Baroque manor house in Tauche, Brandenburg, partially inhabited today.
Schloss Lindenberg is a manor house located in the Lindenberg district of Tauche, Brandenburg, Germany. Built on the remnants of a late medieval structure, it features a baroque two-wing design. Historically, it was owned by notable families and is now partially inhabited.
Schloss Lindenberg is a manor house located in the district of Lindenberg, within the municipality of Tauche in Brandenburg, Germany. The manor was likely constructed on the remnants of a late medieval predecessor. Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, it was owned by the noble families of von Kracht and von Beeß. Notable figures associated with the manor include Otto Leopold von Beeß, a Prussian minister, and Hildebrand von Kracht, a former captain of the Küstrin fortress. In 1903, Wilhelm Colsman, from the entrepreneurial Colsman family, acquired the estate. He introduced innovative agricultural methods and contributed to food supply efforts during World War I. In 1910, Colsman commissioned Berlin landscape architect Ludwig Lesser to redesign the park surrounding the manor. The last owner before expropriation was Robert Pferdmenges, a banker and CDU politician, who hosted Konrad Adenauer in 1937. Architecturally, Schloss Lindenberg is a baroque two-winged structure, retaining a room with central pillars and a staircase from the late medieval period. Today, the manor is only partially inhabited. It is recognized as an architectural heritage monument in Brandenburg, reflecting its historical and cultural significance in the region.