KRAHE, Peter Joseph - b. 1758 Mannheim, d. 1840 Braunschweig - WGA

KRAHE, Peter Joseph

(b. 1758 Mannheim, d. 1840 Braunschweig)

German painter and architect. He was instrumental in converting the old city walls and fortifications of Braunschweig into a series of parks and other public spaces.

He was the son of the well-known historical painter Lambert Krahe (1712-1790). In 1775, he became a student at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, which his father had helped to create. At the age of twenty-two, he became the Academy’s youngest professor. Thanks to a grant from Elector Karl Theodor in 1782, he was able to spend a year studying in Rome. Upon returning, he set himself up as an architect.

The years 1785 and 1786 were also spent in Italy, where he became an honorary professor at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze. His first architectural project was a theater in Koblenz, commissioned by Elector Clemens Wenzeslaus of Saxony and completed in 1787. He was appointed Director of the City Planning Board there in 1790, but the post was abolished in 1795 when the area was occupied by the French Army. He then applied for a position as Court Architect in Hanover, but that area was also taken by French troops. As a result, he was forced to work at odd jobs, including tax collection.

Duke Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand of Braunschweig personally negotiated with Krahe to settle there, and in 1803, he became the Chief Civil Engineer. Shortly thereafter, he began razing the old fortifications, preserving some of the ramparts near the city centre and using parts of the wall for causeways. The hills where the bastions were located became parks.

In 1806, the French Army once again displaced him from his position, but he was able to find sporadic employment expanding a Baroque-era castle for the use of King Jérôme. After the area’s liberation in 1814, he took over management of the construction industry for the Duchy of Braunschweig. In 1830, the Duchy created a Construction Authority, based on Prussian models, and Krahe had to yield to the lawyers who became the new managers. Nevertheless, he continued to work for the Authority until his forced retirement in 1837.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

From the 1770s, numerous authors wrote analyses of the problems of urban development and thus helped to propagate new qualities of middle-class life in the cities. Though the ideal remains the detached house looking like a miniature Schloss, people were aware that urban residences could not start and finish with this model and other models needed to be found. Baroque towns had been constructed according to a uniform plan, and now the desire was to see a succession of varied houses that, though they would be subject to the overall plan, would not surrender their individuality.

Distinguished and elegant villas were built in a very reduced plain style by Peter Joseph Krahe for middle-class clients inBraunscweig. Thanks to the scrupulous balance of proportions, the Villa Salve Hospes, built for the merchant Krause on the site of a former bastion, offers a touch of grandeur despite the very restrained use of decoration and traditional architectural trappings of dignity, and despite the small lunettes in the roof.

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