Lower mountain house
The Bottom Berghaus is a typical vineyard house of Lößnitz , it lies in the district Niederlößnitz of Saxony Radebeul , at the Jacob Stein 2. This vineyard house is at the bottom of the sand Leithe , one of the three vineyards of Neufriedstein . Johann Peter Hundiker lived there in the 1820s .
description
The Lower Berghaus is now a listed building . Its ground floor lies in line with the quarry stone retaining walls that form the end of the vineyard towards the south, on the Am Jacobstein street . The building is a squat cube, the ground floor consists of solid natural stone walls and the roof is a steep hipped roof . The half-timbering of the upper floor was later boarded. There is an annex on the north side, i.e. the side facing away from the street. There the arcade, which was open until 1886, is closed and the roof over it is towed.
Inside there is a vault that represents an oven with a chimney. The smoke rose from there into the chimney on the outer wall, which from there spread over the length of the roof hip to the roof ridge.
history
After the Dresden councilor Johann George Ehrlich and his son Johann Gotthold Ehrlich had combined the three historic vineyards Schild , Sandleithe and Wehlsberg to form the Ehrlich vineyard between 1727 and 1749 , son Johann Gotthold built a baroque winery around 1750 at the lower end of the vineyard .
In 1819 Hundiker moved to Lößnitz near Dresden. There, his son-in-law Georg Schwarz made the Lower Berghaus on the Sandleithe vineyard available to him as a residence. Hundiker devoted himself to his other literary work here.
In 1853 an extension was added to the building, and in 1860 the staircase on the north side was built by extending the massive walls under the cantilevered arcade on the ground floor, which had been open until then. In 1886 the arcade itself was added.
literature
- Frank Andert (Red.): Radebeul City Lexicon . Historical manual for the Loessnitz . Published by the Radebeul City Archives. 2nd, slightly changed edition. City archive, Radebeul 2006, ISBN 3-938460-05-9 .
- Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (= Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 .
- Georg Wulff; et al. (Red.): Winegrowers' houses in Radebeul . In: Association for Monument Preservation and New Building Radebeul (ed.): Contributions to the urban culture of the city of Radebeul . Radebeul 2003 ( online table of contents ).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 5 (Last list of monuments published by the city of Radebeul. The Lower Monument Protection Authority, which has been located in the Meißen district since 2012, has not yet published a list of monuments for Radebeul.).
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 45.5 ″ N , 13 ° 37 ′ 40.2 ″ E