Stetten Castle (Remstal)

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Stetten Castle
Stetten Castle at the blue hour
Bonn building with chapel
Fountain in the courtyard
Coat of arms on the castle

The Castle Stetten is a former castle in the Castle Street 38 in Stetten and now the seat of the Diakonie Stetten . It was mainly built and expanded between the 16th and 19th centuries, but is based on older remains.

Location and description

The lock is located in the center of Stetten and is striking because of its angle hook shape. In the south-east of the complex, facing south-west to north-east, is the Bonn'sche Bau. It is a two-story building with a high, solid ground floor and a plastered half-timbered upper floor . Under the gable roof with dormers is a gable made of unplastered half-timbering in a north-easterly direction . On the side facing the inner courtyard there is a round stone stair tower with an octagonal half-timbered bell storey and a Welscher hood .

The Liebenstein'sche building adjoining it at right angles to the northwest consists of two brick and one half-timbered floors. The arched gate leading from the inner courtyard into the garden is special.

The Eberhardinische Bau extends over a connecting structure between the central structure and the Liebenstein'schen Bau from southeast to northwest. It has two floors under a hipped roof with a dormer window, but the upper floor facing the courtyard is only a mezzanine . On the north-western transverse side there is a four-storey extension with a hipped roof, on the north-western long side there is a 3½-storey building with a pyramid roof .

The central building is parallel to the Bonn'schen building and divides the courtyard into the inner and outer courtyards. The central building is a two-story building with a gable roof and dormers. On the north-eastern transverse side there is a 1 ½ storey high volute gable with a crowning triangular gable and obelisk . On the mezzanine floor of the gable a circular window is installed below this can be a coat of arms - cartridge recognize.

history

Until 1507

That of the Stewards of Stetten built predecessor of Winkelhaken plant , which consisted of two stone houses, was first mentioned in the 1241st One house stood on the site of today's Liebenstein building and served as a reception building, the other in place of today's intermediate building between the Bonn building and the central building and served as a kitchen building. Between 1384 and 1387 it was expanded by Wilhelm and Wolf von Stetten.

Owned by Thumb von Neuburg (1507–1664)

The plant was acquired in 1507 by Konrad Thumb von Neuburg for 4,000 guilders from Hans Truchsess von Stetten. A year later he had the centerpiece of the palace, the Bonn'schen Bau, built. A stair tower, which still exists today, was built on the northern side of the building in 1516. In 1580 Hans Konrad Thumb II had a cellar built under the Bonn building. Four years later he added another castle building, the Liebenstein'schen Bau, at right angles to the Bonn building. In 1645 Johann Friedrich Thumb bequeathed half of the castle to the imperial quartermaster Johann Jakob Bonn and Philipp Konrad von Liebenstein, who were married to the two heir daughters. The names of the wing structures come from them.

Under the rule of Württemberg (1664-1830)

In 1664 and 1666 the Liebenstein and Bonn parts of the castle and the village came into the possession of the Dukes of Württemberg. To the wedding with Wilhelm Ludwig von Württemberg was Magdalena Sibylla of Hesse-Darmstadt 1673 Stetten as a dowry. The castle was then built by Duke Eberhard III. expanded to include the middle section. After Wilhelm Ludwig's death in 1677, Magdalena Sibylla used the castle as a widow's residence, where she lived from March to October. She spent the rest of the year in Kirchheim unter Teck , where the widow's residence in Württemberg was actually located. As early as 1679, she had a chapel built in the form of a transverse church with the inclusion of a choir on the southeast side in the Dürnitz des Bonn'schen building by master builder Matthias Weiß, who then rebuilt the St. Vitus Church in Stetten in 1698 . In 1692, the summer hall was built on the ground floor of the central building under the direction of Andreas Schmutzer with wall paintings by Paul Etschmann. In 1722, Duke Eberhard Ludwig had another building added for his mistress Wilhelmine von Grävenitz , who had lived in Stetten from 1712 until 1733, which is why it is called the Eberhardinischer Bau. This part of the castle was probably built by the court architect Donato Giuseppe Frisoni . After Eberhard Ludwig's death, the castle was owned by his widow Johanna Elisabeth , who had the winter hall added in 1745. Also in 1745 an intermediate building was built between the Bonn'schem and the central building, as these were previously only connected by a Söller . From 1810 until his death in 1830 the palace was the residence of Wilhelm Friedrich Philipp von Württemberg , brother of the first King Friedrich . In 1826 the lake that had previously surrounded the castle on two sides was filled in.

From 1830 until today

In 1831 a high school with boarding school was housed in the castle, in the course of which the Eberhardin building was increased by one floor in 1832. However, due to a lack of demand, the school was closed in 1852. From 1852 onwards, the camera and forestry office and a straw hat factory were briefly located in some rooms. In May 1864 the “sanatorium and nursing home for feeble-minded children”, which had previously been in Winterbach , was moved to the castle. In 1927 an extension was built southeast of the Bonn building. During the Second World War, however, the nursing home had to move out again: until 1943, the castle first served as accommodation for Bukowina Germans , later as a non-commissioned preschool for the Luftwaffe. From autumn 1943 the castle was an alternative hospital for the city of Stuttgart. After the World War, the castle was again the seat of the “sanatorium and nursing home for the feeble-minded and epileptic”, from which today's Diakonie facility emerged. 1960 to 1962 an extension was built on the courtyard side of the Eberhardinisches building, and the angle between the Eberhardinisches, Liebenstein'schem and central building was renewed.

literature

  • Gerhard Fritz, Roland Schurig (ed.): The castles in the Rems-Murr-Kreis . Manfred Hennecke Verlag, Remshalden 1994, ISBN 3-927981-42-7 , pp. 77-78.
  • Annual reports of the private sanatorium and nursing home for the mentally ill and epileptic in Stetten im Remstal for the years 1899–1902 with sick lists . State Archives Ludwigsburg: E 163 Bü 887, in it on p. 17 ff. A “Guide through Stetten Castle and its history”.

Web links

Commons : Schloss Stetten (Remstal)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 37.
  2. Max Herrmann, Adolf Kaufmann: History of the village and castle Stetten i. R. Self-published by A. Kaufmann, Stetten i. R., 1931, p. 29.
  3. ^ A b Adolf Schahl: The art monuments of the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Volume 1. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin and Munich, 1983, ISBN 3-422-00560-9 , p. 460.
  4. a b Schahl: The art monuments of the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Volume 1. p. 466.
  5. Bocherle: From the history of the village of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. P. 38.
  6. ^ Schahl: The art monuments of the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Volume 1. p. 461.
  7. a b Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. P. 25.
  8. Andreas Stiene: The Stettener Querkirche - An early example of its building type ; in: Andreas Stiene, Karl Wilhelm: Old stones - new life. History and stories of the Evangelical village church in Stetten im Remstal ; Stetten im Remstal 1998
  9. Theodor Dierlamm: 600 years of Stetten Castle 1387 - 1987 (a look back at a millennium in words and pictures) ; Ed .: Municipality of Kernen im Remstal and Stetten Institution, Kernen 1987
  10. a b c Schahl: The art monuments of the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Volume 1. p. 462.
  11. ^ Wolfgang Mayer: Art monuments and museums in the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Theiss, Stuttgart, 1989, ISBN 3-8062-0571-X , p. 92.
  12. Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. P. 39.
  13. ^ Description of the Cannstatt Oberamt. Published by the Royal Statistical Office, Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, 1895, p. 639.
  14. Herrmann, Kaufmann: History of the village and castle Stetten i. R. p. 31.
  15. Bocherle: From the history of the village of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. P. 40.
  16. Bocherle: From the history of the village of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. P. 42.

Coordinates: 48 ° 47 ′ 30.4 "  N , 9 ° 20 ′ 26.8"  E