Ehrensteiner Hof

You can easily access this apartment via elevator or staircase on the 1st floor of the Hostertsgasse building. The apartment is spacious and because of carefully selected materials and no pet access also well suited for allergic guests. 

Bathroom: Daylight, barrier-free, spacious shower area, illuminated cosmetic mirror, 

Kitchen: fridge/freezer, ceran stove top, oven, microwave, exhaust hood, dishwasher, coffee machine and toaster. 

Living room / Dining Area: dinner table, leather couches, 4K Smart TV, CD / DVD / radio, highspeed internet access. 

Bedroom 1: Box-spring bed 1,80m X 2,00m, closet and bedside table.

Bedroom 2: Box-spring bed 0,90m X 2,00m, closet and bedside table.

Overview

files/amsteinfelderhof/redaktion/apartment-lilie.png Size: 70 sqm
files/amsteinfelderhof/redaktion/apartment-lilie.png Occupancy: 3 people
files/amsteinfelderhof/redaktion/apartment-lilie.png Bedrooms: 2 bedrooms - 3 beds
files/amsteinfelderhof/redaktion/apartment-lilie.png

Price for occupancy with 2 people:
2019 - 98 EUR
20 EUR surcharge for each additional person
Price valid for weekly booking

Services Included: bathroom towels, kitchen towels, bed sheets, highspeed internet, parking. All guests may use washing machine, dryer, flat iron and ironing board, which are at our guests' disposal in our utility room.

 

Calendar:

Floor Plan

Click to enlarge!

History: "Ehrensteiner Hof"

In the medieval ages there was a nobility manor named „Ehrensteiner Hof“ at the place where you nowadays find the restaurant „Eifelstube“ in Ahrweiler. Ehrensteiner Hof used to be a feud of the abbey of Prüm. Since the Ehrensteiner Hof owned a quarter of the local mill and the Blankarts Hof owned three quarters, it is to assume that both used to belong together to some degree.

Around 1330 the castle of Ehrenstein was built in the Wiedbachtal by the men of Ütgenbach, which upon completion started calling themselves „von Ehrenstein“.

In 1449 the castle of Ehrenstein was sold to related Wilhem von Nesselrode, who thus also owned the Ehrensteiner Hof in Ahrweiler from then onwards.

In 1502 Wilhelm Nagel buys the „Staffeler Turm“ and Ehrensteiner Hof, which from that point in time onwards always stayed in the same hand, which was a completely new thing in the history of the city.

Dietrich Nagel, who was the new owner of both properties, got married to Anna von Ahr zu Antweiler. Their grandchild Katharina von Wachtendonck then got married to Dietrich von Metternich-Bourscheid, in 1574, who henceforth became the new owner and was an influential person at that time.

The heritage carries on until Wolf Heinrich von Metternich in 1652, who then sells the properties to the men of Steinkallenfels.

In 1700 they sold both tot he abbey of Steinfeld, whose property burned in the „Wehrscheid“ in Ahrweiler burned down in 1689. With this deal, the denotation of both properties being nobility feuds got lost.