Schaumburg Castle

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Schaumburg Castle from the west

Schaumburg Castle , also known as the Schaumburg for short , is a castle south of Balduinstein near Limburg an der Lahn . Originally the complex was a hilltop castle . Its main tower is the zero point of the Soldner coordinate system for the Duchy of Nassau .

history

It is possible that a castle was built on the mountain as early as 915 when the area was mentioned in a donation to the Weilburg monastery .The name "Schowenburg" or "Schauenburg" appears for the first time in 1197 for the castle, as the center of a rulership of the same name . In addition to the castle at that time, this included the towns of Biebrich , Cramberg and Steinsberg . In the 12th century the castle was owned by the Counts of Leiningen .

When the male counts died out around 1220, the castle fief was divided and ownership changed several times. Part of the castle was owned by Elise , daughter of Count Emicho III. von Leiningen and wife of Ruprecht the arguable from Nassau . With her death, this share was transferred to the county of Virneburg via her daughter . Another share in the castle fell to the County of Diez and from there to the County of Weilnau . A third part of the Schaumburg fell to the Isenburg family . When the estate was divided in 1232, the Schaumburg share came into the possession of Gerlach I of Limburg . However, the Limburg family had to forego part of the castle in an arbitration award in favor of Kurköln in 1266 . The Archbishop of Cologne Siegfried von Westerburg transferred the Kurkölner share to the House of Westerburg in 1276 .

The Westerburg house expanded the Schaumburg from 1279. In order to weaken the position of the castle, built in Baldwin of Luxembourg , the castle Balduinstein near the Schaumburg. A lengthy dispute ensued, as a result of which Balduinstein was separated from the Schaumburg rule in 1321 and made a town.

Up until the 15th century, the Westerburg house was able to acquire all other parts of the castle. From 1557 the house of Leiningen-Westerburg-Schaumburg , a side line of the house of Westerburg, resided on the Schaumburg. In 1656 Georg Wilhelm von Leiningen sold the castle and the manor to Agnes von Effern, the widow of Count Peter Melander von Holzappel , who united the Lordship of Schaumburg with the county of Holzappel . Agnes died that same year; the Schaumburg remained in the possession of their female descendants: House Nassau-Dillenburg (1656–1707), Anhalt-Bernburg- Schaumburg (1707–1812), Habsburg-Lothringen (1812–1867).

Archduke Stephan of Austria owned the Schaumburg from 1847 to 1867 . In the course of the revolution in 1848, he had to leave his native Hungary and, from 1850 to 1855, lavishly rebuilt the Schaumburg in a neo-Gothic style into today's castle, according to plans by the architect Carl Boos , to whom the construction management was entrusted. Stephan of Austria set up a picture gallery and a library, he also collected coins, left behind a considerable collection of minerals and also maintained a small zoo. The two larger-than-life figures, made on his behalf in Berlin, adorn the main entrance to the palace as heralds. The big Pracht , with the expansive windows in the bay window of the enclosed by two corner towers to the west facade, but was never finished. Neither Archduke Stephan nor later owners expanded it inside as planned, and so it is still unplastered in the shell condition from 1855. With the construction of the Lahntalbahn in 1862, the Schaumburg was easily accessible and a meeting place for nobles from all over Europe.

The childless Archduke Stephan bequeathed the castle to the youngest son of his cousin Peter , his great cousin Duke Georg Ludwig von Oldenburg. The House of Oldenburg managed the castle from 1867 to 1888. But the House of Waldeck-Pyrmont also laid claim to the complex. After a court process lasting over twenty years, it was awarded to Georg Viktor zu Waldeck-Pyrmont in 1888 .

The castle passed to its last aristocratic owner in 1967 with the death of Josias zu Waldeck and Pyrmont . His son and heir Wittekind zu Waldeck and Pyrmont , however, sold it together with the inventory and land for 15 million DM in 1983 . The Schaumburg should be converted into a hotel with an attached golf course. This planning failed, however, and the deterioration of the substance continued. After another sale in 1990 to a businessman from southern Germany for six million German marks, the palace complex was up for sale again in 2011 for 1.3 million euros. At that time, a large part of the land had already been sold. At the end of 2012, the Schaumburg was sold to a Turkish group of investors who, according to their own statements, intended to set up an educational facility there. Corresponding construction work was not carried out. After one of the investors left the project in the meantime, the new and now sole managing director of the Turkish investor group announced in 2015 that he wanted to turn Schloss Schaumburg into an international wine institute. The group of investors acquired several listed properties in Germany.

The entire Schaumburg archive, which has been kept over the centuries, was acquired by the state of Rhineland-Palatinate and has been in the state main archive of Koblenz ever since .

Development and usage plans since 2012

The revitalization of the Schaumburg Castle is very complex due to the monument protection requirements but also due to the sheer size of the complex.

On April 6, 2018, the Balduinstein municipal council decided unanimously to draw up a development plan. On the area of ​​the former terrace gardens below the castle, catering is to be made possible, the ten tree houses planned on the Schlossberg will be used as a hotel. The gatehouses were restored by April 2018, and they are being used as a café.

investment

The castle is a three-wing complex on a mountain top. It received its present appearance during the expansion from 1850 to 1855 and is designed according to the ideal of Rhine romanticism. The castle is of an elongated three-storey palace with octagonal dominated corner towers of basalt. In the southeast corner of the Palas is a 42 meter high tower, a keep is intended to represent. A gate system was created in the north to access the castle .

Little remains of the medieval castle complex. There are still remains of the gate system in the south of the castle, the kennel and the remains of the outer bailey with a flanking tower . The east wing is a late medieval building, but it was heavily rebuilt during the construction work under Archduke Stefan of Austria.

Others

In 1999, Schaumburg Castle served as the backdrop for the fictional high school from the horror film Scream - Because I'm Going to Kill You! .

literature

  • Karl von Ibell (ed.): Schloss Schaumburg near Balduinstein ad Lahn and the surrounding area: a small guide for tourists and summer guests, Diez 1899 ( dilibri )
  • Alexander Thon, Stefan Ulrich, Jens Friedhoff : "Decided with strong iron chains and bolts ...". Castles on the Lahn . Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-7954-2000-0 , pp. 140-145.
  • Michael Losse: The Lahn castles and palaces . Peter Imhof, Petersberg 2007, ISBN 978-3-86568-070-9 , p. 56-58 .

Web links

Commons : Schaumburg bei Balduinstein  - collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. Wilhelm von der Nahmer: Handbuch des Rheinischen Particular-Rechts: Development of the territorial and constitutional relations of the German states on both banks of the Rhine: from the first beginning of the French Revolution up to the most recent times . tape 3 . Sauerländer, Frankfurt am Main 1832, OCLC 165696316 , p. 577 ( online at google books ).
  2. Schloss Schaumburg: Old walls to be sold cheaply , Rhein-Zeitung of July 12, 2011, accessed on October 25, 2011.
  3. ^ Rhein-Zeitung of November 8, 2012: Turkish investor wants to turn Lahn-Schloss Schaumburg into an educational establishment
  4. a b Now Turkish investor wants to turn Schaumburg into a wine institute. Rhein-Zeitung, January 3, 2015, accessed on May 7, 2020 .
  5. a b New Schaumburg plans: Will a café soon be opened in the gatehouse? Rhein-Zeitung, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  6. For catering business: Schloss Schaumburg GmbH applies for a development plan. Rhein-Zeitung, accessed on September 9, 2018 .
  7. Late summer festival: This is what it looks like behind the walls of Schloss Schaumburg. Nassauische Neue Presse, accessed September 9, 2018 .

Coordinates: 50 ° 20 ′ 20.4 ″  N , 7 ° 58 ′ 39 ″  E