Radniční No. 25
Description of the Building:
A two-storey row burgess house on a narrow deep land parcel with a
one-storey court wing and widened rear aisle. The main building is
covered with a saddle roof perpendicular to the front. The street
front with two window axes is finished with a round gable with
volutes.
Architectural and Historical Development:
The house is of medieval origin. The lateral court wing, which
belonged to the house No. 21 until 1663, probably originated in
that time. The lengthwise court wing probably originated in the
Rennaissance period. The second floor of the building is of either
Rennaissance or Baroque origin. In the second half of the 18th
century the street front and some interiors were renovated and
obtained their present appearance, e.g. the ceiling of a chamber on
the second floor, a division wall of the second floor section which
divided it into a chamber and a scullery (a kitchen without
windows). Further reconstructions were carried out in the first
half of the 19th century. The last significant reconstructions were
done mainly in the central aisle in 1941, when a new staircase was
set.
Significant Architectural Features:
- a street front from the second half of the 18th century
- a stucco mirror of the ceiling in a chamber on the first floor, covering a joist ceiling with double decking (a more simple version with skived edges)
- odd arcades in a room on the second floora
- simple collar beam roof truss of probably Rennaissance origin (now removed nowadays)
- a moulded cornice of the lateral court aisle
History of the House Residents:
The first known owner of the house was a butcher Mertl until 1466.
From 1484 a certain Haluzna owned it . In the second third of the
16th century a tailor Jan Chromý stayed there, whose surname has
probably its origin in his physical handicap (chromý = lame). From
1560 - 1572 the house belonged to a weaver Jakub Spanner. The
following owner was Hans Verwaltel or Verwalter from Weitra. The
price of the house was only 280 three scores of Meissen groschen in
1620. In the 1650s - 80s a merchant Heřman Mühlperger, who also
brewed beer, lived there. In 1663 a back building of the house at
Panská
No. 21 was added. From 1752 the house belonged to a teacher
František Kasper, who was followed by a weaver Vincenc Schubert in
1810. On the break of the 19th and 20th centuries Josef Poschl
owned it. At that time a tailor´s and butcher´s are mentioned in
the house, although the ground floor section served business
purposes even in the first third of the 19th century.
Present Use:
Little hotel, restaurant, wine bar U Malého Vítka