Warta 3

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The ruins of the Warthe 3 building (right) in 1955
Area south of the town hall and Sankt-Johannis-Kirche in 1952, on the right small in the picture the ruins of the house Warthe 3
Area cleared of rubble in December 1952 with the ruins of the Warthe 3 building (right)
Ruin (right) at night, November 1952
View from the northeast; Warta 3 on the left in the foreground; 1953

The Warthe 3 house was a listed residential building in Magdeburg in what is now Saxony-Anhalt . The spelling Wait 3 is also used .

location

It was located in Magdeburg's old town south of Magdeburg's town hall at the southern end of the Warthe street, which was a dead end in the extension of Hartstraße to the south from Dreienbrezelstraße. Today (as of 2019) the northeastern part of the Allee-Center shopping center is located there .

Architecture and history

The masonry of the house, which dates back to the Romanesque era, consisted of light quartzite and reddish greywacke in the walls facing south and west , which alternated in camps. On the first floor there was a round arched door with a layered garment. The building was on the north side of the city's southern Ottonian city wall and was built on a tower of the city wall. It was run as a brewery and a farmyard for the golden horse and was a fiefdom of the monastery of Our Dear Women . In the notes of Otto von Guericke it is called the Golden Parish . The property of the house went backwards in a south-easterly direction to the property at Große Junkerstraße 15 c . There was a corresponding passage that was often used at times, probably also by the general public. In 1651 Malsius referred to it as To the two gates against this background .

As the owner is in 1631, the year destruction Magdeburg Heinrich Brauns , at the same time quarter Mr of the third quarter known. His widow sold the property in 1650 for 423 thalers to her son Andreas Hakenberg , who rebuilt the property in 1651, probably using the remains of Romanesque buildings. In 1681 his widow, then in 1683 and 1688 his heirs are named as the owner. In 1702 it belongs to the lawyer Johann Ludwig Pfeil and the pastor Sigismund von Syborg , whose wife was a née Pfeil. In 1705 the pastor was the sole owner, but in 1709 his widow. She sold the property in 1725 to Pastor Sethobal Heinrich Calvisius .

Schuchard is given as the owner for 1823, the businessman Max Schimmelburg around 1916 and Schmidt's heirs as the owner in 1939 .

The building was badly damaged in an air raid during World War II in 1945. The ruins of the building remained in place even after the rubble had been cleared and was still there at least in 1955. Although it is described as a listed building , it was later demolished. During the construction work in preparation for the construction of the Allee Center in 1997, remains of the vaults of the building were discovered.

literature

  • Götz Eckardt (Hrsg.): Fates of German monuments in the Second World War. Henschel Verlag Kunst und Gesellschaft , Berlin undated (around 2000?), ISBN 3-926642-24-6 , volume 1, page 269.
  • Ernst Neubauer, House Book of the City of Magdeburg 1631–1720, Part 1 , Editor: Historical Commission for the Province of Saxony and for Anhalt, Magdeburg 1931, page 492.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Neubauer, Häuserbuch der Stadt Magdeburg 1631-1720, part 1 , editor: Historical Commission for the Province of Saxony and for Anhalt, Magdeburg 1931, page 492
  2. ^ H. Menzel, The waiting room in the inner city is alive , page 119
  3. ^ Ernst Neubauer, Häuserbuch der Stadt Magdeburg 1631-1720, part 1 , editor: Historical Commission for the Province of Saxony and for Anhalt, Magdeburg 1931, page 492
  4. ^ Ernst Neubauer, Häuserbuch der Stadt Magdeburg 1631-1720, part 1 , editor: Historical Commission for the Province of Saxony and for Anhalt, Magdeburg 1931, page 492
  5. ^ Address book of the city of Magdeburg by EFLiweh , reprint of the address book from 1823, Magdeburg 2004, page 225
  6. ^ Magdeburg Address Book 1916 , August Scherl German Address Book Society, Part II, page 169
  7. Magdeburg address book 1939 , Verlag August Scherl Successor, Part II, page 194
  8. ^ H. Menzel, The waiting room in the inner city is alive , page 119

Coordinates: 52 ° 7 ′ 47.3 "  N , 11 ° 38 ′ 19.3"  E