Powder tower

(Redirected from Powder house)

A powder tower (German: Pulverturm), occasionally also powder house (Pulverhaus), was a building used by the military or by mining companies, frequently a tower, to store gunpowder or, later, explosives. They were common until the 20th century, but were increasingly succeeded by gunpowder magazines and ammunition depots. The explosion of a powder tower could be catastrophic as, for example, in the Delft Explosion of 1654.

The powder tower of Prague
The powder tower in Meschede

List of powder towers edit

Buildings formerly used as powder towers include the following:

Germany edit

These are sorted by states of Germany, since there are so many.

Baden-Württemberg edit

Bavaria edit

Brandenburg edit

Bremen edit

Lower Saxony edit

Mecklenburg-Vorpommern edit

The Pulverturm, Demmin, bears the name, but was probably not used for this purpose.

North Rhine-Westphalia edit

Rhineland-Palatinate edit

Saxony edit

Saxony-Anhalt edit

Thuringia edit

Austria edit

Czechia edit

Italy edit

Latvia edit

Namibia edit

Switzerland edit

  • Pulverturm, Zofingen

USA edit

Gallery edit

Literature edit

  • Adolf Weinbrenner: Pulvermagazin, in Otto Lueger (ed.): Lexikon der gesamten Technik und ihrer Hilfswissenschaften, Vol. 7 Stuttgart, Leipzig 1909, pp. 274–275; digitalised at zeno.org
  • Brewer, Ted (1999). Czech and Slovak Republics Guide. Londres: Open Road Publishing.
  • Legal, Claus; Legal, Gert (2020). Friedrich II. von Preußen und Quintus Icilius: Der König und der Obrist. Munique: utzverlag GmbH.
  • Prokopovych, Markian (2009). Habsburg Lemberg: Architecture, Public Space, and Politics in the Galician Capital, 1772-1914. Lafaiete Oeste, Indiana: Imprensa da Universidade de Purdue.


External links edit