Steindlbach outdoor seating area

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Villa Sassi in Peuerbach, part of the municipality Bruck-Waasen

The outdoor seating Steindlbach (now Villa Sassi ) is located in the village parsonage Heuberg the municipality of Peuerbach in Grieskirchen in Upper Austria .

history

The estate in Steindlbach was first owned by Wolf Haugg, 1595–1608 Hohenfeldischer Pfleger zu Peuerbach . After his death († before 1610) his widow Magdalena, née Schmidtauer, succeeded him in the property. This was followed by her son Johann, nurse and district court administrator in Erlach and married to Susanna, née von Mücklau. After the death of Johann Haugg († 1643), his widow married Johann Schickhmair, 1647–1662 "counter-writer" in the Peuerbach rulership and subsequently Pfleger zu Erlach. In 1655 Johann and Susanna rebuilt the Steindlbachhof. Johann Schickhmair determined in his will of 1674 that the Steindlbachhof should always be owned by the eldest of the family. The Freihof was first owned by his sons Johann Christian, caretaker at Parz († 1720), and Ignaz Dominik, postmaster at Haag († 1724). Then Steindlbach came to the son of Ignaz Dominik, Franz Josef, also a keeper to Parz († 1737).

When a royal Bavarian edict of December 22, 1811 declared all entails canceled, the seniority succession for Steindlbach also ended. The daughter of the last owner Josef Schickhmair († 1819), Josefa, wife of the accountant Franz Xaver Lindner in Vienna , kept the estate as an allodial inheritance . Their daughter Clementine sold the estate in 1842 to Andreas Uttentaler, Bruck an der Aschach municipality chair. Andreas Uttentaler owned the farm with his wife and then his son until 1881; afterwards it was bought into the possession of Ferdinand and Josefa Burgstaler from Vienna.

In 1886 Eugen and Ida Sassi bought the estate, tore down the old parts of the building and had a manor house (sometimes called Neu-Steindlbach ) built here; The opening of the new house is likely to have been on August 16, 1888, because on that day there was a torchlight procession from Peuerbach up to the villa. Over the next few decades, the house became a meeting place for doctors, judges, singers, theologians, musicians, painters ( Josef Straka , Katha Wallner , Maria Egner , Alfred Bareis ), lawyers, batches of the Imperial and Royal Monarchy and also aristocrats such as Princess Caroline Maria von Saxony Coburg-Gotha and Prince August Leopold . Ida Sassi died in 1938 and her two children, Aloisia and Moriz, succeeded her. In 1943, during the Second World War , women with children from Krefeld , Düsseldorf , Eindhoven and Bruck an der Mur were forcibly quartered . Aloisia died in 1949 and her brother became the sole owner. In 1952 Moriz Sassi sold Freihof Steindlbach to a tobacconist from Vienna. This was followed by Johann Hämmerle, then an order from Tyrol ("North Tyrolean Capuchin Province"), then Mrs. Rosa Koller, the Hoos family and, since 2002, the Toth family.

Steindlbach outdoor seating (Villa Sassi) today

In the Franziszeischen cadastre about 0.4 km east of the parish church of Peuerbach to St. Martin still marked the Freysitz Steindlbach .

On the site of the patio, the Villa Sassi was built for Eugen Sassi from Vienna in 1887 according to the plans of the imperial building councilor Alexander Wielemans von Monteforte and the builder Josef Eichinger. The villa is located in a sloping park with old trees. From the geometric design of the garden, an octagonal water basin, accessible via an outside staircase, remained in the main axis. The building is adorned with corner projections. The windows are partially equipped with plaster panes and carved window frames and wrought iron bars. The rooms inside the house are decorated with tiled stoves, old German furniture and paintings (including the market coat of arms of Peuerbach).

The complex is now privately owned by the Toth family and cannot be visited.

In the vicinity of the former open space is the Turner war memorial in Steindlbach , which was erected in 1919/1920 by the Peuerbach tower club in memory of the fallen members of the gymnastics club, the Liedertafel and the Peuerbach fire fighting facility by master builder Hans Doblmaier, who was also chairman of the Peuerbach general gymnastics club, was built.

literature

  • Eva Berger : Historic gardens of Austria: Upper Austria, Salzburg, Vorarlberg, Carinthia, Styria, Tyrol Gardens and parks from the Renaissance to around 1930 (Volume 2) . Böhlau, Vienna 2003, ISBN 978-3-205-99352-0 .
  • Walter Knoglinger (Ed.): Romantic Peuerbach in the common living space with the communities of Bruck-Waasen and Steegen. Market town of Peuerbach, Peuerbach 1981.
  • Christian K. Steingruber : A critical consideration of the historical-topographical manual of the fortifications and mansions of Upper Austria . Upper Austrian Provincial Archives , Linz 2013.

Individual evidence

  1. Christian K. Steingruber , 2013, p. 127.
  2. Turner War Memorial - Upper Austria .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 20 ′ 47 "  N , 13 ° 46 ′ 48.1"  E