Following the city fires of 1536 and 1540, it would appear from the tax registers that this property was owned by Hans Ermweig from 1549 to 1566. He married in Weiden in 1542
in the presence of a large gathering of foreign and distinguished guests. Hans Ermweig visited the trade fairs in Leipzig as a tradesman. In 1567, his brother, Michael Ermweig,
paid tax on the present-day house at Unterer Markt 9. He was a city judge who owned his own large house near to Unteres Tor. Michael Ermweig made donations to students and the poor in his home city. He was also the site supervisor for the 1565 reconstruction of the Kastenhaus, or crate house, belonging to the Reiche Almosen, a voluntary fund for the poor. These days, the Kastenhaus occupies Pfarrplatz 4 and Schulgasse 3a. Michael Ermweig, the richest tradesman in Weiden, was also responsible for the construction of the new vault for the church of St. Michael in 1565 following the city fires. Today, the Ermweig family tomb can be found in the choir of the evangelical parish church of St. Michael.

City judge Ermweig was apparently succeeded as the owner of the house by cloth-maker Wolf Mayer in 1585. The house had a tax value of 500 gulden, which equated to the value of 60 cows, 10 horses and 50 hogs. In 1582, Wolf Mayer married Maria Sindersberger, the daughter of a middle-class family from Weiden. This marriage produced ten children between 1583 and 1601. Wolf Mayer died in 1621 at 65 years of age. He had served as a city councilor and mayor for a long time.

His widow, Maria Mayer, sold the property to mayor Jacob Schabner, who had been born in Bärnau and had come to Weiden as an elementary school teacher. But he also used his house to run a general store, which was taxed at 20 gulden. His wife, Barbara Bauer, a Weiden pewterer’s daughter, whom he had married in 1623, died of pestilence in 1634. In 1637, the tax register reports that the chattels were looted. The house stayed but the malt house was torn down and the tax value was reduced to 400 gulden.

Jacob Schabner was an alderman for 37 years, and mayor for 26 of them. He wrote a chronicle of the city of Weiden for the years 1619 to 1663 which, due to its major importance in relation to the history of the city in the Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648), was published as a book in 1928. Father to 12 children from 3 marriages, Jacob Schabner had sons who moved to Erbendorf, Amberg and Strasbourg, and a daughter who married and moved to Volkach in Franconia. One line of descendants was raised to the peerage by Empress Maria Theresia in 1764 as “Schaabner von Schönbaar”. A great-granddaughter of Schabner born in 1727 married Johann Joseph Meyer in 1749. Their offspring owned the Plattnerhof hotel at Obersalzberg near Berchtesgaden. Their fate is described by Richard Voss in his novel "Zwei Menschen" (Two People). Mayor Jacob Schabner died in 1671.

Ownership of the house passed to his son-in-law, master butcher Georg Neidt, and son, master carpenter Hans Georg Schabner, with the house valued at 600 gulden.
Five years after the death of her father, Hans Georg Schabner, who was also first an "outer" then an "inner" councilor, Jacob Schabner’s granddaughter, Anna Maria Schabner, who was born in 1681, married master shoemaker Johann Prölß, who as a result became the owner of the house at Unterer Markt. In 1717, “as a foreigner” he had to pay a citizenship fee of 45 gulden, nine times the fee of 5 gulden charged to sons of local citizens. Johann Prölß too was a member of the Inner Council until his death in 1755.
One of the 5 children from this marriage, daughter Maria Margareta Prölß, born in 1719, took over the house after her wedding in 1741. Her husband, Johann Michael Mayer, a master butcher, had been born in Weiden in 1710 to the butcher Sebastian Mayer. In 1741, as a son of local citizen, he paid a citizenship fee of 5 gulden. He had already completed his apprenticeship to become a master butcher on 2 January 1737. Johann Michael Mayer died in 1759.

His widow, Maria Margareta, sold the house on 19.10.1772 to her only son, Georg Alexander Mayer (Meyer), who, like his father, was also a butcher by trade. He had been born in 1745 and married Anna Barbara Mayer, daughter of leather manufacturer Michael Mayer and Maria Margareta Schober, in 1772. She died at the young age of 24 in 1777, when her daughter was less than a year old and her son only four. Her widower, Georg Alexander Mayer, married Elisabeth Hummer from Parkstein. Their only child, Johann Karl, died immediately after his birth in 1780.

Mr. and Mrs. Alexander and Elisabeth Meyer sold the "house on the square between the houses belonging to Andrä Schober, baker and confectioner, and Erhard Roscher, butcher" to Johann Christian Dienstl, an unmarried soon-to-be master comb-maker, for 1850 gulden on 15.1.1782. Johann Christian Dienstl went on to marry Maria Regina Herbst from Vilseck in 1789. Of the 10 children that the Dienstls had, 3 boys and 3 girls died as young children. In the property tax register of 1808, the house is described as follows: "the residence of the comb-maker in the city", Johann Christian Dienstl, a spacious dwelling in the city between the houses belonging to Erhard Roscher and Joseph Fruth with personal brewing entitlement and the trade of comb-maker. The yearly tax for the estate amounted to 17 gulden and 25 kreuzer.

Daughter Margarethe Dienstl and her intended husband, city clerk Zachäus Eduard Herrmann, bought the three-storey house in the city with barn and land from her parents for 3500 gulden on 7.8.1833. In the old land register from 1841, the estate at house number 93 in Weiden, plan number 110, is described as follows: "... the residence of city clerk Eduard Herrmann. Dwelling, stable and courtyard 0.10 Tagwerk (unit of land measurement). The estate includes a barn at the church of St. Sebastian, a rock cellar at the Weißes Kreuz hotel, a garden on Schanzgraben, meadows and arable land 35.30 Tagwerk and 10.92 Tagwerk of woodland”. The following entry has been made under “Special Circumstances”: This house shares wall and gutter entitlement with neighboring house no. 92 (today Unterer Markt 7). The upper gutter against house no. 94 (today Fleischgasse 1) is maintained solely by the owner of house no. 93, the courtyard wall against the same house is shared.

Mr. and Mrs. Herrmann-Dienstl had 8 children. Their son, Joseph Johann Herrmann, came into the world in this house in 1836. After attending school in Weiden and Amberg, he studied law and joined the Bavarian civil service. From 1889 until 1895, he was a member of the Lower House of Parliament in Munich for the constituency of Weiden. Joseph Herrmann then represented the Kingdom of Bavaria in the Federal Council and was particularly involved in the passing of social legislation. He was given the freedom of his home city of Weiden and, as a state councilor, he was raised to the peerage as Ritter von Herrmann. He died in 1914 in Munich, where his father had also died before him in 1854. His mother died in Weiden in 1899 at the age of 93. The house at Unterer Markt 9 remained in the possession of Margarete Herrmann, a woman of independent means who died in Weiden in 1921 aged 75.

The estate passed to the regional court physician Dr. med. Gustav Vierling. His relative, the academic painter and sculptor Wilhelm Vierling, created the St. George for the house above the archway with the Vierling family symbol, the horizontal half eight.

His widow, Hedwig Vierling, sold the house to the fruit wholesaler Max Gottschalk prior to World War Two. The latter’s widow, Betty, ran the business as a food and fruit store until its sale in the 80s to Robert Müller.