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Dreistein Castle à Ottrott dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Bas-Rhin

Dreistein Castle

    Dreistein D426
    67530 Ottrott
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Château de Dreistein
Crédit photo : Pethrus - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle (première moitié)
Destruction of the castle
1866
Consolidation work
6 mars 1990
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Dreistein (cad. A 79): inscription by order of 6 March 1990

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited Sources do not mention any specific historical actors

Origin and history

The castle of Dreistein, located in the commune of Ottrott (Bas-Rhin, Grand Est), is a castle in ruins dating from the 13th century, although some sources also suggest a possible construction in the 14th century. It consists in reality of three castles built on three adjoining rocky spurs, hence its name Drei Stein ("three stones" in medieval German). These buildings, built in pink sandstone of the Vosges, overlook the Ehn Valley and form part of a defensive network including the castles of Ottrott (Koepfel, Rathsamhausen, Lutzelburg) and Hagelschloss, near the pagan wall of Mount Saint Odile.

The current remains reveal a two-part separation by a ditch, with a semi-outbuilding stair tower in the western castle. Historians agree on destruction in the seventeenth century, probably in its first half, although the causes remain uncertain. Consolidation work was carried out in the 19th century (an inscription dated 1866 bears witness to this), and the site was listed as historic monuments on 6 March 1990.

Access to the Dreistein is only on foot, via hiking trails marked by the Vosges Club. Owned by a private company, the castle is not open to visit permanently, but its state allows to observe medieval construction techniques and the strategic role of these fortifications in protecting the Alsatian valleys. The sources refer to differences in its exact dating, as well as to tasker marks suggesting changes after its initial construction.

External links