Katzenstein Castle

Katzenstein Castle
Arms of the Hohenstaufen
(German: Burg Katzenstein)
Dischingen, Heidenheim in Germany

Aerial view

Aerial view
Location in Baden-Württemberg
Burg Katzenstein
Location in Baden-Württemberg
Coordinates 48°43′25″N 10°23′30″E / 48.72361°N 10.39167°E / 48.72361; 10.39167Coordinates: 48°43′25″N 10°23′30″E / 48.72361°N 10.39167°E / 48.72361; 10.39167
Type Castle
Site information
Open to
the public
Yes
Condition Standing
Website www.burgkatzenstein.de/en
Site history
Built 11th Century
Built by House of Hohenstaufen
In use 1099-1939
Materials Stone
Fate Privately owned since 1939
Burg Katzenstein on the hill above the village Katzenstein

Katzenstein Castle is one of the oldest remaining Hohenstaufen castles in Germany.[1] It is located in a borough that shares its name with the castle in the Dischingen municipality of the Heidenheim district of Baden-Württemberg. The castle is open to visitors and contains several dining rooms as well as hotel rooms.

Location

This hill castle is located in the valley of a tributary of the Egau river on the Härtsfeld in Heidenheim district near an old Roman road running from Faimingen in Lauingen to Bopfingen known as the Frankensträßle (English: Frankish avenue).[2] Burg Katzenstein is located 538 metres (1,765 ft) above sea level.

History

In 1099 the Lords von Cassenstein were first mentioned. The family was a Ministerialis or unfree knight family in the service of the Graf (or Count) von Dillingen.[3] In 1262 Edlen von Hürnheim was listed as the owner of the castle von Katzenstein when it was sold by Hermann von Hürnheim-Katzenstein.

Ownership changed again in 1354 when the Graf von Oettingen acquired the castle. He quickly pawned the castle on the Graf von Helfenstein, who gave the castle to Berthold von Westerstetten in 1382. In 1572 the Katzenstein line wiped out the Westerstetten line. The inheritance of the Westerstetten family was sold again to the von Oettingen family.

The castle was burned to the ground by French soldiers in 1648, at the end of the Thirty Years' War.[3] The castle was rebuilt in 1669.

Burg Katzenstein went to the Oettingen-Wallenstein line in 1798. Then in 1810 the castle was taken over by the state of Württemberg and placed under the district of Neresheim.

Since 1939 the castle has been privately owned.

The inner courtyard of Burg Katzenstein

Sights

In 1973 the St Laurentius chapel was opened and cleaning began. Under the dirt and partially completed Baroque paintings, impressive Mediaeval paintings were discovered.[3] The fresco paintings date from 1250 to 1280 and show the transition from Romanesque art to early Gothic art.

See also

References

  1. Live Like a German.com
  2. http://www.burgkatzenstein.de/en
  3. 1 2 3 Dörr (1988). Schwäbische Alb: Bergen, Schlösser, Ruinen. Schwäbisch Hall, Germany: E. Schwend GmbH & Co. pp. 29, 30. ISBN 3-616-06727-8.

Further reading

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