Leienfels Castle

Leienfels Castle
Pottenstein-Leienfels

Ruins of Leienfels Castle – view of the inner bailey with its entranceway and flanking round tower (April 2011)
Coordinates 49°42′34″N 11°22′11″E / 49.709441°N 11.369734°E / 49.709441; 11.369734Coordinates: 49°42′34″N 11°22′11″E / 49.709441°N 11.369734°E / 49.709441; 11.369734
Type hill castle, spur castle
Code DE-BY
Height 590 m above sea level (NN)
Site information
Condition restored ruins
Site history
Built c. 1300
Materials rubble stone walls
Garrison information
Occupants ministeriales

Leienfels Castle (German: Burgruine Leienfels) was a late mediaeval aristocratic castle, immediately northwest of the eponymous village of Leienfels in the region of Franconian Switzerland in Germany. The village belongs to the borough of Pottenstein in the Upper Franconian county of Bayreuth in Bavaria.

The ruins of the hill castle are freely accessible and act as a viewing point.

The Leienfelser Schlossberg with the ruins above the village of Graisch seen from the NE from the nearby site of Leuenstein Castle (May 2009)

Location

The ruins lie within the Franconian Switzerland-Veldenstein Forest Nature Park on the 590-metre-high hill of Leienfelser Schlossberg immediately next to the village of Leienfels, about 4.6 kilometres northwest of the church at Betzenstein.

The castle may be reached from the village of Leienfels by heading in a northwesterly direction. The site of the castle begins at the edge of the village.

In the vicinity, towards the west, lie the ruins of Bärnfels Castle, to the north, on the Bleistein near Graisch, is the site of Leuenstein Castle. To the southeast is the site of Leupoldstein Castle and, to the southwest, in the valley of the Trubach, were other castles, of which ruins or foundations (Burgställe) still exist.[1]

History of the castle

Coat of arms from Siebmacher's 1605 armorial
Remains of the wall closing off the ditch (January 2006)
Remains of a building, the so-called Kalte Ecke ("Cold Corner") (January 2006)

The castle, whose name is probably derived from Löwenfels ("Lion Rock"), is one of the later castles to be built in Franconian Switzerland and may have been erected in the 14th century at the behest of Seibot I of Egloffstein, who is recorded between 1285 and 1332.

The castle itself is first mentioned in 1372. Lord Götz of Egloffstein had to give his part of the hitherto probably allodial castle to the Bishop of Bamberg after a feud.

In 1380 the castle was captured by troops of the Bishop of Bamberg and Burgrave Frederick V of Nuremberg. Götz of Egloffstein was taken prisone and incarcerated in Nuremberg. His successor was also frequently involved in feuds. The castle was destroyed in 1397 on the orders of Emperor Wenceslaus.

1In 502 Jobst I of Egloffstein sold the castle to the Bishop of Bamberg and it became the seat of a small episcopal Amt.

In the Peasants' War the castle was badly damaged in 1525, but its garrison under Otto of Mengersdorf was able to prevent it being taken. The restoration of the castle was carried out immediately. In 1553, during the Second Margrave War, it was again seriously damaged. Its reconstruction was carried out more slowly this time. In 1594, Leienfels was incorporated into the episcopal Amt of Pottenstein. By 1610, the site was already being described as uninhabitable. In 1643, during the Thirty Years' War the repair of the castle was no longer considered to be worthwhile. In 1646, the bricks were of the surviving buildings were carried off and the site left to decay.

Today, the ruins have been designated by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Protection as listed site D-4-72-179-83 "Leienfels, formerly an almost triangular site, remains of the enceinte and the main building with corner tower, the core 14th century; wall of the former outer bailey, 14th century.", as well as ground monument D-4-6234-0068 "finds from the Middle Ages and early modern period in the area of the castle ruins of Leienfels"[2]

References

  1. Location of the castle ruin at Bayern Atlas
  2. for Pottenstein at the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Historic Buildings and Monuments (pdf; 152 kB)

Literature

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