Oberbrunn Palace

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Oberbrunn Palace is a former Hofmarks Palace in the village of Oberbrunn between Seeon and Pittenhart in Chiemgau .

history

The first mention of Oberbrunn as "Brunn" can be found for the year 924 in the Salzburg document book . Hans I. Sunthaimer had the current palace building built between 1530 and 1535. On April 27, 1531 he received the Hofmarksrecht for the seat of Oberbrunn. His son, Hanns II. Sunthaimer, sold the Hofmark to Hanns Egidius Sonderndorffer zu Polling in 1570. Via inheritance, Oberbrunn came to the Armannsperger in 1607, who owned it until 1753. Then Joseph Ignaz Krez from Munich, electoral court chamber councilor and court paymaster, acquired it. In 1760 Franz Seraph Basselet de La Rosèe bought the Hofmark. In 1851 the von Belli di Pino family from Munich bought the property. In 1891 most of the forests were sold to the miller from Roitham , who had them cut down. The painter Carl Friedrich Steinheil bought the castle . After renovation, he sold it eight years later to Theodor von Cramer-Klett on Hohenaschau. From 1905, Cramer-Klett left the premises to the girls' educational institution at Schloss Oberbrunn, which built a school here. After its closure in 1919, the castle came to the wholesale merchant Paul Naber from Rheydt in the Rhineland in 1922 . In 1936 his widow sold the castle to the consul Merkle from Nuremberg. He too only kept it for a few years and leased the rooms to the Arbeiterwohlfahrt , which purchased it in 1954. The associated bog areas were allocated in parcels. During the Second World War, the upper floor was already used as a hostel for evacuees. The workers' welfare organization rebuilt the inside of the palace while maintaining the outer facade and added a new building in 1967/68 to accommodate those seeking relaxation. In 1985 Karl Rubenberger KG, Erding acquired the castle. Subsequently it served and still serves as a meditation and educational center for various spiritualist communities.

Building description

Castle and castle chapel, high structure with a crooked roof and east projecting apse, first half of the 18th century, with an older core.

See also

literature

  • Gotthard Kießling, Dorit Reimann: District of Traunstein (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.22 ). Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg im Allgäu 2007, ISBN 978-3-89870-364-2 .
  • Richard van Dülmen: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part of old Bavaria. Traunstein. Series 1, issue 26, Verlag Laßleben, 1970.

Web links

Coordinates: 47 ° 57 ′ 51.9 "  N , 12 ° 24 ′ 58.5"  E