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Weimar has always captivated people. So it is not surprising that Goethe felt at home here. On Frauenplan there is a building that was built in by the princely chamber commissioner and hosier Helmershausen.
It is not known whether he ever lived there. It is assumed that it was rented out. In any case, the family passed it on from generation to generation. In Goethe rented the western half of the house. A rather large area that included what is now the Yellow Room, the Juno Room and the Urbino Room, the western part of the rear building and large parts of the ground floor. He lived and worked in this house until Over the next few years, Johann Wolfgang had several alterations carried out, which the owner helped to finance.
The duke, as the owner of the house, finally gave Goethe the house as a gift. His former living and working quarters remained largely untouched until The Goethe National Museum was founded in the same year and shortly afterwards the first rooms opened their doors to visitors. Today, the Goethe National Museum, which is run by the Klassik Stiftung Weimar, includes the residence, the garden and the two pavilions. In addition, an extension has been built. My tour begins in an inner courtyard.
A fountain gurgles and numerous doors lead into the individual parts of the building. On the ground floor there were once rooms for the servants and utility rooms. Today, small films about the house and the museum can be seen there.
An ideal introduction to a tour of the house. I climb a staircase to the first floor. Here, I am told, Goethe had some alterations made. The staircase was not so representative before. On the first floor, a tour begins through the living quarters and rooms in which the collector Goethe kept his exhibits.