- 1
- 2
- Source: Schauenburg Castle (Oberkirch)
Howl’s Moving Castle (2004)
Castle in the Sky (1986)
Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay (2008)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
Schauenburg Castle is a ruined hilltop castle located in Oberkirch, Germany, atop a 367-metre-high (1,204 ft) (NN) hill spur overlooking the Rench river valley above the town of Gaisbach, Baden-WĆ¼rttemberg. The castle was built by Duke Berthold II of ZƤhringen.
The well-preserved ruin includes the remains of two towers with living quarters, a gate tower, a rampart, and a shield wall with an attached chapel. The remains of an outer bailey are surrounded by a dry moat and a second shield wall.
The castle is now a tourist attraction and includes a small museum in the cellar of the former castle chapel and a restaurant.
History
Schauenburg Castle was built in the 10th century by Duke Berthold II of ZƤhringen and was first mentioned in a written text in 1120. The Palatinate, Gottfried von Calw (d 1131, Count of Calw, Count-Palatine of bei Rhein, 1113ā1126) came into possession of the castle through his marriage to Liutgard von ZƤhringen. On his death it passed to his granddaughter Uta, Duchess of Eberstein. Schauenburg Castle is noted as a part of the dowry upon her marriage to Duke Welf VI, a brother of Henry X, Duke of Bavaria in 1131. After Uta's death, the Sindelfinger Chronicles note that the castle passed to Uta's brother Eberhard, founder of the All Saints' Abbey. Schauenburg Castle remained in the possession of the Counts of Eberstein until the financial ruin of Wolf von Eberstein. In 1386, half of the possessions of the Ebersteins, including Schauenburg Castle, was sold to Rudolf VII, Margrave of Baden-Baden (d. 1391).
The knights of Schauenburg became a separate noble family, working as Ministerialis and Burgmann under the Ebersteins. After the death of Ludwig Winterbach von Schauenburg, the last of his line, there was a dispute between Heinrich TruchseĆ von Hƶfingen and the other line of the Schauenburg family as to who possessed the fiefdom. The family Schauenburg wanted the Schauenburg to remain a Ganerbenburg, whereas Heinrich wanted sole fiefdom. This led to the Feud of the lords of Schauenburg with Bernhard von Baden, a two-year war from 1402 to 1403. This resulted, in 1404, with Schauenburg Castle remaining with the Eberstein family.
During its time as an active castle, it was besieged many times and overrun twice. After at least two different demolitions (probably during 1689 by Vauban and MĆ©lac in the Nine Years' War) the castle was ruined and, in the 17th century, stones from the castle were used in the building of Gaisbach Castle by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen, the author of the Baroque satire Simplicius Simplicissimus. The castle has been a preserved ruin since the 18th century and today the castle is owned by the Freiherren von Schauenburg.
Notes
References
Further reading
Max Miller, Gerhard Taddey: Handbuch der historischen StƤtten Deutschlands. Band 6. Baden-WĆ¼rttemberg. Stuttgart 1965.
Alexander Antonow: Burgen des sĆ¼dwestdeutschen Raums im 13. und 14. Jahrhundert ā unter besonderer BerĆ¼cksichtigung der Schildmauer. Verlag Konkordia, BĆ¼hl/Baden 1977, ISBN 3-7826-0040-1, pp. 246ā248.
Kurt Klein: Burgen, Schlƶsser und Ruinen - Zeugen der Vergangenheit im Ortenaukreis. Reiff Schwarzwaldverlag, Offenburg 1997, ISBN 3-922663-47-8, pp. 74ā75.
Friedrich-Wilhelm Krahe: Burgen des deutschen Mittelalters ā Grundriss-Lexikon. Sonderausgabe. Flechsig Verlag, WĆ¼rzburg 2000, ISBN 3-88189-360-1, p. 537.
Wolfgang Zimmermann: Unterwegs zu Burgen und Schlƶssern im Schwarzwald. AusflĆ¼ge und Wanderungen zu den schƶnsten und interessantesten Burgen und Schlƶssern. Fink-KĆ¼mmerly und Frey, Ostfildern 1981, ISBN 3-7718-0409-4.
Dieter Buck: Burgen und Ruinen im nƶrdlichen Schwarzwald ā 33 AusflĆ¼ge auf den Spuren der Ritter. Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 2002, ISBN 3-8062-1601-0, pp. 54ā57.
Hans-Martin Pillin: Die Schauenburg. In: Burgen und Schlƶsser in Mittelbaden/Historischer Verein fĆ¼r Mittelbaden. Hrsg.: Hugo Schneider, Offenburg 1984, pp. 204ā216 (Digitalised).
Bertha Freifrau von Schauenburg: Die Ruine Schauenburg. In: Die Ortenau: Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins fĆ¼r Mittelbaden, 21. Heft: Burgen und Schlƶsser Mittelbadens. 1934, pp. 259ā270 (Digitalised).
Max Wingenroth: Die KunstdenkmƤler des Kreises Offenburg (= Die KunstdenkmƤler des Grossherzogthums Baden Bd. 7). TĆ¼bingen 1908, pp. 157ā177 (Digitalised).
External links
Official website (in German)
"Ruine Schauenburg Oberkirch". www.schwarzwald-informationen.de. (in German)
Entry on Schauenburg bei Oberkirch in EBIDAT, the databank of the European Castles Institute
Die Schauenburg bei badenpage.de
Burg Schauenburg bei burgenwelt.de
Die Schauenburg bei badischewanderungen.de
Die Schauenburg auf Schlƶsser und Burgen in Baden-WĆ¼rttemberg