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750 Jahre Frauenfeld 1996 Gold plated Coin Token SWITZERLAND 1246-1996

$ 1.57

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Switzerland

    Description

    Since 1094 the Kyburgers were the masters of the Landgraviate of Thurgau . Around 1230 they built a strong defensive tower on the Molasse rock above the Murg to strengthen their rule . The tower, built from large boulders , forms the center of the castle today. The entrance, originally accessible via a wooden arbor, was at the height of today's second floor. You can still enter the tower through it to this day. The small room with its thick walls and two small windows (one was built later) could be heated by an open fire. The oak ceiling beams of this room have been dendrochronologicaldated to around 1231, that of the storey above it to 1235. On all four sides of the tower, wooden outside arbors were attached at the level of the second storey. This is evidenced by three beam holes in each of the supporting beams and the beam imprints or remnants of four vertical guide timbers. At the same time as the tower, the so-called Murgturm, actually the Palas , was built on the Murg side of the defense tower, cultivated, which contained the living quarters. On the plinth made of boulders there was probably a wooden log house. The entrance to the hall was located here at the level of the first floor. This lower room, which was also habitable at the time, was accessible through an opening in the beam ceiling of today's armory, which was dendrochronologically dated to 1235. Since there was no direct connection between the somewhat less secured hall and the defense tower , one could have withdrawn into the tower in case of danger.
    In 1264 the Kyburger died out. Rudolf von Habsburg (1218 to 1291) inherited it. A kennel was added to the side of the castle, presumably with a battlement and a wooden structure. In 1273 Rudolf von Habsburg achieved the dignity of German kings and the castle became the seat of a Habsburg-Austrian administrator. Under King Albrecht (1248 to 1308) Jakob von Frauenfeld (killed in the Battle of Morgarten in 1315) was Vogt in the castle, but rose to become the king's court master and therefore seldom stayed in Frauenfeld. Nikolaus Hofmeister († 1344), son of Jakob von Frauenfeld and from 1334 Bishop of Constance, had the castle chapel extended. The kennel was given a new two-story structure, the outer walls of which are still partially preserved today.
    Early modern ageTo edit
    Towards the end of the 14th century, the court masters sold the castle to the Lords of Hohenlandenberg . After the unsuccessful attack by the Appenzell family in 1407, they dug a deep trench between the castle and the city and surrounded it with a double strong curtain wall in places. The little door in the inner wall, which led to the lower palace garden, enabled the lord of the palace to leave the castle even when the city gates were closed. The lock now received the bolted one, protruding structure, which gives it its characteristic appearance. At the same time, the first ground-level entrance next to the defense tower, which is still in use today, was broken out. The former chapel next to the castle became a residential building and a barn was built against today's town hall. In 1460 the Swiss conquered Thurgau and gradually built up their rule. It was only after the Swabian War of 1499 that the bailiffs, who replaced each other every two years, resided permanently in Thurgau.
    In 1534 the confederates bought the castle from the impoverished Landenbergers. From then on, the bailiffs had their seat there. They enlarged the windows and set up the large courtroom on the second floor, and probably also had the corridor on the second floor and the mansion painted elegantly. No more significant changes were made. Every two years a new bailiff came, in rotation from the seven old towns of Zurich, Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden, Zug and Glarus. From 1712 Bern also took part in the rule. The most important household items stayed in the castle so that not every new bailiff had to bring some with him.
    Later useTo edit
    The French Revolution put an end to the old rule in 1798 ; the governors no longer came. In 1803 the castle fell to the now independent canton of Thurgau, which initially used it for apartments. From mid-1809 it served as a provisional breeding and workhouse establishment. In 1811 the prison phase of the castle was over: the institution was relocated to Tobel . From the following year on, the castle served as the official building for the state treasury, and government councilor Johann Conrad Freyenmut (1775–1843) also had his apartment in it. In 1834, the canton added the part of the building facing the town hall in order to accommodate the financial administration in the castle. The state safe was built in the toweron. A little later, the lower castle garden and the moat were filled in and the outer curtain wall was broken off, while the inner wall was made lower. In addition, the castle shed was built in the courtyard facing the town hall, for the rear of which the old city wall was used.
    With the construction of the government building from 1864 to 1866, the castle became redundant as an administrative seat and was sold by the canton. Thanks to resistance from the population, the sale to a bank did not take place, which would have demolished it and built a new building in its place. In 1867, Chief Justice Johann Jakob Bachmann-Wegelin bought the castle in Stettfurt for his son Dr. Jakob Huldreich Bachmann, who furnished apartments in it and also lived in the castle himself with his family. His daughter Marie Bachmann bequeathed it to the canton in 1955 with the condition that the Historical Museum be includedaccommodate. In 1960, when Thurgau celebrated 500 years of membership in the Swiss Confederation, the palace was completely restored inside and out, and the museum was set up to display the prehistoric and prehistoric and historical collections, including the Frauenfeld miter .