Villa Oberhummer

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Villa Oberhummer

The Villa Oberhummer is a residential building in Munich . The villa is located at Heilmannstrasse 25 in the Prinz-Ludwigs-Höhe villa colony in the Thalkirchen district of Munich . The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian list of monuments.

history

In 1901 the architect Gustav Schellenberger , a nephew of Jakob Heilmann , the founder of the villa colony, built a villa in the English country house style . Schellenberger lived on the upper floor, on the ground floor Heilmann & Littmann set up a construction office for the villa colony.

In 1903 Josephine Oberhummer, a daughter of Jakob Heilmann, and her husband Roman Oberhummer (1871–1944), the owner of the textile house Roman Mayr , bought the house and property on the Isar high bank. In 1904 they bought additional land that contained the Isar slope and a strip at its foot through which the Wenzbach stream flows.

Entry of the morgue in the Munich Military Post telephone directory as of July 1, 1947

The US occupation forces confiscated the villa to use it as a morgue ( Mortuary 1 ). On October 16, 1946, US soldiers are said to have brought the urns with the ashes of the eleven National Socialist officials who were sentenced to death in the Nuremberg trial of the main war criminals into the house and emptied them the next morning in Wenzbach .

architecture

Schellenberger's original villa has been greatly changed by additions and renovations.

literature

  • Denis A. Chevalley, Timm Weski: State Capital Munich - Southwest (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.2 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-87490-584-5 , p. 286 f .
  • Dorle Gribl : Roman Oberhummer - Heilmannstrasse 25 . In: Solln and the Prince Ludwigs-Höhe: Villas and their residents . Volk Verlag, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-86222-043-4 , pp. 193-195 .

Web links

Commons : Heilmannstraße 25  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. List of monuments for Munich (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation. Retrieved November 9, 2018 (monument number D-1-62-000-2464 ).
  2. ^ Josef Bogner: History of the Munich forest cemetery. In: Historischer Verein von Oberbayern (Ed.): Upper Bavarian Archive. Volume 104. Verlag des Historisches Verein von Oberbayern, Munich 1979, pp. 201–258, here p. 234.
  3. Bodo Scheurig : Alfred Jodl. Obedience and doom. Propylaea, Berlin / Frankfurt am Main 1991, ISBN 3-549-07228-7 , p. 423.
  4. ^ John Weitz : Hitler's Diplomat. The Life and Times of Joachim von Ribbentrop. Ticknor & Fields, New York 1992, ISBN 0-395-62152-6 , p. 3.

Coordinates: 48 ° 4 ′ 53.4 "  N , 11 ° 32 ′ 12.2"  E