Sigmaringen Castle: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 48°05′16″N 9°13′01″E / 48.08778°N 9.21694°E / 48.08778; 9.21694
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Content deleted Content added
→‎Castle Site: Fortress and walls
→‎Castle Site: started translation of walls section
Line 85: Line 85:


[[Image:Schloss Sigmaringen Innenhof2.jpg|thumb|right|Inner courtyard of the castle, the ''Buckel Stones'' from the first castle are visible on the far wall]]
[[Image:Schloss Sigmaringen Innenhof2.jpg|thumb|right|Inner courtyard of the castle, the ''Buckel Stones'' from the first castle are visible on the far wall]]
The first castle at Sigmaringen dated from around 1200 and was built from ''Buckel Stones'' (squared off stones with a rounded outer surface). The original castle was fully absorbed into the later constructions. It was built on the eastern side of the rock hill. Due to the location of the castle, Sigmaringen was one of the best protected castles in Germany during the Middle Ages.
The first castle at Sigmaringen dated from around 1200 and was built from ''Buckel Stones'' (squared off stones with a rounded outer surface). The original castle was fully absorbed into the later constructions. built on the eastern side of the rock hill, it was one of the best protected castles in Germany during the Middle Ages. The orignial castle was 80 by 30 m with the central keep being 45 by 20 m in size. The flat and therefore threatened west side was protected by a moat and a 25 or 26 m high keep. The square western keep was 8.23 by 8.34 m in size. The foundations of the castle were between 3 m and 2.5 m thick. The, originally, four story keep walls taper slightly to 2.50 or 2 m thick. The walls are built in the ''buckel stone'' style out of a mixture of [[limestone]] and [[Molasse|Nagelfluh]], a [[conglomerate (geology)|conglomerate rock]] found in the area. The keep could be entered through a nearly 8 m high entrance on the courtyard side. To the north of the keep, next to the wall tower, is the castle gate with a [[gatehouse]]. The 2.28 m wide and 3.96 m high castle gate was built as a semi-circular entrance with rounded stones and soldiers carved as [[Capital (architecture)|capitals]] on the columns.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 23:19, 3 March 2008

Schloss Sigmaringen from the north west
Schloss Sigmaringen from the north east
View from the south looking over the city of Sigmaringen toward the castle

Sigmaringen Castle (German: Schloss Sigmaringen) was the princely castle and seat of government for the Princes of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. Situated in the Swabian Alb (German: Schwäbische Alb) region of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, this castle dominates the skyline of the town of Sigmaringen. The castle was rebuilt following a fire in 1893, and only the towers of the earlier medieval fortress remain.

Location

Sigmaringen is located on the southern edge of the Swabian Alb a plateau region in southern Baden-Württemberg. The Hohenzollern castle was built below the narrow Danube river valley in the modern Upper Danube Nature Park (German: Naturpark Obere Donau). The castle rises above the Danube River on a towering chalk projection of the white jura formation. The hill is known simply as the Schlossberg or Castle Rock. The Schlossberg is about 200 m long and up to 35 m above the river. On this free standing rock tower, the princely Hohenzollern castle is the largest of the Danube valley castles. The shear cliffs and steep sides of the tower made it a natural site for a well protected medieval castle. The castle is located about 605 m above sea level, while the Danube is about 570 m.

History

Looking up the castle hill to the castle

The first castle at Sigmaringen appeared during the end of the Early Middle Ages, during the early 11th Century. The castle was first mentioned in 1077 following the unsuccessful siege of Burg Sigmaringen by Rudolf von Swabia in his fight against the King of Germany, Henry IV[1]. In 1083 a pair of brothers, Ludwig and Manegold von Sigmaringen, are listed as witnesses on a document for the Königseggwald abbey.

Ludwig von Sigmaringen was married to Richinza von Spitzenberg, daughter of Berthold I. von Zähringen[2]. At the end of the 11th Century he built a castle on Spitzenberg mountain by Kuchen, Germany. The castle and the surrounding land and villages were part of the inheritance of Richinza. From the marriage of Richinza and Ludwig they had four childern; Mathilde von Spitzenberg, the wife of Aribo von Wertingen, the clergyman Ulrich von Sigmaringen, Ludwig II. von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg and Manegold von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg. The three brothers, Ulrich, Ludwig and Mangold von Sigmaringen are named as the founders of the 11th Century St. George's Abbey in the Black Forest.

From 1133 until 1170 Rudolf von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg, the son of Ludwig II. von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg, ruled at Sigmaringen. In 1183 Graf (or Count) Ludwig von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg-Helfenstein, the son of Rudolf, is mentioned at the castle. In 1147 Ludwig as well as his father Rudolf and brother Ulrich II von Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg, is mentioned in a document from Walters von Dillingen, Bishop of Augsburg, as lords of Spitzenberg-Sigmaringen.

Under the Helfenstein family, the castle was renovated around 1200. The castle was totally rebuilt with buckel stones (squared off stones with a rounded outer surface). Between 1209 and 1258 the castle was occupied by Count Gottried von Sigmaringen-Helfenstein and his son Count Gebhard von Sigmaringen-Pietengau. In 1258 the cousin of Count Gebhard, Count Ulrich II. von Helfenstein, became the owner of Burg Sigmaringen. Later, Ulrich's daughter Agnes married Count Ulrich I. von Montfort. Following the marriage in 1272, Sigmaringen was owned by the Counts of Montfort. Then, in 1290 Count Hugo V. von Montfort, son of Ulrich I. von Montfort sold the castle and the city of Sigmaringen to Albrecht and Rudolf von Habsburg.

Before 1325 Duke Luipold von Habsburg sold the castle and the county of Sigmaringen to Count von Württemberg.

Finally in 1399 Count Eberhard von Württemberg granted the castle and county of Sigmaringensein as well as the county of Veringen in Margraviate of Austria, to his uncle and liegeman Count Eberhard III. von Werdenberg (1387-1416) as a fief. His son Count Johann IV. von Werdenberg (1416-1465) and his wife Countess von Württemberg (disinherited by the House of Württemberg), in 1459 inherited the castle and county of Sigmaringen. The protect his land, in the following year he declared Sigmaringen an Austrian fief. From 1460 until 1500 the Counts von Werdenberg renovated and expanded the Burg (a military fortress) into Schloss Sigmaringen (a fortified residence), the dimensions of which remain until today.

Hugo IX. zu Sigmaringen (1459-1508), son of Johann IV., died without any male offspring. His sister Anna von Werdenberg married Count Friedrich von Fürstenberg in 1516.

In 1521 Christoph (1494-1534) together with his brothers Johann VI. and Felix I. von Werdenberg, was granted the fief of Sigmaringen from Emperor Charles V. Count Christoph married, after his first marriage to Eleonore Gonzaga remained childless, Johanna von Bröseln, widow of the Count Eitel Friedrich III. von Hohenzollern in 1526. All of his children died, except for his daughter Anna, who married Friedrichs II. von Fürstenberg.

According to the Zimmern Chronicle[3] in 1530 as Count Felix I. was in the bath house with Leonora Werdenberg (the illegimate daugther of Hugo IX and the mistress of Felix and Christoph von Werdenberg[4]) the bath house fire was allowed to spread, leading to a fire that expanded throughout the outbuildings around the castle.

In 1534, following the death of the last male member of the Werdenberger family, Count Friedrich von Fürstenberg demanded the Werdenberger lands. However, King Ferdinand I granted the fief of Sigmaringen and Veringen, in 1535, to Charles I of Hohenzollern (1516-1576), the son from Johanna von Bröselns first marriage with Friedrich III. von Hohenzollern

Charles I was the first Hohenzollern to rule in Sigmaringen.

In 1539 there was another fire that damaged the castle.

A year later, in 1540 Sigmaringen and Veringen were transferred to the House of Hohenzollern as part of the Pfullendorf agreement (German: Pfullendorfer Vertrag). Count Charles I. von Hohenzollern occupied the castle.

The main gateway

Charles II. von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (1547-1606), son of Charles I was the count of Sigmaringen from 1576 until 1606. He was also the founder of the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen line of the Hohenzollern family. Under Charles II the castle was renovated. Between 1576 and 1606 the gatehouse was expanded to cover the entrance to the castle and a new church was built near the castle.

In 1576 the House of Hohenzollern split into four lines, Hohenzollern (died out in 1602), Hohenzollern-Haigerloch (absorbed by Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen after 1630), Hohenzollern-Hechingen (died out in 1869) und Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. Sigmaringen was the main residence of the family of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen from 1576 until 1850.

Combined Coat of Arms of the house of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
Inner courtyard of the castle

Johann von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (1578-1638), the son of Charles II was the count of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen from 1606 until 1623. Then in 1623 the family was promoted from Count (German: Graf) to the rank of Princes of the Holy Roman Empire (German: Reichsfürst). Johann then became the first prince (German: Fürst) of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.

During the Thirty Years' War, the castle was besieged by Swedish troops in 1632, and retaken by the Imperial troops in the following year. During the attack by Imperial troops under General Horn, the eastern section of the castle was destroyed by fire.

Before the siege, Johann fled to Bavaria. He would remain in Bavaria until his death, at age 60, in 1638.

Johann's son, Meinrad I (1605-1681), was the prince from 1638 until 1681. Meinrad had the burned eastern wing rebuilt during 1658 and 1659 by the master builder Michael Beer. Both eastern buildings, built when the Werdenberg family owned Sigmaringen, were combined under a single roof.

Maximilian (1636-1689), son of Meinrad I, was prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen from 1681 until 1689.

Castle Sigmaringen with the city and mill. The roof on the central tower was replaced with a pointed spire in 1877

His son Meinrad II (1673-1715) ruled from 1689 until 1715. From 1698 on he ruled in Haigerloch. His son, Josef (1702-1769) ruled from 1715 until 1769. In 1724 Josef ordered the construction of the Marstalles. In addition to this construction, in 1736 he had the castle modernized and the Knights' Hall (German: Rittersaal) was converted into the Ancestors' Hall (German: Ahnensaal). His son, Karl Friedrich reigned from 1769 until 1785.

Karl Friedrich's son, Anton Aloys (1762-1831), reigned from 1785 until 1831. Between 1815 and 1817 he had building which was known as the Fruit Basket (German:Fruchtkasten) rebuilt as a five story knights' building, which became known as the Wilhelm's building (German: Wilhelmsbau).

Prince Karl (1785-1853), the son of Anton Aloys, ruled from 1831 until 1848. In 1833 Karl called a constitutional assembly (German: Landtag) together and created a constitutional charter that would be the law in his lands. He founded a hospital for his subjects, and had the Ständehaus built on the modern Leopoldsplatz in Sigmaringen (today owned by the Hohenzollerischen Landesbank). Karl also removed the burden of serfdom and various other medieval laws. During the German Revolution of 1848 Karl abdicated in favor of his son, Karl Anton, on August 27, 1848. In recognition of Karl's efforts to improve the lives of his subjects, in 1857 the hospital that he built was renamed the Fürst-Carl-Landesspital (Prince Carl Regional Hospital). In 1869 Karl Anton, following the death of Konstantin the last prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen, annexed the lands of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and became the prince of Hohenzollern.

Karl Anton built the castle into a meeting point for the nobility of Europe. Portions of the castle were rebuilt and decorated to make Schloss Sigmaringen into a destination of the rich and powerful. In 1855 the walls of the upper story were removed to create the Old German Hall (German:Altdeutschen Saal). In 1864 he modified the arches above the southern curtain wall to form the Weapons Room (German: Waffenhalle). From 1862 until 1867 he built the new Art Gallery (German: Kunsthalle), which is today a museum. As a member of the German high nobility, Karl Anton needed a centerpiece of his elegant castle. To create this, in 1872 he had the Parisian architect Lambert rebuild the dining hall into the French Hall (German: Französische Saal). In 1877 he expanded the central keep, remvoed the old roof and topped the keep with a new pointed roof. In the following year, the Ancestors' Hall (German: Ahnensaal) was rebuilt.

The French Hall (German: Der Französische Saal), used as a dining room

Since 1871 the castle has been open for guided tours. These tours provide a history of the castle as well as the House of Hohenzollern.

Leopold (1835-1905), the son of Karl Anton, was offered the Spanish crown after the Spanish Revolution of 1868 overthrew Queen Isabella II. He was supported by the Prussian Prime Minister Otto von Bismarck, but opposed by the French emperor Napoleon III. Leopold was forced to decline the offer, but the extra demands made by the French government and the sending of the Ems Telegram resulted in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71, which led to the fall of emperor Napoleon III and the setting up of the French Third Republic. Following the war and the death of Karl Anton, he ruled as prince of the Houses of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern from 1885 until his death in 1905.

In 1893 the eastern wing burned and was nearly totally destroyed. Starting in 1895, the construction manager Johannes de Pay and the Munich architect Emanuel von Seidl rebuilt the destroyed section. In 1899 and 1906, other sections of th castle were redone in the ecletic style that was common at the time. The Portuguese Gallery (German: Portugiesische Galerie) was built during this reconstruction. The construction continued under Leopold's son, Wilhelm (1864-1927) who was prince of the Houses of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern from 1905 until 1927.

Photochrom print (color photo lithograph) of Schloss Sigmaringen from 1890 to 1905

In 1901, the pointed spire on the keep was destroyed. It was replaced with a octagonal pointed neo-gothic tower made from tuff stone.

Leopold's son Friedrich (1891-1965) was the prince of the house from 1927 until 1965. He opened the carriage house in the lower story of the museum as a early history museum.

Barbed wire, a witness of the time the Vichy Regime occupied Schloss Sigmaringen

Following the Allied invasion of France, the french Vichy Regime was was moved from France into Schloss Sigmaringen. The princely family was forced by the Gestapo out of the castle and moved to Schloss Wilflingen. Wilflingen had been aquired by the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen House during the Mediatisation of 1806. The french authors Louis-Ferdinand Céline and Lucien Rebatet, who had written political and anti-semitic works, feared for their safety and fled to Sigmaringen with the Vichy government. Célines 1957 novel D'un château à l'autre, (English: From one castle to another) describes the end of the war and the fall of Sigmaringen on the 22 April 1945. The book was made into a German movie in 2006, through the German media companies ZDF and Arte, called Die Finsternis (English: The Darkness).

During the 1970's, following a crisis in the steel industry, Frederick William had to sell some of the family property to support the Hüttenwerkes Laucherthal (English: Laucherthal Steel Works). Since the death of his wife Margarita in 1996 Prince Frederick William lives in a country estate in Jagdschloss Josefslust between Krauchenwies and Sigmaringen. His son and heir Karl Friedrich lives in the Sommerschloss in Krauchenwies. The castle is occupied by the management for the business interests of the prince as well as the museum.

Castle Site

The modern Schloss Sigmaringen owes its current size and appearance to three construction periods.

  • The medieval castle from the 11th to 13th Centuries, built under the Counts of Sigmaringen-Spitzenberg and Spitzenberg-Helfenstein.
  • The renovations and expansion of the castle under Counts of Werdenberg.
  • The renovations to make the castle into a princely residence for the Princes of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen

Fortress and protective walls

Inner courtyard of the castle, the Buckel Stones from the first castle are visible on the far wall

The first castle at Sigmaringen dated from around 1200 and was built from Buckel Stones (squared off stones with a rounded outer surface). The original castle was fully absorbed into the later constructions. built on the eastern side of the rock hill, it was one of the best protected castles in Germany during the Middle Ages. The orignial castle was 80 by 30 m with the central keep being 45 by 20 m in size. The flat and therefore threatened west side was protected by a moat and a 25 or 26 m high keep. The square western keep was 8.23 by 8.34 m in size. The foundations of the castle were between 3 m and 2.5 m thick. The, originally, four story keep walls taper slightly to 2.50 or 2 m thick. The walls are built in the buckel stone style out of a mixture of limestone and Nagelfluh, a conglomerate rock found in the area. The keep could be entered through a nearly 8 m high entrance on the courtyard side. To the north of the keep, next to the wall tower, is the castle gate with a gatehouse. The 2.28 m wide and 3.96 m high castle gate was built as a semi-circular entrance with rounded stones and soldiers carved as capitals on the columns.

See also

References

  1. ^ From the Chronicle of Petershausen Abbey: From there King Rudolf of Swabia marched to Burg Sigmaringen and besieged it. Once he discovered that King Henry IV. and his army approached though the alpine passes toward his army, he lifted the siege and moved to Sachsen.
  2. ^ Template:De iconFrom Heinz Bühler: Richinza von Spitzenberg und ihr Verwandtenkreis. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Grafen von Helfenstein. In: Württembergisch Franken, Heft 58, 1974. In the book she is called vidua de Spitzenberg
  3. ^ Zimmerische Chronik:Band 3:Seite 82.
  4. ^ Zimmerische Chronik:Band 2:Seite 267

German References

  • Chronik der Grafen von Zimmern, 1564-1566, Band 1-3. Hrsg. Decker-Hauff, 1964/67
  • Die Kunstdenkmäler Hohenzollerns, Band 2. Landkreis Sigmaringen, 1948
  • Gerd Dörr: Schwäbische Alb, Burgen, Schlösser, Ruinen. HB-Bildstlas. 1988
  • Wilhelm Gradmann: Burgen und Schlösser der Schwäbischen Alb. 1980
  • Handbuch Historischer Stätten Deutschlands. Baden Württemberg. 1965
  • Gustav Hebeisen: Schloß Sigmaringen In: Burgwart. 1924. Nr. 1/2 Fürstliches Hohenzollernsches Schloß Sigmaringen
  • Prinz Johann Georg von Hohenzollern: Der Museumsbau in Sigmaringen In: Blätter des Landes Denkmalamt, 1962
  • Alfons Kasper: Kunstwanderungen kreuz und quer der Donau. 1964
  • Walter Kaufhold: Schloß Sigmaringen. Die Geschichte der Burg- u. der Schloßherren. In: Kunstführer Nr. 580. Verlag Schnell & Steiner. München 1953
  • Walter Kaufhold, Rudolf Seigel: Schloß Sigmaringen und das Fürstliche Haus Hohenzollern. Konstanz 1966
  • Walter Kaufhold, Das Fürstlich Hohenzollernsche Museum in Sigmaringen, Schnell Kunstführer Nr. 1269, Verlag Schnell & Steiner, München und Zürich 1981
  • Peter Kempf: Schloß Sigmaringen mit Sammlungen In: Blätter des Schwäbischen Albvereins, Nr. 2, 1987. 1987
  • Naturpark Obere Donau. Wanderführer 1964
  • Wilfried Pfefferkorn: Burgen unseres Landes - Schwäbische Alb. 1962
  • Günter Schmitt: Sigmaringen. In: Ders.: Burgenführer Schwäbische Alb. Band 3: Donautal. Wandern und entdecken zwischen Sigmaringen und Tuttlingen. S. 41-62. Biberacher Verlagsdruckerei. Biberach 1990. ISBN 3-924489-50-5
  • Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europäischen Staaten. Band 1 und 2. 1965
  • Stefan Uhl: Buckelquader an Burgen. Manuskript. 1983
  • Johann Nepomuk Vanotti: Geschichte der Grafen von Montfort und von Werdenberg. 1988
  • Helmut Voith: Führer durch die Museen im Kreis Sigmaringen. 1986
  • Eva Walter, Walter Pfündel: Strefzüge im Donautal. 1989
  • Dr. Karl Theodor Zingeler und Georg Buck: Zollerische Schlösser, Burgen und Burgruinen in Schwaben. 1906



48°05′16″N 9°13′01″E / 48.08778°N 9.21694°E / 48.08778; 9.21694