Burgstall Antiesenberg

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Burgstall Antiesenberg
Moat and ramparts of the Antiesenberg castle stable

Moat and ramparts of the Antiesenberg castle stable

Creation time : 9th and 10th centuries
Castle type : Hilltop castle
Conservation status: Castle stable, wall and moat remains
Place: community Antiesenhofen
Geographical location 48 ° 20 '57.3 "  N , 13 ° 24' 37.3"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 20 '57.3 "  N , 13 ° 24' 37.3"  E
Burgstall Antiesenberg (Upper Austria)
Burgstall Antiesenberg

In the commune Antiesenhofen of Upper Austria is located on Antiesenberg (formerly Antisenberch ) of the Postal Antiesenberg an Outbound hilltop castle .

history

Site plan of the Antiesenberg castle stable by Johann Ev. Lamprecht around 1880

Presumably this is an early medieval fortification from the 9th and 10th centuries, which was used as the seat of the Lords of Antiesenberg in the High Middle Ages. These resided between 1140 and 1269 at the Passau ministerial seat of Antesenperg ( those of Antisinperge ); is known by name u. a. a Chunradus nobilis ministerialis (in the years 1180 and 1190) and Ulrich von Antiesenberg (around 1270). Johann Ev. Lamprecht also suspects that there was a high fort here in Roman times that monitored the lower Antiesental.

Burgstall Antiesenberg today

The facility is a section fortification sealed off from the hinterland by two trenches . In the center there is an irregular earthwork, which is reminiscent of the core works of house mountain systems. Parts of the castle plateau seem to have slipped towards the Antiesental. Remains of walls are said to have been visible in historical times; but this requires an archaeological examination.

literature

  • Johann Ev. Lamprecht : Archaeological expeditions and investigations of various walled sites in the lower Innviertel. Manuscript in Upper Austria. Landesmuseum, no location and no year (approx. 1880).
  • Christian K. Steingruber : A critical consideration of the historical-topographical manual by Norbert Grabherr . Upper Austrian Provincial Archives, Linz.
  • Marianne Pollak; Wilhelm Rager: "In villa Antesna" - On the early historical settlement development in the northern Innviertel. Pp. 357-379.

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