Liebenstein Castle (Saxony)

Liebenstein Castle (German: Raubschloss Liebenstein) is a ruined castle on a rocky hill spur in the Schwarzwassertal valley near Pobershau. The spur castle was probably built in the 12th century and may have guarded the road through the valley.[1]

Liebenstein Castle
Raubschloss Liebenstein
Olbernhau
Liebenstein Castle
Coordinates50°37′45″N 13°14′31″E
Typehill castle, spur castle
CodeDE-SN
Site information
Conditionburgstall (no above-ground ruins)
Site history
Built12th century

History

According to archaeological evidence, there was a medieval fortification on the steep-sided, Liebenstein hill spur from the 12th to the 14th century. It may well have been the seat of a village-based, lordly estate perhaps even ruled by a Bohemian vassal.[1] That said, Bohemian influence here is doubtful because the area in question was then uninhabited native forest.

It is quite likely that the present abandoned village of Ullersdorf was connected with this fortification and it may be assumed that it functioned as a local base during the colonization of the area. At the same time, the fortification and settlement are thought to be the furthest outpost of a region in which settlement began in the second half of the 12th century - something obviously facilitated by one of the so-called Bohemian tracks.[2]

The name Liebenstein only appears on later maps. In the common parlance the castle ruins are referred to as the Raubschloss or 'robber baron's castle'.

The castle had a total length of approximately 90 metres and a width of 25 metres. The fortifications consisted of two simple ditches with an intermediate earth bank to seal it off from the hinterland. The interior of the castle consisted of two parts: an almost square area separated by a cross ditch from the elevated inner bailey, which is formed by a rocky cliff partly covered with dry masonry.

The ruins and the remains of a strong tower were said to have been still visible until the 18th century.[3].

Present

Today only wall remains and dressed stone blocks are still visible on the Liebenstein. An information board near the excavation area gives the history of the place.

Literature

  • Volkmar Geupel: Die mittelalterliche Wehranlage „Raubschloss“ Liebenstein bei Olbernhau, Kr. Marienberg. In: Arbeits- und Forschungsbericht zur sächsischen Bodendenkmalpflege, No. 27/28, Dresden, 1984, pp. 289–307
gollark: You do arc length integration? That's part of one of the furtherererest further maths topics in UK maths curricula (or, well, the one used by the exam board my school uses).
gollark: I have "mgollark" downloaded somewhere, which is a 117M-parameter GPT-2 model trained on 11MB of my Discord messages on free Google Colab GPUs.
gollark: You can actually train GPT-2s to be slightly more task-specific, although it takes horrible amounts of computing power.
gollark: Interestingly, my Discord messages CSV file (used for GPT-2 training some time ago) only goes to 28% of its original size.
gollark: You can run general purpose text compression over it and get English to something like 1/8 the size.

References

  1. krumhermersdorf.de, retrieved 24 June 2009.
  2. Gerhard Billig, Volkmar Geupel: Entwicklung, Formen und Datierungen der Siedlungen in der Kammregion des Erzgebirges. In: Siedlungsforschung. Archäologie – Geschichte – Geographie, Band 10, Verlag Siedlungsforschung Bonn, 1992, p. 178, ISSN 0175-0046
  3. ins-erzgebirge. de, accessed on 13 April 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.