The Toplerhaus was an important Renaissance town house in the German city of Nuremberg. It was named after the patrician family Topler and was among the most elaborate of the late Renaissance residencies in the city. It was destroyed in a bombing raid in World War II.[1]
Architectural history
editJakob Wolff the Elder built the house in 1590/91 as a tower-like sandstone block with a pinnacle.[2] It was a very striking and rather unusual building of the Nuremberg Renaissance style. The facade had rhythmic Gothic patterns overlaid with repeated Gothic 'Chorleins' (oriel or bay windows in Nuremberg) and a multi columned gable.[3] During the air raid on January 2, 1945, the house burned down and collapsed; the remains were removed later. The post-war building that was built in the same place is a simple, purpose-built building with no relevance to building history.
Location
editThe Toplerhaus stood prominently on Paniersplatz in the castle district of Nuremberg's old town. It was flanked by the Upper and Lower Söldnersgasse streets, which lead into the Paniersplatz.
References
editExternal links
edit- Drawing and floor plan from 1906 at Photo Archive Photo Marburg
Literature
edit- Hartwig Beseler, Niels Gutschow: The fate of war in German architecture. Losses, damage, reconstruction. Documentation for the territory of the Federal Republic of Germany. Panorama Verlag, Wiesbaden 2000, ISBN 978-3926642226.
49°27′29.29″N 11°4′44.47″E / 49.4581361°N 11.0790194°E