Bilstein Castle (Lennestadt)

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Bilstein Castle (German: Burg Bilstein) is a hill castle in the Sauerland in Germany. It is located in the eponymous quarter of Bilstein in the town of Lennestadt. Since 1927 the building has been a youth hostel.

Conditionpreserved
Coordinates51°05′46″N 8°01′10″E
Built1202 to 1225
Quick facts Site information, Type ...
Bilstein Castle
Burg Bilstein
Lennestadt-Bilstein
Aerial photograph of the castle
Site information
Typehill castle, spur castle
Conditionpreserved
Location
Bilstein Castle is located in North Rhine-Westphalia
Bilstein Castle
Bilstein Castle
Bilstein Castle is located in Germany
Bilstein Castle
Bilstein Castle
Coordinates51°05′46″N 8°01′10″E
Site history
Built1202 to 1225
Garrison information
Occupantsnobility
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Oldest illustration of Bilstein Castle, dating to 1561
Artist's impression of Bilstein Castle before the expansion of 1977 based on as-completed drawings

Origin of the name

The word Bilstein (and linguistically related terms such as Beilstein, Bielstein etc.) is not uncommon as a field and place name. According to Förstemann,[1] it means something like "a steeply towering or prominent rock". This description certainly applies to the promontory of Bilstein's castle hill. Thus, presumably the name was transferred from the hill, which is made of keratophyre (green volcanic rock), to the castle and adjacent settlement. Other explanations relate the name to a hunting place, an idol or the Old High German word billi for "sword".[2]

Castle site

Bilstein is a spur castle on an extension of the nearby hill of Rosenberg. This hill spur falls away steeply on three sides so that the castle's defences only needed to be oriented towards the hill to the northeast. The appearance of the castle is thus dominated by its two round towers, each with a diameter of about eight metres: the Chapel Tower in the northwest and the Hohnekamp Tower[3] in the southeast. The towers are connected by a tunnel under the castle courtyard, above ground is a 20th century archway.

The northwestern wing of the main ward and the central block in the southwest are historical structures. By contrast, the wing in the southeast was built in 1978 to expand the hostel. On the valley side of the central block is a portal terrace (Söller) on which a prominent lime tree is growing.

Today a brick bridge spans the moat between the inner and outer baileys. The moat has been partly filled-in and is about 15 metres wide. The outer bailey comprises three buildings, which are referred to as the gatehouse, timber-framed house and festival hall.

References

Literature

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