Prandegg Castle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypeCastle
ConditionRuins
Coordinates48°24′53″N 14°40′00″E / 48.41472°N 14.66667°E / 48.41472; 14.66667
Built13th century
Burgruine Prandegg
Schönau im Mühlkreis, Austria
view of the Prandegg Ruins
Site information
TypeCastle
ConditionRuins
Location
Coordinates48°24′53″N 14°40′00″E / 48.41472°N 14.66667°E / 48.41472; 14.66667
Site history
Built13th century
Prandegg Castle, engraving by Georg Matthäus Vischer (1674)
A tower of Prandegg Castle
Prandegg Castle and its surrounding area
The ruins after renovation and cleaning

Prandegg Castle is a ruined hill castle in Austria, near the village of Schönau im Mühlkreis in the Freistadt District (which lies in the Mühlviertel area of Upper Austria).

Prandegg is an elongated castle on a hilltop adjacent to a collection of rocky cliffs. It lies at 705 metres (2,313 ft) above the Adriatic (the primary sea level determinate of Austria), between two valleys formed by the river Waldaist and the smaller stream Prandegg. Gutau is 3.9 kilometres (2.4 mi) as the crow flies, with Schönau im Mühlkreis lying 5.3 kilometres (3.3 mi) away. The nearest village is Pehersdorf, along Hiking Trail No. 82 (Wanderweg Nr. 82).

Name

The Name Prandegg refers to the terrain on which the castle was constructed: this included an area of forest that was clear-cut using fire (in standard German Brand, which means "fire", rendered in the local dialect as prant) and a large, exposed rocky outcropping (from the standard German Ecke, for corner, rendered in the local dialect as egg).

Description

Following the rocky outcropping upon which it is set, the castle is long and narrow. The total area of the grounds is 2,435 square metres (0.60 acres), of which the main castle occupies 1,490 square metres (0.37 acres). A previous structure, the late Romanesque old castle (Altburg), which was built at the end of the 12th century, was at the highest point of the northern ridge, and though it no longer exists, it once covered 340 square metres (3,700 sq ft). Nearby to the south, a castle chapel once stood, as well as a barrel-vaulted passage connecting it to the interior courtyard. A castle gate, a small gatehouse, and a palas were erected nearby as well, opposite a series of farm buildings. The residential buildings have been preserved up to a height of several stories, at least along the outer walls. In some cases, plaster layers, bay windows, window frames, window alcoves and pointed arch portals are still visible. The main castle is separated by a high wall from the bergfried, a powerful defensive tower typical of castles in German-speaking area. The bergfried of the Prandegg Castle is a 26-metre (85 ft) high, round tower built on a natural outcropping of rocks and with an elevated entrance. It is accessible today by a wooden bridge or simple wooden set of stairs and serves as a lookout point for the surrounding area. South of the bergfried lies the low-lying outer ward, which was separated from the inner ward by a 9-metre (30 ft) wide, man-made moat, over which a drawbridge allowed access to the heart of the castle. At the foot of the castle, the Maier courtyard once stood. Originally a four-sided space, some of the area has since been enclosed, and a restaurant now operates within this area.

History

Works cited

References

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