Landsöhr Castle
Landsöhr Castle | |
---|---|
Burg Landsöhr, Burg Landseer, Bertaburg | |
Bad Boll | |
The hollows on the hill spur | |
Landsöhr Castle | |
Coordinates | 48°37′24″N 9°37′38″E / 48.623265°N 9.627317°ECoordinates: 48°37′24″N 9°37′38″E / 48.623265°N 9.627317°E |
Type | hill castle, spur castle |
Code | DE-BW |
Height | 739.2 m above sea level (NHN) |
Site information | |
Condition | burgstall (no above-ground ruins) |
Site history | |
Built | first recorded in 1502 |
Landsöhr Castle (German: Burg Landsöhr), also called Landseer Castle (Burg Landseer) or Bertaburg, is a lost spur castle on a northern spur,739.2 m above sea level (NHN), of the Kornberg[1] near Bad Boll in the county of Göppingen in Baden-Württemberg.
The castle was probably built during the Celtic period as a refuge castle. The present burgstall only consists of two hollows between which the castle was probably located.
In the 12th century Berta von Boll, a sister of King Conrad III, is supposed to have had her dower seat here.[2]
References
- ↑ Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
- ↑ Bad Boll 2013 at stauferstelen.net, retrieved 13 December 2013.
Literature
- Konrad Albrecht Koch: Burgenkundliche Beiträge zum Oberamt Göppingen. In: Blätter des Schwäbischen Albvereins. 1926.
- Hartwig Zürn: Boll. In: Die vor- und frühgeschichtlichen Geländedenkmale und die mittelalterlichen Burgstellen der Kreise Göppingen und Ulm. 1961.
- Günter Schmitt: Landsöhr (Bertaburg). In: Ders.: Burgenführer Schwäbische Alb, Band 1 – Nordost-Alb: Wandern und entdecken zwischen Aalen und Aichelberg. Biberacher Verlagsdruckerei, Biberach an der Riß, 1988, ISBN 3-924489-39-4, pp. 321–326.