Kalteneck Castle (Holzgerlingen)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The southeast wing of the castle

Kalteneck Castle or Kalteneck Castle is a two-wing moated castle in Holzgerlingen in the Boeblingen district in Baden-Württemberg .

history

The original castle was probably built by the funds free of the Counts of Tübingen . The Bürgle was first mentioned in 1363 in connection with a purchase of Holzgerlingen . In 1412 the castle was owned by Ulrich Mayer von Wasseneck, who had received it as a fief from Württemberg and finally bought it in 1420. After his death without a valid fiefdom successor, the castle fell back to Württemberg in 1441, which Wilhelm Zimmerer enfeoffed. The castle was probably owned by Count Eberhard im Bart's illegitimate son , Ludwig Württemberger, in 1482, and in 1489 Count Eberhard sold the castle and two gardens to Claus Steinmarn (or Staimer) von Jesingen. This is probably responsible for the construction of the southeast wing, which was built in 1502. In 1552 the castle was first mentioned as Kalteneck Castle with Hans Marquart, the mayor of Holzgerlingen. In 1648 the west wing was built, which was rebuilt in 1702, as evidenced by a date in the lintel of the east door. The castle was sold to farmers as early as 1744 before the owners quickly changed at the end of the 18th and first half of the 19th century: between 1802 and 1849 alone, the castle had ten owners, including the municipality of Holzgerlingen in 1826, who after the purchase kept the goods of the castle like an almost 40 hectare tree population in Schönbuch. In 1988 the castle was bought by the municipality of Holzgerlingen and after a renovation in 1991 it was expanded into a cultural center.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Dagmar Zimdars (arrangement): Georg Dehio: Handbook of German Art Monuments. Baden-Württemberg I. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin / Munich 1993, ISBN 3-422-03024-7 , p. 372.
  2. Municipal administration Holzgerlingen (ed.): Holzgerlinger Heimatbuch. Self-published, Holzgerlingen 1957, pp. 135ff.
  3. ^ A b Julius Fekete: Art and cultural monuments in the district of Böblingen. Theiss, Stuttgart 2006, ISBN 3-8062-1969-9 , p. 157.
  4. a b c d Description of the Oberamt Böblingen. Issued by the Royal Statistical-Topographical Bureau; Unchanged reprint of the edition from 1850, Bissinger, Magstadt 1961, p. 178.
  5. a b Sönke Lorenz: Holzgerlingen: from the Schönbuchsiedlung to the city. WEGRAhistorik-Verlag, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-929315-04-1 , p. 57.

Coordinates: 48 ° 38 ′ 10.9 ″  N , 9 ° 0 ′ 49.3 ″  E