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{{short description |Half-timbered building in Hanover, Germany}}
{{Use British English |date=January 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates |date=January 2024}}
{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Broyhanhaus
| name = Broyhan House
| native_name = {{native name|de|Broyhanhaus}}
| logo =
| logo =
| logo_size =
| logo_size =
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| num_employees =
| num_employees =
| parent = Fritz Budde
| parent = Fritz Budde
| website = {{URL|https://www.broyhanhaus.de/}}
| website = {{official website}}
}}
}}


[[File:Broyhan Haus 2011.jpg|thumb|Broyhanhaus, 2011]]
[[File:Broyhan Haus 2011.jpg|thumb|Broyhanhaus, 2011]]
The '''Broyhanhaus''' is a residential and commercial building built in 1576 in [[Hanover]]'s historic old town or ''Altstadt''. The building is standing on the cellar walls of a previous building from the 14th century and is the second oldest preserved [[Timber framing|half-timbered building]] in Hanover.<ref>''Hansische Geschichtsblätter'', ed. 104-105, Lübeck 1986, p. 206</ref> The house is named after the [[brewery|brewer]] Cord Broyhan († 1570 in Hanover) who lived there since 1537.<ref>Rudolf Eckart: ''Aus alten niedersächsischen Chroniken'', C. A. Schwetschke und Sohn, Braunschweig 1895, p. 224. Cord Broyhan, who had trained in [[Hamburg]], brewed the first Broyhan beer end of May 1526 in Hanover, in the ''Brauhaus'' (brewery) of Hans von Sode, Leinstraße</ref>
The '''Broyhan House''' ({{lang-de|Broyhanhaus}}) is a residential and commercial building constructed in 1576 in [[Hanover]]'s historic old town ({{lang|de|Altstadt}}). It is the second-oldest preserved [[Timber framing|half-timbered building]] in Hanover, and stands on the cellar walls of an earlier building dating to the 14th century.<ref>''Hansische Geschichtsblätter'', ed. 104-105, Lübeck 1986, p. 206</ref> The house is named after the [[brewery|brewer]] Cord Broyhan who began to live in the house in 1537 and who died in Hanover in 1570.<ref>Rudolf Eckart: ''Aus alten niedersächsischen Chroniken'', C. A. Schwetschke und Sohn, Braunschweig 1895, p. 224. Cord Broyhan, who had trained in [[Hamburg]], brewed the first Broyhan beer end of May 1526 in Hanover, in the ''Brauhaus'' (brewery) of Hans von Sode, Leinstraße</ref>

[[File:Hannover Kramerstraße and Broyhanhaus.jpg|thumb|Kramerstraße and Broyhanhaus, as seen from Marktplatz, Hanover, 2020. Left to right: corner house with Am Markt (not fully visible); Kramerstraße 24 (Broyhanhaus)]]


[[File:Hannover Kramerstraße and Broyhanhaus.jpg|thumb| Kramerstraße and Broyhanhaus, as seen from Marktplatz, Hanover, 2020. Left to right: corner house with Am Markt (not fully visible); Kramerstraße 24 (Broyhanhaus)]]
== Location and description ==
== Location and description ==
The Broyhanhaus is located at Kramerstraße 24 in Hanover's [[Hanover-Mitte|old town]]. It is located in a row of historic half-timbered buildings in the immediate vicinity of the [[Marktkirche, Hanover|Marktkirche]].<ref>Ekkehard Oehler-Austin: ''Hannover: Rundgänge durch die Geschichte'', Erfurt 2010, p. 32</ref>
The Broyhanhaus is located at Kramerstraße 24 in Hanover's [[Hanover-Mitte|old town]]. It is located in a row of historic half-timbered buildings in the immediate vicinity of the [[Marktkirche, Hanover|Marktkirche]].<ref>Ekkehard Oehler-Austin: ''Hannover: Rundgänge durch die Geschichte'', Erfurt 2010, p. 32</ref>

Revision as of 04:16, 6 January 2024

Broyhan House
Native name
Broyhanhaus (German)
IndustryRestaurant
Founded1576; 449 years ago (1576)
FounderCord Broyhan
HeadquartersHanover, Germany
Area served
Germany
Key people
  • Cord Broyhan
ParentFritz Budde
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata
Broyhanhaus, 2011

The Broyhan House (Template:Lang-de) is a residential and commercial building constructed in 1576 in Hanover's historic old town (Altstadt). It is the second-oldest preserved half-timbered building in Hanover, and stands on the cellar walls of an earlier building dating to the 14th century.[1] The house is named after the brewer Cord Broyhan who began to live in the house in 1537 and who died in Hanover in 1570.[2]

Kramerstraße and Broyhanhaus, as seen from Marktplatz, Hanover, 2020. Left to right: corner house with Am Markt (not fully visible); Kramerstraße 24 (Broyhanhaus)

Location and description

The Broyhanhaus is located at Kramerstraße 24 in Hanover's old town. It is located in a row of historic half-timbered buildings in the immediate vicinity of the Marktkirche.[3]

The building is a typical residential and commercial building from the early days in Hanover. The owners of the property have been stated since 1428. The majority of them were Kramer (merchants) who carried out their trade in the house. From 1537 the brewer Cord Broyhan lived in the house.

The building was examined in 1984 and then restored until 1987. Today the building is used as a restaurant on the two lower floors and in the vaulted cellar and as a residential building on the upper floors. The Broyhanhaus is listed in the list of architectural monuments.

The restaurant is well known for roast suckling pig with Sauerkraut.[citation needed]

Literature

  • Wolfgang Frontzek, Günther Kokkelink: Zur Baugeschichte des „Broyhanhauses“, Kramerstraße 24 in Hannover. In: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter, Neue Folge 39 (1985), p. 135–168
  • Helmut Knocke, Hugo Thielen: Hannover Kunst- und Kultur-Lexikon, Handbuch und Stadtführer, 4th edition, zu Klampen Verlag, Springe 2007; here: p. 159
  • Tim Hampson: The Beer Book. Cleveland, OH 2008, p. 100
  • Helmut Knocke: Broyhanhaus. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (ed.) and others: Stadtlexikon Hannover. Von den Anfängen bis in die Gegenwart. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9, p. 86

References

  1. ^ Hansische Geschichtsblätter, ed. 104-105, Lübeck 1986, p. 206
  2. ^ Rudolf Eckart: Aus alten niedersächsischen Chroniken, C. A. Schwetschke und Sohn, Braunschweig 1895, p. 224. Cord Broyhan, who had trained in Hamburg, brewed the first Broyhan beer end of May 1526 in Hanover, in the Brauhaus (brewery) of Hans von Sode, Leinstraße
  3. ^ Ekkehard Oehler-Austin: Hannover: Rundgänge durch die Geschichte, Erfurt 2010, p. 32

Media related to Broyhanhaus (Hannover) at Wikimedia Commons