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Beautifully preserved privately owned castle
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The beautiful Christmas market at Guteneck Castle is particularly recommended. It is open on all four Advent weekends from Thursday to Sunday and recently even the weekend before as a "pre-opening" (except on Remembrance Sunday). The atmosphere is unique and the food selection is very varied. Despite the expensive entrance fee (between €8 and €10), it is really highly recommended.
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Warberg Castle Warberg Castle, formerly known as Wartberg, is a ruined hilltop castle on the Warnberg near the town of Neunburg vorm Wald. The first indirect mention of the castle was around 1138, when Countess Adelheid von Warberg donated her estate near Traitsching to the Ensdorf monastery. Elisabeth von Sulzbach, the daughter of Count Gebhard III, married Count Rapoto I of Ortenburg around 1159 and received Warberg Castle as a wedding gift. In 1188, after the death of Count Gebhard III, her sons Heinrich I and Rapoto II of Ortenburg inherited Warberg Castle. The first probable destruction probably took place in the war between the Counts of Ortenburg and the Counts of Bogen, Passau, Bohemia and Austria in the years 1192 to 1199. The castle remained in the possession of the Ortenburgers until 1261, in the same year the son of Count Friedrich von Truhendingen and Anna von Ortenburg, daughter of Heinrich I von Ortenburg, sold Warberg to Duke Ludwig the Strict. The reason that led to the final destruction of Warberg Castle could be related to the military invasions of the Bohemian King Ottokar II of Bohemia in the second half of the 13th century. There is no reliable evidence for this, however, although the Schwarzhofen monastery, which is located not far from the castle, is said to have also been destroyed in the course of this war before 1285. The castle was therefore abandoned between 1261 and 1283, perhaps as early as 1278 if the Second Bohemian War and with it the death of Ottokar II in the Battle of the Marchfeld in that year are the reason for the abandonment. The Warbergers were mentioned in documents several times up until 1495 (Balthasar the Warberger of Kürnberg), presumably a ministerial family that continued to name itself after the destroyed castle. Between 1991 and 1993, an excavation was carried out by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation, during which some of the walls were uncovered. Only a few remains of the walls and the well remain of the former 150 by 50 meter castle complex with its Salian-Staufian ring wall and layered water well. Finds can be found in the Schwarzachtaler Heimatmuseum in Neunburg vorm Wald. Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de
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Today, Schwarzenfeld Castle is a conference and recreation hotel with a beautiful park on the banks of the Naab.
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Schwarzenfeld Castle The Schwarzenfeld seat was built and inhabited by Conrad Pullenhofer in 1372, before it became the property of the Plankenfelser noble family in 1389. They expanded the rather inconspicuous building and added four towers in the 15th century. In the 1580s, the Teuffel von Pirkensee family bought Schwarzenfeld. During the Thirty Years' War, the castle and the town were devastated. The castle's four towers were probably destroyed and have not been rebuilt since. From 1654, the imperial colonel Peter Pischer and his family were lords of Schwarzenfeld. In 1686, the baronial von Schneidau family took over Schwarzenfeld as a manor. In 1707, a fire destroyed the castle and the surrounding buildings, so that it had to be completely rebuilt elsewhere. A new building, called the "Plankenfelser Schlössl", was built on the foundations of the old castle. It was adapted to the period with stepped gables. In 1717, Schwarzenfeld was owned by the von Wildenau family, and in 1794 the property was purchased by the Counts of Holnstein. At the beginning of the 19th century, the main building was given its current shape by removing the stepped gables in favor of a hipped roof. Two small towers with onion tops were also added. In 1890 and 1892, Maximilian von Holnstein had the castle extended by Julius Hofmann to include the annex and the two towers in the style of the then popular historicist architectural style. At times, up to 160 workers were involved in the reconstruction, which gave the castle its final appearance. Surrounding buildings were also demolished to provide a view of the castle. Shortly after its completion, Count von Holnstein used the castle as a retirement home. He went blind in 1893 and died in the castle on February 1, 1895. After the Holnstein family moved out in 1907, the castle remained unused for a long time, except for short-term leases. The market acquired the castle in 1934, and after several changes of ownership, the main building of the castle burned down on the night of June 25, 1982 and lay abandoned for many years. In 1995, it was sold to private individuals Christine and Hans Dobler from Nabburg. They had the castle completely gutted, renovated and converted into a conference hotel, which opened in 1996 and is called "Hotel Schloß Schwarzenfeld". Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de
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