Bieberbach Castle

The burgstall or site of Bieberbach Castle is a ruined mediaeval spur castle situated at a height of 530 m above sea level (NN) on a rock formation in the southern part of the parish of Bieberbach, in the market municipality of Egloffstein in the county of Forchheim in the German state of Bavaria.

Bieberbach Castle
Biberbach
Egloffstein-Bieberbach
Site of Bieberbach Castle (1998)
Coordinates49°43′40″N 11°17′24″E
Typehill castle, spur castle
CodeDE-BY
Height530 m above sea level (NN)
Site information
Conditionburgstall (no above-ground ruins)
Site history
Builtc. 1225

The castle was built around 1225 by the lords of Dachstetten. Later occupants were the lords of Egloffstein and the lords of Wichsenstein, who were recorded as ministeriales of the Bishopric of Bamberg. The castle was damaged in 1525 during the Peasants' War and finally destroyed during the Thirty Years' War. In the early 19th century the remains were carried away apart from a vaulted roof and a cellar.

Literature

  • Walter Heinz: Ehemalige Adelssitze im Trubachtal - Ein Wegweiser für Heimatfreunde und Wanderer. Verlag Palm und Enke, Erlangen und Jena, 1996, ISBN 3-7896-0554-9, pp. 186–190.
  • Hellmut Kunstmann: Die Burgen der südwestlichen Fränkischen Schweiz. Aus der Reihe: Veröffentlichungen der Gesellschaft für Fränkische Geschichte Reihe IX: Darstellungen aus der Fränkischen Geschichte, Vol. 28. Kommissionsverlag Degener und Co., Neustadt/Aisch, 1990, pp. 239–243.
gollark: Idea: make a language which is maximally bloated according to Nobody.
gollark: Hmm, we should probably procedurally generate them somehow.
gollark: Who is reasonably going to be able to understand the effects of a million different operations?
gollark: Apparently npm has a few hundred thousand packages. If each of them is one operation, that covers about half of what we need.
gollark: So 132000 operations, *maybe*, although the overloads are probably just slightly different convenience versions.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.