Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Castral site of Lorentzen dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Château
Bas-Rhin

Castral site of Lorentzen

    Place du Château
    67430 Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Site castral de Lorentzen
Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1328–1334
Initial construction
1335
Partial donation
1527
Passage to Nassau-Sarrebruck
1573–1577
Renaissance Restoration
1683
Back to Nassau-Sarrebruck
1713 et 1768
Customs Residence
1792
Sale as a national good
1847
Partial fire
4 mai 1990
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle: facades (except adventitious elements) , turrets, roofs, large staircase with balusters ; inside, all remains preserved prior to the 19th century, visible or not, including the vaulted kitchen on the ground floor, at the intersection of the north and west wings; in the south wing: staircase in screws, glazed ceilings, rooms called Veuves and Knights, fireplace style Louis XIV. . . House: facades and roofs. Castral mill: facades, roofs, bladed wheels in the canal. Dîmière grange: facades and roofs (Boxes 5-24-26, 28-30, 31a, 31b, 32-37, 38a, 38b, 39, 40, 42, 43): inscription by order of 4 May 1990

Key figures

Friedrich II de Sarrewerden - Count and founder Commander of the castle (1328–1334).
Ludwig Crato de Nassau-Sarrebruck - Count died in 1713 His widow is doing some work.
Sophie de Nassau-Sarrebruck - Customs Countess Residence at the castle around 1768.
Mathieu Steyss de Gornitz - Cooker manager Owner from 1527 to 1683.
Ioanes Scheer et Maria Heckelin - Post-revolutionary owners Names engraved on a door (1804).

Origin and history

The castral site of Lorentzen, located in the Bas-Rhin in Alsace, is a medieval architectural complex marked by several periods of construction and transformation. Built between 1328 and 1334 by Count Friedrich II of Sarrewerden, this plain castle surrounded by water (Wasserburg) adopts a square plot flanked by five round towers, three of which remain today. In 1335, the count gave up half of the castle and the dependent villages to the archbishop of Treves. The site, passed to Nassau-Sarrebruck in 1683, became a customs residence after the death of Count Ludwig Crato around 1713, then Countess Sophie around 1768, who undertook baroque works there, as evidenced by the oak staircase.

The French Revolution marked a turning point: the castle, sold as a national property in 1792, was divided into housing lots. A fire in 1847 partially damaged the buildings. The site preserves medieval defensive elements (snave nests, remains of drawbridge) and Renaissance additions, such as the 16th century stair turret. The wheat mill, dated 1728 and active until 1958, illustrates the economic adaptation of the estate, while the tidal barn of 1770 recalls the seigneurial system of the tithe.

The ensemble, inscribed in historical monuments since 1990, also includes remarkable spaces such as the Knights' Hall, the room of the Widows (black woodworks), and vaulted kitchens of the fourteenth century. The facades, roofs, and interior elements (monstrous staircases, ground ceilings) are protected. The mill, with its wooden blades and its canal fed by the river Eichel, as well as the barn with curved doors, complete this multi-series testimony of Alsatian history, between feudal power, agricultural life and modern transformations.

Dependencies, such as the 1808 house, reflect post-revolutionary divisions. The seigneurial weapons carved on the lintels and the engraved dates (1726, 1787, 1804) recall the successive phases of occupation and development. Today, the site, located in the Place du Château in Lorentzen, offers a rare example of continuous architectural evolution, from medieval origins to 19th century adaptations, in a rural setting of the Vosges du Nord.

External links