Bartholomäus Khöll


Bartholomäus Khöll was an imperial master stonemason und 1653 superintendent of the Vienna Bauhütte.

Life

Bartholomäus married into a family of stonemasons. His wife was Christine Ungerin, who was the daughter of Simon Unger, who oversaw the maintenance of St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna
He received citizenship from Vienna in July 1651, but there is not any information about his origins. His tax payments between 1652 and 1664 register him as a renter in central Vienna and as a middle income master craftsman.
On December 22, 1652, he was elected master of his Zunft's Rathaus.
His wife Christine died on July 21, 1661 at the age of 29. In her will and testament, she bequeathed her three children, David, Maria, and the one-year-old Micheal 150 Guilder. One of her testament witnesses was Adam Haresleben, who was the stonemason responsible for Vienna's cathedrals at the time.
Master Bartholomäus Khöll had remarried and wrote his will and testament on February 19, 1664. He died a few days later at the age of 50. His widow married the master stonemason Urab Illmayr, who took over Khöll's position as leader of the Vienna Bauhütte. The three children from his first marriage had become orphans, but they subsisted from the inheritance given by their parents.

Main Entrance of the Schottenkirche

Bartholomäus Khöll built the middle tower facades of the Schottenkirche in 1652. He followed a plan with a half-column framing, Entablature, and blasted gable segments, to create a Niche. A sculptor of Maria with her child was created by Tobias Kracker and added to this niche in 1651.

Work for the Imperial Court

There are excerpts from the receipts of respectives tasks assigned to Khöll from the imperial construction offices for 1657. The following workers were named on these excerpts: