Reisslerhof

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Reisslerhof
Entrance to the Reisslerhof

Entrance to the Reisslerhof

Data
place Ludwigswinkel
Architectural style elongated transverse house
Construction year after 1745

The Reisslerhof (alternative spelling: Reislerhof ) is a historic building in Ludwigswinkel in Rhineland-Palatinate , which was probably built in the 18th century and served as weekend and holiday accommodation for the "Mietergemeinschaft Reisslerhof" from 1972 to 2018. The farm is regarded as the "cradle" of the village Ludwigswinkel, founded in 1783. The brook named after him rises near the house from the Reisslerhof , right tributary of the Sauer , which flows into the Rhine.

history

In 1722, a large part of the swampy upper Sauerbach valley was auctioned by the lordly government of the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg for clearing and reclamation . The Hanau-Lichtenberg customs tenant Hans Georg Schlick from Fischbach acquired the land as an inheritance; After his death in 1745, his heirs built the Reisslerhof there.

In the following years the landgrave Ludwig IX was built there. approved new settlement Ludwigswinkel. At the behest of the Landgrave, the buildings of the Hofgut were restored to a permanently good condition, as the Landgrave's clerk Hopfenblatt, who was supposed to manage the Ludwigswinkler settlement business, had to live there with his family. The building is a listed building by the State of Rhineland-Palatinate .

The Reisslerhof in Bavaria

In 1886 the farm came into the possession of the Bavarian state and then remained the official seat of forest officials from 1887 to 1972 .

Individual evidence

  1. Helmut Sommer: Ludwigswinkel - where vacation becomes an experience. Local community Ludwigswinkel, accessed on January 6, 2019 .
  2. Historical tour of Ludwigswinkel. (PDF) Retrieved January 6, 2019 .
  3. End of a forest idyll. In: The Rhine Palatinate. Retrieved January 6, 2019 .
  4. Lilo Hagen: Reislerhof as the cradle of the Ludwigswinkel community - of customs officers, monasteries and landgraves. September 24, 2005, accessed on April 11, 2020 (private website, published in: Die RHEINPFALZ. September 24, 2005).
  5. General Directorate for Cultural Heritage Rhineland-Palatinate (ed.): Informational directory of cultural monuments - District of Südwestpfalz. Mainz 2020, p. 30 (PDF; 8.7 MB).

Coordinates: 49 ° 5 ′ 18.8 ″  N , 7 ° 38 ′ 45 ″  E