Radmer

  • SPÖ: 5
  • ÖVP: 4

Radmer is a municipality with 635 inhabitants (as of 1 January 2013 ) in Styria, in the judicial district or district of Leoben in Austria.

  • 2.1 Para Deiss gallery
  • 2.2 pilgrimage church to Saint Anthony of Padua
  • 2.3 Castle Pommern
  • 2.4 mansion in Radmer No. 19
  • 2.5 Hunting Lodge in Radmer
  • 2.6 Literature

Geography

Geographical Location

The Radmer is located in the mountains of Upper Styria, between iron ore, Hieflau and John Bach.

Expansion of the municipal district

The municipality extends over the territory of the Radmertals, surrounded by mountains Lugauer, Kaiserschild and Zeiritzkampel.

Community structure

The municipality comprises the two villages (in brackets population as of 31 October 2011):

  • Radmer at the hazel (182 )
  • Radmer at the office ( 474)

The municipality comprises the cadastral Radmer at the hazel and Radmer to the room.

Neighboring communities

Population Development

Culture and sights

Para Deiss gallery

The Para Deiss Stollen is a copper Mine. With a tunnel railway Visitors can reach the late medieval copper mine traveled. The Radmerer copper mining counted in its heyday, the four most important copper mining sites in Central Europe and consisted of about 60 studs. The highest flow rate was reached in 1596 with 480 t of raw copper. 1634 one of the first blasting with black powder in the alpine countries took place in this mining. In the 16th and 17th centuries was the copper mine owned by the Abbots of Seitenstetten in Lower Austria. In the premises of the actor Mine is a showroom, which is stocked with finds from the mine as well as minerals and other exhibits.

Sanctuary for St. Anthony of Padua

The pilgrimage church of Saint Anthony of Padua, which was inaugurated on August 10, 1602, is located in the district Radmer to the room. The church was designed by the court architect Giovanni Pietro de Pomis, the implementation of the plans was made by the architect Hans Ressl.

The high altar dating from around 1727, with its columnar architecture and handling portals occupies the entire choir circuit. The core is the altarpiece from the year 1602. It shows the Saint Anthony of Padua with the Infant Jesus on her arm. Two equally large side altars from 1681 decorate the triumphal arch at the entrance to the high altar. An image of the Immaculate Conception dominates the gospels side Marie altar. Epistelseitig shows the great altarpiece of the " Three Holy Madln " ( The Holy Barbara, Catherine and Margaret ). The pulpit dates from 1714 and Joseph Claudius Zeller is attributed. On the original double loft a new organ from Graz organ builder Johann Georg Mitter Reither was erected in 1737.

Castle Pommern

The former Austrian imperial hunting lodge Pommern ( Greifenstein ) in the upper Radmertal with four-story circular corner towers dates back to a palace dating back to 1600. It was in the 18th century under a Baron von Pommern the seat of trades (mining) and was structurally today's appearance. It belonged to 19th century Seitenstetten in Lower Austria, the end of the century was a hunting lodge of the Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph. As inheritance of the heir to the throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Habsburg- Este came after his assassination in 1914 in Sarajevo, at his morganatic descendants, the princes and dukes of Hohenberg ( Austrian noble family ).

Mansion in Radmer No. 19

The building was in the days of Emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg (1459-1519) a hunting lodge " in Redmeregg ", was expanded in 1602 to a castle and was later an administrative building for the mining industry. Today, the portal, the walled-up double glazed windows, large vaulted and door reveals the age and the importance of the building testify.

Hunting lodge in Radmer

In the years 1872/1873, the single-storey former Austrian imperial hunting lodge was built east of the Saint Anthony Church in the district Radmer to the room in the appearance of a mountain home in Switzerland.

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