- Château du Falkenstein
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The Château du Falkenstein is a ruined castle in the commune of Philippsbourg in the Moselle département of France, at the heart of the Parc naturel régional des Vosges du Nord. This semi-troglodyte castle dominates the Zinsel valley.
Contents
History
The castle, built by Count Pierre de Lutzelbourg, is mentioned for the first time in 1127. It was intended to protect the possessions of the Count in the Forêt Sainte (Holy Forest) of Haguenau.
In 1150, Renaud, son of Pierre, died without heir. The castle was therefore shared between Folmar of Sarrewerden and the Hohenstaufen family. Jacques de Falkenstein appears as a witness in a charter signed at Haguenau in 1205 and, in 1316, Gottfried, Conrad, Heinrich and Jacob de Falkenstein made peace with the city of Strasbourg. A paix castrale (castle peace) was signed in 1335, dividing the castle in three shares along the transverse walls.
In 1419, Jean de Finstingen made himself Lord of Falkenstein seeing that he was the occupier on behalf of the Sarrewerdens and in 1474 a convention was held to divide the property among the Falkensteins : no part could be ceded, even to another member of the family, without the consent of the other sharers. The castle was sold to the counts of Deux-Ponts-Bitche in 1479 and in 1482-1482 a conflict blew up over non-respect of the convention between the members of the family.
The Falkensteins were sole masters of the castle in 1515 and the modernisation begun by Balthasar was continued by his son. In 1564, Philippe IV (1538-1590), Count of Hanau Lichtenberg, bought the castle from Balthasar's children and grandchildren and, some months later, it was completely destroyed by fire and never rebuilt.
In 1570, a part of the ruined castle was still inhabited by a forester employed by the Count de Hanau-Lichtenberg. Between 1570 and 1605, a conflict erupted between the Hanau-Lichtenbergs and the Duchy of Lorraine, at the end of which the Falkensteins returned to Hanau-Lichtenberg in 1606.
In 1623, the castle was ruined by the troops of Ernst von Mansfeld during the Thirty Years' War, to such an extent that the foresters could no longer live there. The final destruction of the castle was carried out by French troops.
The structure
The castle's sandstone has been shaped by wind and bad weather.
Of note are the entrance, the remains of the keep, the cave rooms and the well tower, which had three functions: to protect the well, to defend the surrounding area and, on the top floor, to provide habitation. Nearby are the ruins of the Château du Helfenstein.
The ruins, property of the state, have been classified since 1930 as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture.[1] Access has been banned since 1999.
See also
External links
References
- ^ Château fort de Falkenstein, in the Ministry of Culture database
- www.culture.gouv.fr (French)
- This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.
Categories:- Moselle
- Official historical monuments of France
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