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ニーダーエスターライヒ州
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エーベルガシング

周辺の城・トップ9

ハイキングの途中で偶然見つけた場合でも、ガイドブックに沿ってたどり着いた場合でも、いつも特別な体験をもたらしてくれる城。エーベルガシングには訪れるべき 11 の美しい城があります。一覧から行きたい城を見つけて、次の冒険では歴史にも触れてみましょう。

最終更新日: 2月 17, 2026

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フランツェンブルク

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A visit to Franzensburg is a real highlight in the castle park of Laxenburg.
Emperor Franz II left behind an extraordinary work here.

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Seibersdorf城

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What a great castle! Unfortunately, it no longer seems to be in operation. The entrance looks at least very down. Still a great sight!

Read more on Wikipedia: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schloss_Seibersdorf_(Nieder%C3%B6sterreich)

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Altkettenhof Castle was rebuilt as the family seat of Anton Dreher II at the beginning of the 20th century. The location of this building, which is still imposing today, can look back on a long history.

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Schloss Lanzendorf

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Around 1170, Lanzendorf Castle was owned by the Asparn-Maleisdorf family, who were later replaced by the Schönberg family.

The Caritas of the Archdiocese of Vienna took over the property in …

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トラウトマンスドルフ城

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Mighty here is a beautiful castle, 2014, it got a new owner who intends to restore it completely again - I hope it succeeds (soon).

burgen-austria.com/article-month.php?id=242

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コミュニティからのヒント

Harald
4月 30, 2025, Schloss Trautmannsdorf

Lost place... dilapidated castle in a huge area.

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A visit to Franzensburg is a real highlight in the castle park of Laxenburg Be sure to take a guided tour

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Altkettenhof Castle, also known as Dreher Castle or Kettenhof Castle, is a baroque castle in the Lower Austrian town of Schwechat. The castle was built in the 13th century as a small complex in what is now the Alt-Kettenhof district of Schwechat and was continually expanded. In 1760, the Archducal Austrian First Chancellor Heinrich Kajetan von Blümegen (1715–1788) became the new owner of the castle and expanded it. In 1766, he founded the Kettenhofer cotton and calico factory with two partners. After his father's death, his son Franz Heinrich Graf von Blümegen lived in the castle with his daughters Josefine and Eleonora until 1813. In 1814, the property was purchased by the art patron and banker Moritz Reichsgraf von Fries (1777–1826) and his brother Philip Jacob. After his death, Johann Ziegler (then director of the Kettenhofer cotton and calico factory) and Elonora Countess von Kálnoky acquired the building. The castle acquired a new owner in 1826 with the brothers Josef, Moritz and Johann Freiherren von Ziegler; they sold it to Karl Mayer in 1830. In 1850, the castle was bought by the Austrian diplomat and later foreign minister Johann Bernhard von Rechberg and sold in 1872 to the Schwechat brewing industrialist Anton Dreher junior. Rechberg lived in the building until his death on February 26, 1899. In 1902, Dreher had the castle rebuilt in the neo-baroque style by the architect Emil Bressler (1847–1921) and the Schwechat master builder Johann Miksch (1843–1908) for around 800,000 crowns (approx. 4 million euros). The interior was designed by the Viennese furniture maker and interior designer Portois & Fix. After Anton Dreher's death in 1921, the castle was inhabited by his wife Katharina Dreher (1850-1937) until her death and in 1938 was donated to the city of Schwechat in accordance with the wishes of her son and sole heir Eugen Dreher. Source: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schloss_Altkettenhof

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A visit to Franzensburg is a real highlight in the castle park of Laxenburg. Emperor Franz II left behind an extraordinary work here.

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Lanzendorf Castle is located in the municipality of Lanzendorf, cadastral municipality of Oberlanzendorf in the Vienna Basin, Lower Austria, about four kilometers south-east of the Vienna city limits. It stands in the south of the village next to the thoroughfare. In its turbulent history, the castle has been rebuilt several times. It is now a block-like, three-storey building over an L-shaped floor plan. The street front is kept simple with seven irregular window axes and corners with decorative ashlars. In the middle of the hipped roof sits a square turret covered with a pointed tin helmet. It probably comes from the reconstruction in 1758. The courtyard front has windows with profiled walls and straight roofing, which are largely covered by extensions. On the side of the large park there is a two-storey loggia, the columns of which support a flat ceiling on the ground floor and a wicker vault on the upper floor. This addition is relatively new. To the south, there is also a two-storey porch with a grooved ground floor. The high, round-arched French windows on the upper floor are separated by double pilasters. Behind it is the former ballroom. A chapel was built on the upper floor of this wing around 1830. The extensions on the courtyard side also date from this year. In place of a roof, this porch supports a roof terrace bordered by a stone balustrade. On the side of the street there is a tower-like roof house. An outbuilding is connected to the main building by a flat-roofed colonnade. This and other, mostly two-storey buildings were built at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century as administration and care buildings. The former defensive wall still surrounds parts of them today. The formerly large dairy farm on the other side of the street was demolished in 1998, only the stables remained.

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The palace has stood empty since the interwar period and has fallen into disrepair. A real estate developer from Vienna acquired it in 2014 in order to renovate it and put it to a new use. This project is controversial. Strict ban on entry and threatened video surveillance - but there is no sign of renovation. Story: The name Trautmannsdorf refers to a Trutman who served under the Babenbergs, acquired land here from the Göttweig monastery around the year 1100 and presumably built a permanent house. In the 12th and 13th centuries, Trautmannsdorf was a link in the chain of fortifications against the Hungarians. The castle as such is first mentioned in 1292. Around 1163/1180 the small castle passed to the noble family of Stuchsen, ministerials of the Styrian margraves, who probably had their ancestral castle in Stixenstein, which was previously called Stuchsenstein. The castle was largely spared during the Kuruzzi invasions and the Turkish wars, as the complex was very well fortified and armed. From 1576 to 1756 the castle and dominion were owned by the Windisch-Graetz family. Under the Protestant, but loyal to the Emperor, Baron Friederich von Windischgraetz, the palace chapel was a center of the Protestants in eastern Lower Austria. Karl Joseph Graf Batthyány acquired the rule in 1756. After 1810, Prince Philipp Batthyány had the old buildings removed and a Classicist palace built. Joseph Kornhäusel is assumed to be the master builder. During the suppression of the revolution in Hungary in 1849, it served as a military hospital for wounded soldiers. After the death of the childless Prince Philip in 1870, the decline continued. In the vacant castle, a sanatorium for lung diseases was set up for a short time and the lands were leased.

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Around 1170, Lanzendorf Castle was owned by the Asparn-Maleisdorf family, who were later replaced by the Schönberg family. The Caritas of the Archdiocese of Vienna took over the property in 1948 and set up a care center for people of all ages in it. Since then she has restored the castle, erected new buildings and adapted existing objects for the kitchen, workshop, storage and laundry room. As part of the restoration of the castle, which is now called Haus Franziska, a staircase made of exposed concrete was built to commemorate the victims of the Nazi regime. More about the story: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schloss_Lanzendorf

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The wishes have been increased 😊... is currently being renovated (see photos)!

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