Ouren Castle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Typehillside castle, settlement
ClassificationRuins
LocationOuren
Coordinates50°8′N 6°8′E / 50.133°N 6.133°E / 50.133; 6.133
Ouren Castle
Location within Belgium
General information
Typehillside castle, settlement
ClassificationRuins
LocationOuren
Coordinates50°8′N 6°8′E / 50.133°N 6.133°E / 50.133; 6.133
Completed11/12th century
OwnerGentry
Ouren Castle on the Ferraris-Map of 1777.

Ouren Castle is a castle ruin in Ouren in the East Cantons of Belgium. It was the ancestral seat of the lineage of the free nobles of Ouren.

Dating back to the 11th century, the site was originally a segmented, fortified castle fortress with a palas, a bergfried and a chapel in the higher-located northern part of the castle hill. The outer bailey with the service buildings were situated in the southern area.

During the Late Middle Ages the castle gradually lost its fortified character in favour of the living comfort of its noble inhabitants. Between 1535 and 1615, periods of modification mark the changes to the residence of the nobility. A re-drawing in the lost watercolour by Joseph-Ernest Buschmann (1814-1853) from the mid-19th century shows the site as a – probably romanticized – Baroque castle. After its demolishment by French Revolutionary troops in 1794 the castle became uninhabitable and was nearly fully demolished after 1845.

The castle ruin is located in the southern part of East Belgium, close to the borders of Luxembourg. The castle plateau is situated on a shale rock which is protruding by an off-set into the valley of the river Our. To the North, West and East the castle hill is surrounded by the river Our. Through a slight depression in the South the access to the castle plateau is attained. Mostly timbered ridges of mountains of the East Ardennes are extending on both sides of the stream course on altitudes of approximately 400 to 539 meters above level Ostend (m O.P.).

History

The castle ruin nowadays

Further reading

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