Taufkirchen Palace

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Taufkirchen Palace

The Taufkirchen-Palais , also Tauffkirchen-Palais , is a monument on the town square in Burghausen .

The listed Palais Taufkirchen at Stadtplatz 97 was built by Vitztum Adam Graf von Taufkirchen and moved into in 1736. It is a stately three-storey building with a gable roof and curved gable. The facade with rich Rococo stucco was largely rebuilt after the fire in the previous building in the middle of the 18th century. On the facade is the stuccoed alliance coat of arms of the noble families von Taufkirchen (left) and von Lerchenfeld (right), who held the Burghausen Rent Office for two generations in a row. The rear building is a three-storey mansard roof building , the ground floor made of tuff stone , with attached supporting pillars, probably 18th century and a connecting building with a two-storey closed arcade. From April 28 to May 2, 1809, Emperor Napoleon I stayed in the building. From 1959 to 2006 the Burghausen District Court was housed here. After the branch of the Altötting District Court moved out , the building was now empty and, after being restored in 2018, now houses apartments and businesses.

Web links

Commons : Tauffkirchenpalais  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Alois Buchleitner: Burghausen city - castle - history . In: Heimatverein and Stadtarchiv Burghausen (ed.): Burghauser Geschichtsbände . 5th edition. tape 33 . Burghausen 2001.
  2. Volker Liedke: Baualtersplan urban renovation Burghausen . In: City of Burghausen (Ed.): Burghauser Geschichtsbände . tape 34 . Burghausen 1978.
  3. ^ Rainer Wetzl: New life in the house with history . In: Burghausen . ( pnp.de [accessed September 25, 2018]).

Coordinates: 48 ° 9 ′ 34.8 ″  N , 12 ° 50 ′ 1 ″  E