Campagne Hubelgut

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Campagne Hubelgut Habstetten

The Hubelgut Campagne , also known as Habstetten Castle , is a historic country estate from the 17th century in a classicist style in Habstetten near Bolligen in the canton of Bern .

location

The Hubelgut is a Bernese campaign at the entrance to Habstetten. A peristyle was added to the seven-axis residential storey with a protruding hipped roof around 1840 . To the south there is a broad view over Bern to the Bernese High Alps. Not far away, on Stampachstrasse, was a small Marienkapelle until the Bernese Reformation. The pilgrimage chapel was demolished and a house built over it. Remnants of the apse wall are still visible as the north wall of the house.

history

The village of Habstetten was originally owned by the nobles von Thorberg . Ritter Berchtold sold it to Bern in 1345. The Habstetten estates were acquired by Ulrich von Buch and Cuno von Holz in 1376. In 1670 the estate on the Hubel was owned by the town clerk Gabriel Gross and in 1679 was taken over by his son of the same name. In 1732 the doctor Johann David Wilhelmi exchanged the Hubelgut for land belonging to Gabriel Gross. In 1777, the captain and later governor of Morges, Carl Ryhiner, acquired the estate from the property of the other family . As a colonel in the Bernese troops near Laupen , he achieved sad fame on March 3, 1798, when he ordered his exhausted soldiers to attack. His widow sold the Hubelgut to Susanna Elisabeth Hartmann in 1801. After various generations of inheritance, Salomon Ludwig Jakob von Wattenwyl , lord of the Kirchdorf castle, acquired the Hubelgut in 1834 and expanded it extensively. Since then, the country house has remained in the family's possession, since 1976 through several inheritances of the von Mandach family.

literature

Web links

Commons : Campagne Habstetten  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wolf Maync: Bernese Campaigns. P. 44.

Coordinates: 46 ° 59 '1.2 "  N , 7 ° 29' 53.9"  E ; CH1903:  604 540  /  203625