The Schlössle Alberweiler is a castle in the district of the same name in the municipality of Schemmerhofen in Baden-Württemberg. It was first mentioned in 1488 when it was destroyed by Catholic troops during the Roggenburg feud. At that time it was owned by the gentlemen of Warthausen zu Alberweiler, who had converted to the Protestant faith.
In the 15th century a new castle was built under Bartholome von Warthausen zu Alberweiler at the current location. Back then, the ground floor and the first floor were probably bricked like today. The second floor and the gables are provided with a beautiful half-timbered construction.
In 1585 the castle became the property of the counts of Stadion. Even today there are old beamed ceilings and door frames from the time of construction. The early baroque portal with its blind pillars goes back to the counts of Stadion.
In 1885 the carpenter Andreas Mohr finally bought it and provided it with a baroque half-hipped roof. He made elaborate carvings on the outside of the castle. Not much has been invested since the time of the Weimar Republic, and the castle fell into disrepair.
Restorer Richard Roth, lord of the castle until his death in 1998, bought it in 1968 and brought the building back to its original shape. He inserted a fragment of the epitaph of the last Warthauser in Alberweiler, Felix Friderich, into the castle wall, which was found during the interior renovation of the parish church of St. Ulrich in Alberweiler.