Wernigerode Castle

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Wernigerode Castle
View of the Burghof

Wernigerode Castle (German: Schloss Wernigerode) is a castle located in the Harz mountains above the town of Wernigerode in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The present-day building, finished in the late 19th century, is similar in style to Neuschwanstein Castle, though its foundations are much older.[1] The castle is open to the public and one of the most frequently visited in Saxony-Anhalt.

History

The first mention of the Saxon noble Adalbert of Haimar, Count of Wernigerode, in an 1121 deed is also the first documentation of the settlement, which, made by deforestation, had been founded about a century earlier. The counts built the castle on a slope south of the town as their residence, that was first mentioned as a castrum in 1213. When the line became extinct in 1429, the Wernigerode lands were inherited by the neighbouring County of Stolberg. The castle became the seat of the subordinate Amt administration and was put in pledge several times.

Wernigerode town and castle, about 1820

When in 1645 the Stolberg-Stolberg line split, Wernigerode again became the capital of the County of Stolberg-Wernigerode. The counts however struggled with the citizens in the course of the Thirty Years' War and had to take their residence at nearby Ilsenburg House. It was not until 1710, when Count Christian Ernest relocated the seat of the government and had the castle rebuilt in a Baroque style. He ruled for 61 years, though he had to accept the overlordship of King Frederick William I of Prussia in 1714.

Christian Ernest's descendant Count Otto, first president of the Prussian Province of Hanover from 1867, president of the Prussian House of Lords from 1872 and German Vice-Chancellor from 1878 had the castle again extensively rebuilt in a Neo-Romantic Gründerzeit design, finished in 1893. The entire complex includes a chapel built in 1880 according to plans by the renowned Vienna architect Friedrich von Schmidt. In 1945 the castle was seized by the Soviet Military Administration in Germany.

Trivia

References

  1. "Die Stadt Wernigerode". Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk. 2006-04-26. Retrieved 2009-07-17. 

External links

Coordinates: 51°49′49″N 10°47′42″E / 51.8302777778°N 10.795°E / 51.8302777778; 10.795


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