User:Huligan0/Samuel Werenfels (Architect)

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Samuel Werenfels (Architekt)

Samuel Werenfels (* August 4, 1720, in Basel; † September 11 1800, in Basel) was a famous Swiss Baroque architect.

Biography[edit]

Early Life[edit]

Samuel Werenfels, son of Peter Werenfels (businessman and leather glove manufacturer) and Catharina Socin, grew up in Basel. He was grandnephew and godson of the likewise named Swiss theologian Samuel Werenfels. Werenfels was married to Maria Magdalena Strübin.

Career[edit]

As Architect, he was renowned for his Rococo designs, an 18th century French art and interior design style. In 1743 he joined the Gesellenbruderschaft der Spinnwetternzunft in Basel and became master craftsman in 1748. In 1788 he became mill inspector and from 1794 master-workman in Basel.

The buildings erected in Basel and the surrounding area according to Werenfels' plans, testify his stylistic continuousness to the contemporary Alsatian architecture. Together with Johann Jacob Fechter (1717-1797) and Ulrich Büchel (1753-1792), Werenfels was one of the most distinguished architects and master builders in Basel during the 18th century.

Buildings[edit]

Basel[edit]

  • Das Blaues und Weisses Haus, (the Blue and White House) (Rheinsprung) built between 1763 und 1775 for the brothers and silk ribbon manufaturers Lukas und Jakob Sarasin.
  • Landhaus Ryhiner-Blech (1751)
  • Haus Zum Delphin (1760)
  • Haus Zum Dolder (1761)
  • Posthaus (1773), today this is called the Stadthaus.
  • Falkensteinerhof (1779)

Surrounding Area[edit]

France[edit]

Literatur[edit]

  • E. Blum and Th. Nüesch, Basel Einst und Jetzt, 1913, Verlag Hermann Krüsi, page 61
  • Dorothee Huber, Architekturführer Basel, 2nd edition 1996, Architecture Museum Basel, ISBN 3-905065-22-3, pages 74 to 75
  • Das Bürgerhaus in der Schweiz, Band XXIII - Kanton Basel-Stadt, 3rd part and Kanton Basel-Land, 1931, Orell Füssli Verlag, pages 24 to 26
  • Emil Major, Bauten und Bilder aus Basels Kulturgeschichte, 1986, Verlag Peter Heman Basel, ISBN 3-85722-010-5, pages 136 and 139