A closer look at the creation of Altefeld |
||
Burchard von Oettingen and Altefeld
|
||
Burchard von Oettingen was born in Riga in 1850, the son of a local landowner, August von Oettingen. In Dorport, he attended school and later studied mathematics. He then enlisted in the First Guard field artillery regiment, from which he was discharged in 1889 with the rank of Captain. As a soldier, von Oettingen was successful as a horseman, and so it was with a military background that he began his career in Prussian stud management. He served as Stablemaster in Gudwallen from 1888 until 1892, when he transferred to the great stud, Beberbeck, in Hessen. His career in directing stud operations culminated with his appointment to the top level of Prussian equine breeding, after Trakehnen. Between 1895 and 1911, von Oettingen occupied himself both with breeding, and the comprehensive reorganization of stud farm buildings. |
|
|
His talent for building and landscape design turned Trakehnen into an exemplary stud operation. When Trakehnen was destroyed by Russian troops during World War I, von Oettingen’s good connections facilitated the reconstruction of an improved facility. His son-in-law, Kurt, Count Sponeck, who had married his daughter, Marissa, replaced him as Trakehner Stablemaster. He brought to East Prussia training and test work for breeders of stud farms. He revived hunt-seat riding in Trakehnen, and carried on an active breeding program. |
||
![]() |
||
The centerpiece of von Oettingen’s life work was the creation of a comprehensive stud plant, which would meet every requirement for a first-class facility for the breeding of Thoroughbreds. Von Oettingen aimed to create a worthy successor for the large stud at Graditz. While he and his architect, Friedrich Kuebart, traveled to the great Hungarian studs and drew on the experience at Trakehnen, they improved on all these plans when they laid out Altefeld. |
||
![]() |
||
The new farm was designed in an open, relaxed layout. The stables and residential buildings lie well apart, blending harmoniously into the surrounding landscape. The practical purpose for separating buildings was to prevent the transmission of disease, but the basic principle behind Altefeld was to raise horses in as natural an environment as possible. |
||
![]() |
||
|
|
||
(C) 2005 - All rights reserved |
||