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Rathsamhausen Castle à Ottrott dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Bas-Rhin

Rathsamhausen Castle

    Junckerwaeldel 2 Rue Dreistein
    67530 Ottrott
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Château de Rathsamhausen
Crédit photo : Torsade de Pointes - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
1100
Fire and reconstruction
XIe siècle
Origin of the site
vers 1200
Construction of dungeon
1392
Buying Lutzelburg
XVe siècle
Defensive work
1985
Historical monument classification
2019
Restoration of the dungeon
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Rathsamhausen Castle (ruines) (cad. A 113): inscription by decree of 30 December 1985

Key figures

Famille de Rathsamhausen - Owners and builders Unify the castles in 1392.
Charles-Laurent Salch - Historian and archaeologist Has studied and dated the site.

Origin and history

Rathsamhausen Castle, located in Ottrott (Bas-Rhin), has its origins in the 11th century with a first wooden construction, replaced after a fire in 1100 by a stone building. The latter was destroyed again around 1250, but a large rectangular dungeon was erected around 1200, accompanied by a enclosure. In the 13th century, the site was divided: a ditch isolated the dungeon, which later took the name of Rathsamhausen (1561), while a second castle, Lutzelburg, was reinforced by a round dungeon and a courtine. The two castles, linked to the Rathsamhausen family after 1392, underwent work in the 14th and 15th centuries (false chalks, barbacan) before being abandoned in the 16th-17th centuries.

The ruins, listed as historical monuments in 1985 (then revised in 2025), reveal a typical defensive architecture: a 12th century quadrangular tower, 13th century cylindrical bergfried, and traces of a 14th century bronze fire stick. The tower was restored in 2019. Private property, the site illustrates Alsatian feudal conflicts and medieval military adaptations, between family alliances and local rivalries.

The history of the castle is closely linked to that of the castle of Lutzelburg, bought and rebuilt around 1400 after a fire. The coat of arms of the Rathsamhausen family, affixed to the house, symbolizes their regional power. The two buildings, abandoned in the Renaissance, were consolidated in the 19th century, when interest in medieval heritage emerged. Historical excavations and studies (notably by Charles-Laurent Salch) have made it possible to date precisely the construction phases and the local geopolitical dynamics.

External links