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Old-Windstein Castle dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Bas-Rhin

Old-Windstein Castle

    33 Rue des Châteaux
    67110 Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Château du Vieux-Windstein
Crédit photo : Emile Wagner (1850-1922) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1205
First written entry
1212
Construction by Hohenstaufen
1332
Destruction by Strasbourg
XIVe siècle
Illegal reconstruction
1515
Fire of the castle
1676
Final Ruin
9 novembre 1984
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château du Vieux-Windstein (ruines) (cad. 6 73/19): inscription by order of 9 November 1984

Key figures

Petrus V - Abbé de Neubourg Intermediate for construction (1212).
Hohenstaufen - Imperial Dynasty Initial sponsors of the castle.
Famille de Windstein - Feudal Lords First owners as fief d'Empire.
Sires de Sickingen et Schmalenstein - Medieval co-owners Sharing the castle after 1212.
Dürckheim - Owners post-1515 Noble family before the final ruin.

Origin and history

The Old Windstein Castle was built in the early 13th century on a sanding bar at 340 m above sea level above the town of Windstein (Bas-Rhin). Built by the Hohenstaufen via Abbé Petrus V of Neubourg to protect Haguenau, it becomes a fief of Empire shared between the families of Windstein, Sickingen and Schmalenstein. Its strategic role also makes it a den of robbers, causing its destruction in 1332 by Strasbourg after a siege using pirates.

Reconstructed in the 14th century despite the ban, the castle was burned in 1515 and then passed to the Dürckheim before its definitive ruin in 1676 by the French. Its architecture is divided into two sets separated by a natural ditch, with troglodytic arrangements (tank, rooms, 41 m well) and the remains of a Romanesque chapel. A working dungeon (late XIIIth–early XIVth) and a residential tower remain, while a 19th-century forest house occupies the place of the former communes.

Underground galleries, formerly attributed to local legends (linking with the New-Windstein), would be based on recent assumptions of mines dug during the siege of 1332, although their unstrategic location makes this theory questionable. Today, the site is also a well-known climbing spot, with 95 tracks rated from 4c to 8b, under ecological restrictions to protect nesting raptors.

Ranked a historic monument in 1984, the Old Windstein illustrates the evolution of the Alsatian castles, between feudal conflicts, architectural adaptations and modern reuses. Its state of ruin preserves rare traces of medieval techniques (bossages, polioorcetic) and unique developments related to the rocky topography of the Vosges du Nord.

External links