Johann Friedrich Nette

Johann Friedrich Nette (5 July 1673 — 9 December 1714) was a German architect of the Baroque epoch, trained in the Bohemian style. From 1707 until his death, Nette was the court architect for the Duchy of Württemberg.

Johann Friedrich Nette
Born5 July 1673
Died9 December 1714(1714-12-09) (aged 41)
Nancy, France
NationalityGerman
OccupationArchitect
Known forLudwigsburg Palace

Early life

Johann Friedrich Nette was born on 5 July 1673 in Bernau bei Berlin, the son of the Prussian court organ builder, also named Johann Nette. From 1685 to 1700, the Nettes lived in Dresden, where Johann Friedrich attended the Kreuzschule and then the University of Wittenberg until 1695. After that point, little is known about Nette's life until the War of the Spanish Succession.[1]

Career

In 1706, Nette, at the time an engineer captain, was stationed at Balingen under the command of a Major General Sternberg. Sternberg recommended Nette to his brother-in-law Georg Friedrich von Forstner, who happened to be a friend of and Hofmarschall to Eberhard Louis, Duke of Württemberg.[1] Nette replaced the incumbent court architect Philipp Joseph Jenisch in 1707,[2] and with that appointment was charged with the design and construction of a retreat for the Duke north of Stuttgart. Nette began work on this residence, Ludwigsburg Palace, in 1707, though it was slow thanks to the still-ongoing War of the Spanish Succession. In 1709, the Duke instructed Nette to attach two wings to the existing structure to create a three-wing palace. Despite the war, Nette traveled to Prague in 1708 and 1709 to study Bohemian Baroque architecture and recruit artisans for Ludwigsburg.[1][3]

On 9 December 1714, Nette died suddenly of a stroke near Nancy, in France.[1]

Citations

References

  • Bieri, Pius. "Johann Friedrich Nette" (in German). Süddeutscher Barock. Archived from the original on 30 June 2018. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  • Bieri, Pius. "Residenz Ludwigsburg" (in German). Süddeutscher Barock. Archived from the original on 6 June 2020. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  • Hempel, Eberhard (1965). Baroque Art and Architecture in Central Europe. Penguin Books.
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