Kulmain Castle at the church

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The listed Kulmain Castle at the church (also called Go (e) belsches or Mülzisches Castle) is located in the Upper Palatinate municipality of Kulmain in the Tirschenreuth district (Hauptstrasse 28). At Kulmain there were two noble residences, the Kulmain Castle on the pond and the Kulmain Landsasserei on the church (today the town hall).

history

In the Salbuch of kurpfalzkurpfälzischen Office Waldeck is 1497 as a fief taker called "Hans Pfreimder" ( "Nota. 1 yard get Hansen to loans Pfreimbder. Imagines, nit to indulge or flocking plants.") Until about the 18th century also were there the Pfreimder resident. Only in the sixties of the 16th century appeared after the heirs of Georg Pfreimder as fiefdom Georg von Thanndorf. The following were named: "Paul Lorenz Pfreimder", "Veit Ludwig Pfreimder" (1622) and "Hans Ludwig Pfreimder" (from 1670). After his death († 1712) his daughter Eleonora Pfreimbder was heiress. She married Georg Albrecht Mulz von Waldau, who, as a fiefdom holder for his wife, gave up the compulsory estate for his wife in 1712. He died in 1746 on his Majoratsgut Neuhof in Bohemia ; his widow and two daughters were given the Kulmain estate again. In 1762, Anna Maria Sophia Pfreimbder, nee Mulz von Waldau, was named as the owner of the country estate.

Mülzisches or Göbelsches castle after the Urbarium culmainense of 1761

In 1798, Johann Georg Freiherr von Gobel, a spa Bavarian treasurer, councilor and district judge in Amberg , appeared on the estate . He transferred his property to his nephew Anton Freiherr von Gobel, who was in the service of Würzburg. In 1812 the aristocratic jurisdiction in Kulmain was abolished.

Kulmain Castle at the church today

On July 27, 1834, a fire broke out in Kulmain, which also destroyed Gobelsche Schlösschen. It was rebuilt as a school house after the fire, and school lessons were held there until 1895. Today the building houses the Kulmain Town Hall.

The former noble seat is a two-storey, plastered solid building above a high basement. The house has a half- hipped roof and granite reveals. The year "1810" is affixed to the basement exit; A stone wall to the west of the building also belongs to the earlier castle.

literature

  • Heribert Sturm: Kemnath. Landrichteramt Waldeck-Kemnath with sub-office Pressath (pp. 113–116). (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 40). Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Munich 1975, ISBN 3-7696-9902-5 .

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 53 '41.7 "  N , 11 ° 53' 48.6"  E