Kurtzrock-Wappen am Herrenhaus Wellingsbüttel - Hamburg, Germany
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Kladings
N 53° 38.575 E 010° 04.291
32U E 570836 N 5944327
[GER] Kurtzrock-Wappen am Herrenhaus Wellingsbüttel - Hamburg, Germany [ENG] Kurtzrock coat of arms at Wellingsbüttel mansion - Hamburg, Germany
Waymark Code: WMYM3N
Location: Hamburg, Germany
Date Posted: 06/27/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 4

[GER] Das Herrenhaus Wellingsbüttel ist das Herrenhaus des ehemaligen, 1296 erstmals erwähnten und bis 1806 reichsfreien Rittergutes Wellingsbüttel, dessen Gebiet 1937 durch das Groß-Hamburg-Gesetz nach Hamburg eingemeindet wurde. Es ist heute das Zentrum des nach Gut Wellingsbüttel benannten Hamburger Stadtteils Wellingsbüttel im Bezirk Wandsbek. Die wechselnden Eigentümer Gut Wellingsbüttels waren vom Beginn des 15. bis Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts nacheinander die Erzbischöfe von Bremen, Dietrich Reinkingk, die Freiherrn von Kurtzrock, König Friedrich VI. von Dänemark und Norwegen, Hercules Roß, die Hamburger Großbürger Jauch, die Bankierswitwe Cäcilie Behrens und Otto Jonathan Hübbe. Wellingsbüttel war Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts Sitz des Herzogs Friedrich Karl Ludwig von Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck, Ahnherr nahezu sämtlicher europäischer Königshäuser des 20. Jahrhunderts. Unter den Hamburger Großbürgern Jauch wurden Gut Wellingsbüttel und das Herrenhaus zu einem Mittelpunkt hanseatischer Lebensart im 19. Jahrhundert.

Quelle: Wikipedia (visit link)

Um 1750 ließ Theobald Joseph von Kurtzrock, Minister des Niedersächsischen Kreises und Oberpostmeister zu Hamburg, das Herrenhaus in Wellingsbüttel errichten.

Das Wappen der Grafen von Kurtzrock befindet sich über der Eingangstür des Herrenhauses Wellingsbüttel.

Heute befindet sich hier das Cafe im Herrenhaus (geöffnet Mi.-So. 10:00 bis 18:00 Uhr)

[ENG] The Wellingsbüttel Manor House is the manor house of the former Wellingsbüttel manor, first mentioned in 1296 and free of the empire until 1806, whose area was incorporated into Hamburg in 1937 by the Greater Hamburg Act. Today it is the centre of Hamburg's Wellingsbüttel district in the Wandsbek district, named after Gut Wellingsbüttel. From the beginning of the 15th to the beginning of the 20th century, the changing owners Gut Wellingsbüttels were the Archbishops of Bremen, Dietrich Reinkingk, the Barons of Kurtzrock, King Frederick VI of Denmark and Norway, Hercules Roß, Hamburger Großbürger Jauch, the widow banker Cäcilie Behrens and Otto Jonathan Hübbe. Wellingsbüttel was the seat of Duke Friedrich Karl Ludwig of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck, ancestor of almost all European royal families of the 20th century, at the beginning of the 19th century. Under the Hamburg bourgeois Jauch, Gut Wellingsbüttel and the manor house became a centre of Hanseatic lifestyle in the 19th century.

Around 1750, Theobald Joseph von Kurtzrock, Minister of the Lower Saxony District and Lord Postmaster of Hamburg, had the mansion built in Wellingsbüttel.

The coat of arms of the Counts of Kurtzrock is above the entrance door of Wellingsbüttel Manor House.

Today the cafe is located here in the manor house (open Wed-Sun 10:00 to 18:00)
Bearer of Coat of Arms: Noble (aristocratic) family

Full name of the bearer: Grafen von Kurtzrock

Where is Coat of Arms installed (short description) ?:
The coat of arms of the Counts of Kurtzrock is above the entrance door of Wellingsbüttel Manor House.


Material / Design: Stone

Blazon (heraldic description):
The count's coat of arms shows on red a golden bell, whose tail protrudes from below and which is marked with a black cross, above right a golden balance, above left a golden stretched out measuring compass and below two green clovers with stems leaning towards each other, one turned to the right, the other to the left. Above a crown of the count with nine visible points and pearls, and above a crowned helmet with five red ostrich feathers. The helmet covers are red-golden. On the right a virgin with flying hair, a golden scarf, a long red robe opened to the left up to her knee, a blue golden cloak and laced golden sandals serve as a shield holder; this holds a blue-bound book in front of it in the right, a golden cross in the left; on the left a wild man, who is clothed with a bearskin thrown over his left shoulder and with his left hand a club on the ground.


Address:
Wellingsbüttler Weg 71, 22391 Hamburg


Web page about the structure where is Coat of Arms installed (if exists): [Web Link]

Web page about the bearer of Coat of Arms (if exists): [Web Link]

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