Gräfenberg Castle (Aschaffenburg)

This article is about the castle in the Bavarian county of Aschaffenburg. For the eponymous castle in Forchheim county, see Gräfenberg Castle (Forchheim).
Burg Landesehre
Hösbach-Rottenberg-"Gräfenberg"

Wall remains
Coordinates 50°01′56″N 9°13′51″E / 50.03219715°N 9.23081696°E / 50.03219715; 9.23081696Coordinates: 50°01′56″N 9°13′51″E / 50.03219715°N 9.23081696°E / 50.03219715; 9.23081696
Type hill castle, summit location
Code DE-BY
Height 360 m above sea level (NN)
Site information
Condition burgstall, some wall remains
Site history
Built mid-13th century
Garrison information
Occupants counts

Gräfenberg Castle (German: Burgstall Gräfenberg), also called Landesehre Castle (Burg Landesehre), is a levelled hilltop castle near 360 m above sea level (NN) on the hill of Gräfenberg near Rottenberg in the market municipality of Hösbach in the county of Aschaffenburg in the south German state of Bavaria.

History

The castle was probably built in the mid-13th century on and besides a fort of the La Tène period, probably after Klosterberg Castle opposite. By 1261 the castle had been destroyed during a conflict between the Rieneck counts and Electoral Mainz. In the 18th century the castle was used as a quarry and demolished apart from a few wall remains.

Description

The castle had a sturdy enceinte, which enclosed the entire site and guaranteed protection for its occupants. The roughly 2-metre-thick and probably over ten-metre-high shield wall with its wooden wall walk and tiled roof was integrated into the early mediaeval enceinte. The buildings in the castle courtyard were made of stone and wood. From the then treeless summit, the Aschaff valley could be surveyed.

In 1904, Aschaffenburg chemist, Deinlein, carried out the first excavations on the Gräfenberg. Today there are the wall foundations of a rectangular building, a five-metre-long and 1.8-metre-side longitudinal wall, a four-metre-long and 0.4-metre-wide transverse wall which abuts on another wall that has yet to be uncovered. Also recognisable are elements of a vaulted ceiling and a circular wall that could be a cistern or a dungeon.[1]

Literature

References

  1. Der Gräfenberg – Forschungsgeschichte bei spessartprojekt.de
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