Castle of the Week 42 - Nuremberg
City of Nuremberg
Nuremberg was founded in the year 1040, primarily
as a castle by Emperor Heinrich III and used to secure and expand
the surrounding imperial estates. As it was the custom for
Teutonic (Germanic) people in medieval Europe to set up a castle
around which a town would develop, so a city quickly followed.
"Nouremberc" was first mentioned in documents in 1050 and,
after 1070, the grave of the miracle-working Sebaldus led a
stream of visitors to Nuremberg, which then became an important
trade center.
In 1332 Nuremberg was declared an imperial city
(Kaiserstadt) or city state by King Ludwig of Bavaria; it
remained an imperial free city, with its local government
answering only to the King, until 1806 when it was incorporated
into the Kingdom of Bavaria, now the German state of Bavaria.
Nuremberg was the place where the imperial Reichstag (Parliament)
met until 1543.
From 1424 to 1796 Nuremberg was one of the three so called "Kaiserstädte" (Emperor cities). Every new king was elected in Frankfort and crowned in Aachen. These cities were called "Kaiserstädte" (Emperor cities), but the Kaiser himself was proclaimed in Rome by the pope. In the Emperor cities only the king was crowned. Nuremberg was the third Emperor city, the repository of the so called "Reichskleinodien", a collection of several holy things, which were very important for ceremonies in the German Empire. From 1485 to 1796 the Imperial crown jewels were kept in the Church of the Holy Ghost in the castle. In 1938 they were returned to Nuremberg and 1945 returned to the "Hofburg" in Vienna, where they are still today. The only part of the treasure that is still in Nuremberg is the empty shrine in which the crown jewels were kept.
Nuremberg was also the unofficial capital of the
Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation which began when the Pope
of the Roman Catholic Church crowned the first Emperor on
Christmas Day in the year 800 AD. The first Holy Roman Emperor
was from the Teutonic tribe called the Franks; to most of the
world, he is known as Charlemagne or Charles the Great, but he
has always been known as Karl der Grosse to the Germans. He was
chosen as the Emperor by the Pope because he was Roman Catholic
at a time when there were several other Christian sects in
Europe. The original city of Nuremberg was established inside a
defensive stone wall guarded by 46 fortified towers, surrounded
by a moat filled with water and then another outside wall. There
were five main gates into the city, four of which are still
standing, including the Königstor (Kings's Gate).
Castle of Nuremberg
Nuremberg Castle, or Kaiserburg, is one of the
most important castles in the history of the German Empire.
Between 1050 and 1571 all the German and Holy Roman Emperors
lived there at various times. Nuremberg Castle was built in
stages on a sandstone hill on the north side of Nurembergs's old
city and there are actually three parts to the castle: the
Kaiserburg (Emperor's Castle) in the west and complete in itself,
the Burggrafenveste (Count's Castle) in the middle and also the
oldest part, and the Stadtburg (part belonging to the Imperial
City) on the eastern side. It reached its massive present size
and length of 220 meters in three stages of construction between
the 11th and the 15th centuries.
Burggrafenveste and Kaiserburg
The Burggrafenveste was leased, first of all, to
the burgraves as fiefs but it soon became hereditary however and
withdrew from the Emperor's sphere of influence more and more.
For the protection of his interests, the newly-elected Emperor
Konrad III allowed a second castle to be constructed as an
extension to the old Burggrafenveste on the western part of the
castle rock, called the Kaiserburg (Emperor's castle). While
German emperors never had an actual capital or home base as such
but moved around the country, Nuremberg came as close to one as
possible since the Emperor and his suite were frequently there.
It is one of the very few castles to have had the official
privilege of housing the imperial regalia and bear the symbol of
the empire on its walls. The government of Nuremberg had to
maintain the castle, however they had the right to inhabit it
during the absence of the Emperor.
After Kaiser Konrad III built the original
Kaiserburg, it was reshaped later many times and greatly expanded
by the next emperor, Friedrich Barbarossa (Friedrich I, 1152 -
1190). The sandstone-building with its double chapel
(Doppelkapelle) from the 12th century is the most important
monument in the castle and was built by Friedrich Barbarossa in
the second building phase. The chapel has a bright upstairs room
and a dark downstairs room connected by an open space in the
center. The upper room was for the Kaiser and members of the
royal family while the lower room was for the common people. This
arrangement is a good example of the hierarchical structure of
the Teutonic peoples. The concept of a fortified castle, designed
to protect the King from his people, was a Teutonic invention;
during the same period in history, the Irish and Scottish Kings
lived among their people and did not have castles for protection
until this idea was introduced by the Teutonic Normans.
During the reign of Emperor Friedrich III in the 15th century (1440 - 1493) the old Staufer Palas and the ladies' apartments were replaced by new late-gothic buildings. Also the Knights' Hall and the powerful Simwellturm (round tower) come from this time. The Emperor stables (Kaiserstallung) were constructed in 1495. This grain storage building served for keeping the horses, when the emperor visited Nuremberg and the Reichstag (parliament) met. Emperor Charles V had a loaf of bread baked from grain in storage there for over 180 years. Today it serves as a youth hostel.
A framework wellhouse (Brunnenhaus) encloses the
Deep Well (Tiefer Brunnen). This well was vital during sieges and
in the 12th century had already been dug 50 meters deep into the
sandstone rock to protect the drinking-water supply. Today it
still holds up to 3m of water. The wellhouse is situated in the
inner ward of the Emperor castle.
The Hohenzollern family, a family of European rulers, were counts of the Burggrafenveste from 1192. By using their court- and sovereign-rights, they were able to extend their sphere of influence around Nuremberg in the 13th century. This way the power of the emperor in Nuremberg weakened, although the sovereignty over the Emperor Castle remained in the hands of the Emperor. The building of a watchtower in front of the Burggrafenveste led to a war that ended with an occupation of the Burggrafenveste. In 1420 the Burggrafenveste was destroyed by a fire assault. From the Burggrafenveste only the keep, the so-called pentagon tower (Fünfeckturm), stands today and is the oldest building in the city.
By 1427, the Hohenzollerns moved their main
residence from Nuremberg to the "Mark Brandenburg" and the ruin
of the Burggrafenveste was sold by Count Friedrich I to the city
of Nuremberg. This is where the Emperor Stables were build.
Between 1495 and 1525, a period of prosperity, political power and the atmosphere of intellectual and artistical advance made Nuremberg one of Europe's leading metropolis.The Reformation in 1525 marked an important point in Nuremberg's history. A dispute between the catholic "Kaiserhaus" and the now reformed city of Nuremberg erupted.
During the Thirty Year's War two military
commanders, Wallenstein and the Swedish Gustav Adolf fought in
1632 one of the bloodiest battles at Nuremberg. The war left
Nuremberg highly in debt and with a decimated population. In the
18th century the pressure of high taxes and the many customs
barriers of the surrounding territories paralysed the economic
development and, additionally, Prussia and Bavaria occupied rural
areas of the city. After 1796 French troops occupied Nuremberg
several times. In 1806 Nuremberg was annexed by the kingdom of
Bavaria. Nuremberg was deprived of all its political powers and
became a meaningless city.
The increasing interest in the romanticism of German castles led, in the year 1834, firstly to repair and then reconstruction of the decaying castle by Karl Alexander Heideloff. A thorough restoration through the Bavarian Castle Administration by Rudolf Esterer started in 1934. In 1933 Nuremberg became the city of the so called "Reichsparteitage", meetings that were held by the Nazi-regime under Adolf Hitler with the intention of reviving the Imperial days but in a modern form.
Thirty-eight air attacks on Nuremberg in the
Second World War destroyed 90% of the historical buildings and
40% of the whole city and made Nuremberg one of the most badly
damaged cities in Germany.
The castle was heavily damaged, with only the chapel, parts of the Palas as well as the most important towers surviving. It was rebuilt to the previous plans and houses today a branch of the German National Museum. By 1950 most of the war damage to the castle was removed.
Write-up provided by Hanarky. Pictures courtesy of Scrapbook Pages
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