The Story of the Tower on the Rems, Plüderhausen
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Keywords

Tradition
Heritage
Hill
Rite
Traditional architecture

How to Cite

Schröder, U. (2020). The Story of the Tower on the Rems, Plüderhausen. Journal of Traditional Building, Architecture and Urbanism, (1), 148–161. https://doi.org/10.51303/jtbau.vi1.336

Abstract

Since the mid-1990s, every couple whose members say “I do” at Plüderhausen Town Hall plant a fruit tree on the so-called “Hochzeitswies” (nuptial meadow). The choices include apple, cherry, pear, and plum. Rising from the range of hills of the valley landscape of the Rems, above Plüderhausen, is a tower, which stands in the midst of a fruit orchard known as the “Hochzeitswiese”. The so-called “Wedding Tower” marks out a place and founds the use of an architectural space.

https://doi.org/10.51303/jtbau.vi1.336
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References

Ameriks, Karl (ed.). 2000. The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Burke, Edmund. [1757] 2015. A Philosophical Enquiry into the Sublime and Beautiful. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Schröder, Uwe. 2016. Die Wand. Grenze der Architektur – Architektur der Grenze. der architekt, 4/16.

Semper, Gottfried. 1884. Vorläufige Bemerkungen über bemalte Architektur und Plastik bei den Alten (Altona 1834). In: Semper, Manfred; and Semper, Hans (Ed.), Kleine Schriften, Berlin/Stuttgart: W. Spemann.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2020 Uwe Schröder

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