- Source: Paul Buchner
Paul Buchner (June 1531 – 13 November 1607) was a German architect, geometer, carpenter and screw maker from Nuremberg.
Life
Buchner grew up in Nuremberg and was an apprentice carpenter and screw maker, training under his cousin, Leonhard Danner. In 1556 he worked for Queen Elizabeth I in London, where his job was to produce screws which would be used to strengthen fortifications. In 1557 Duke Emmanuel Philibert of Savoy invited him to Brussels.
On a recommendation from Leonhard Danner, who supplied military equipment for the Saxon court, August of Saxony invited Buchner in 1558 to Dresden. He made screw tools before being appointed as an electoral master craftsman in 1559, then became commander of the Dresden arsenal in 1563. He worked with Voigt von Wierandt, an experienced architect and master builder. Starting in 1567 he supervised the expansion of Dresden's fortifications. Due to his extensive knowledge of fortress construction and weapons technology, Buchner was appointed as a master of the house and land of Dresden in 1575. He was then responsible for all fortifications and armories throughout Saxony.
From 1586 to 1590, Buchner built the Dresden Stallgebäude (the Stable Building) at the Jüdenhof under Elector Christian I. It is likely that he collaborated with the Italo Swiss artist Giovanni Maria Nosseni on various buildings, such as the Langer Gang at the Stallhof in Dresden and the gate to the Kleiner Schlosshof.
Buchner was later married to Maria Kröß, the daughter of a chamber servant in the Electorate of Saxony and the mayor of Dresden, Bastian Kröß. Together, Buchner and Kröß were the parents of the scholar August Buchner.
Buchner died in 1607 in Dresden, and was buried at the Frauenkirchhof in Dresden.
The medalist Tobias Wolff made a portrait medal of Paul Buchner depicting him at the age of 49.
Works
Collaboration on the Dresden Armoury (Zeughaus) - 1559-1563
Conversion of Wilsdruffer Gate at Dresden - 1568
Powder Mill at Dresden - 1574-1575
Conversion of Castle Gommern into a hunting lodge - 1578
Dresden Stallhof (Princely Stable Building) at the Jüdenhof (1586-1589) connected with Dresden Castle, today the Dresden Transport Museum
Electoral Stable Building, also known as the "Old Castle" at Zabeltitz - 1588-1598
Extension of the Königstein Fortress in 1589 (Gate House, Old Armoury, Guard House, Christiansburg)
Pirna Gate at Dresden - 1590–1591, in collaboration with Giovanni Maria Nosseni
Gate to the Kleiner Schlosshof, in collaboration with Giovanni Maria Nosseni
Old Gewandhaus at Dresden - 1591
Sources
Esther Hoppe-Münzberg: The Elector's Stable and Armory Chamber Building with Long Corridor and Stable Courtyard - a new construction task in the complex of the Dresden Residential Palace in: Saxony State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (Ed.): The Residence Palace of Dresden. Volume 2: The castle complex of the Renaissance and its early baroque alterations and decorations. Petersberg 2019, pp. 397–419.
de:Richard Steche: Hans von Dehn-Rothfelser. Ein Beitrag zur Kunstgeschichte Sachsens (online at Google Books). Blochmann, Dresden 1877, on Buchner pp. 36–43.
References
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Eduard Buchner
- Paul Flory
- Paul Josef Crutzen
- Istana Dresden
- Paul Nizan
- Paul Berg
- Paul L. Modrich
- Paul Karrer
- Marie Curie
- Albert Einstein
- Paul Buchner
- Buchner
- Paul Buchner (researcher)
- Georg Büchner
- Georg Büchner Prize
- German Zoological Society
- South-West Oxford
- List of bacterial genera named after personal names
- Willi Hennig
- List of people from Nuremberg