
Fabricius-ház
Here’s what makes the Fabricius-ház (Fő tér 6) feel so layered: this building grew out of older Sopron. Its structure was built on the remains of a Roman-era central building, and the present form is visible from the 14th century. That’s why the story gets fascinating fast. In 1320, work began here for the Szent Dorottya chapel, and the site’s building was then divided with a floor: the lower part became a cellar, while the upper part became living space. The house also has a clear “name chapter.” It belonged to Tóth-lipcsei Fabricius Endre (1770–1847), a noble-born city leader—he bought the house in 1806 and was elected mayor (town administrator/polgármester) on February 3, 1823, before dying on April 9, 1847. In the 19th century, after his death, the widow—Rosenecki Weckher Erzsébet (1783–1863)—came to own it, and later the Fabricius family donated it to the Evangelical Church. …
AI-generated from open data and cross-checked, with review where noted. How we write narrations
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