Rinderbachburg
The Rinderbachburg was a medieval stone building in Schwäbisch Hall , the place of which is now a listed baroque town house.
Location and surroundings
This is located in the row of houses that bounds the market square to the north on the corner of Marktstrasse and has the address Am Markt 9. To the east is the baroque Stiersche House .
history
Residential tower
The Rinderbachburg was probably a medieval residential tower similar to the Keckenburg in Schwäbisch Hall. The so-called "tower" was sold in 1496 to the Lords of Rinderbach. In 1499 the gender tower went to the Egen. Around 1500 the young noble widow Sibilla Egen lived in the tower. This is why the building is also called the Sibilla Egen House . Until 1538 the building was used as a drinking room for the sexes. In 1712 the site master Johann Lorenz Drechsler (1664–1725) received the building, after which it is also known as the Drechsler house .
After the city fire of 1728 , the ruins of the previous building, the Drechsler house or the Rinderbachburg, can be seen on the far left. Detail from the copper engraving by A. Nunzer after JP Meyer |
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The previous building (Rinderbachburg, Drechsler'sches Haus), destroyed in the town fire in 1728, with illumination on the occasion of the bicentenary of the Reformation in 1717 |
Baroque plastered building
After the city fire of 1728, it was rebuilt in 1731 in the Baroque style. Since October 8, 1925, this building has been entered in the national register of architectural monuments. The city's tourist information office is now located on the ground floor.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Eugen Gradmann : At the place of the Adesches Haus on the market (No. 7) at Fischbronnen… In: The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 67 ( archive.org ).
- ^ Johann Herolt: Chronica, Time and Jarbuch from the Place Hall. Origin of what was lost in it and what castles around Hall stood for. For the first time from the oldest manuscript, with a comparison of the others, published by Ottmar FH Schönhuth . Verlag der JJ Haspel'sche Buchhandlung, Schwäbisch Hall 1855, p. 52 f. ( [1] ).
- ↑ City Archives Schwäbisch Hall: List of cultural monuments of the city of Schwäb. Hall. P. 69.
- ↑ schwaebischhall.de
- ↑ Eugen Gradmann : The house No. 9 on the market square… In: The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 81-83 ( archive.org ).
Coordinates: 49 ° 6 ′ 46.1 ″ N , 9 ° 44 ′ 13.5 ″ E