30 ″ E