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Diedendorf Castle dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Bas-Rhin

Diedendorf Castle

    51 Rue Principale
    67260 Diedendorf
Crédit photo : Hochstrasser - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1530
Destruction of the first castle
12 février 1570
Letter of nomination
vers 1580
Completion of the current castle
1722
Transmission to the Münchhausen
23 janvier 1730
Buy by Auguste Guillaume de Lüder
novembre 1944
Bombardments
1977
First entry MH
23 décembre 2002
Protection of interior decorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs as well as the wall of enclosure with its two towers (Box 1 380): inscription by decree of 21 December 1977 - The original interior decoration: vaults, ceiling with soles, wall paintings; the woodwork, floors and fireplaces reported, of the eighteenth century (Box 1 416/372): inscription by order of 23 December 2002

Key figures

Jean Streiff de Lauenstein - Baill and manufacturer Commander of the castle around 1580.
Jean IV de Nassau-Sarrebruck - Count and suzerain Granted the fief to Jean Streiff in 1570.
Charlotte-Quadt de Lanseron - Heir of Streiff Transmits the castle to the Münchhausen in 1722.
Charles Streiff de Lauenstein - Disputing parent Reveals the inheritance until 1730.
Simon Striffler - Landowner Acquired the castle in 1862.
Richard Clark - Last known purchaser Buy the castle after 1966.

Origin and history

The castle of Diedendorf, located in the Lower Rhine, has its origins in the late 16th century. The site was already occupied by an earlier castle, probably destroyed around 1530 with the village. In 1570, Jean IV de Nassau-Sarrebruck granted land in Diedendorf to Jean Streiff de Lauenstein, baili of the Earl of Sarrewerden. The latter built a new castle, completed around 1580, whose architecture reflects the influences of the Rhine Renaissance.

The castle remained in the Streiff family until 1722, when he passed to the Münchhausen by inheritance, after a legal dispute with a distant relative, Charles Streiff de Lauenstein. In 1730, the Münchhausen sold it to Auguste Guillaume de Lüder, bailli of Sarrewerden. The monument then changed hands several times in the 18th century, often as a debt payment, before being acquired in 1862 by Simon Striffler, a Lorrain landowner. The castle suffered major damage during the 1944 bombings and, despite repairs, became obsolete after 1966.

On the architectural level, the castle is distinguished by its rectangular house flanked by two wings and two corner towers, one of which houses a spiral staircase. Its interior walls, decorated with rare motifs (cariates, floral bouquets) and 16th-century murals, as well as 18th-century decorations, were protected by inscriptions to historical monuments in 1977 and 2002. The park, including an orchard, is listed among the remarkable gardens.

The interior decor, inspired by the Rhine, offers an exceptional witness to the life of the Alsatian nobility during the Renaissance. The vaults, floor ceilings, woodwork and fireplaces, partially reported from other Strasbourg and Phalsbourgeois buildings, illustrate the evolution of aristocratic tastes between the 16th and 18th centuries. The castle, now private, thus retains a double value, both historical and artistic.

External links