Untersulmetingen Castle
Tübingen Baden-Württemberg Germany
castle, chateau
Schloss Untersulmetingen
Tübingen Baden-Württemberg Germany
castle, chateau
Untersulmetingen Castle is a small castle-like renaissance structure in the village of Untersulmetingen, now part of the municipality of Laupheim, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany
In der ersten Hälfte des 15
Previous names
Untersulmetingen Castle, Schloss Untersulmetingen
Description
Untersulmetingen Castle is a small castle-like renaissance structure in the village of Untersulmetingen, now part of the municipality of Laupheim, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
The castle is situated at an elevation of 509 metres in the centre of the formerly independent village of Untersulmetingen. It is located on a slow slope of a terminal moraine to the west of the river Riß.
Untersulmetingen Castle is a plain, three-storey building, covered by a large gabled roof which dates from around 1600.
The castles' chapel, which dates from 1608 and was dedicated to Saint Othmar, is decorated by paintings and stucco whose function it is to amalgamate the encompassed forms of the windows and paintings into a moving form.
A medieval castle was built around 1400. In March 1525 this castle was looted and burnt down by the Baltringer Haufen during the German Peasants' War. On the death of Georg von Sulmetingen in 1528, the indigenous local nobility became extinct, after which the castle and the village repeatedly changed hands. Between 1538 and 1542, Hieronymus Roth von Schreckenstein, a patrician from Ulm, had a new castle built on the foundations of the previous one, destroyed during the Peasants' War.
In 1551 Untersulmetingen Castle was acquired by Johann Jakob Fugger. His successors altered the castle fundamentally. Around 1600, the gabled roof was constructed. In 1608, Trajan Fugger added a Rococo-style chapel to the castle. He invested a large sum to embellish the castle itself and its precinct, erecting a gatehouse, a castle garden, a tithe barn and several economy buildings. In 1729, the castle was mortgaged to Ochsenhausen Abbey which ultimately bought the castle in 1735.
Between 1730 and 1732, Benedikt Denzel, abbot of Ochsenhausen Abbey, redesigned the interior of Untersulmetingen Castle as well as the castles' chapel, employing prestigious artists such as sculptor Dominikus Hermenegild Herberger and painter Franz Joseph Spiegler.
In 1803, after the dissolution of the monasteries during the secularisation, the castle went into the hands of Georg Karl von Metternich-Winneburg und Beilstein as compensation for territories lost to France following Napoleon's conquests. In 1805 he sold the castle to Karl Anselm von Thurn und Taxis. In December 1805 the village passed into the possession of the Kingdom of Bavaria and in 1806 it was assigned to the Kingdom of Württemberg. Karl Anselm von Thurn und Taxis remained lord of the castle until the feudal tenure was abolished later on. From that time the castle was allocated to the local priest who used it as his residence until 1969, when it was sold into private hands.
In 1979 and in 2000, the castle's chapel was renovated.
Today the castle is privately owned. The chapel is home of the local administration.
A stork's nest is situated on top of one of the chimneys.
In der ersten Hälfte des 15. Jahrhunderts durch die Ritter von Sulmetingen errichtet. 1525 im Bauernkrieg erstürmt, geplündert und Zerstörung der Obergeschosse durch den Baltringer Haufen
Аb 1551 im Besitz der Grafen Fugger von Kirchberg.
Аb 1729 im Besitz des Klosters Ochsenhausen.
Nach der Säkularisation 1803 im Besitz der Reichsfürsten von Metternich-Winneburg und Beilstein.
Um 1837 Nutzung u. a. als Wohnsitz des Pfarrers und als gutsherrlicher Fruchtkasten.
1805 verkauft an die Fürsten von Thurn und Taxis. Ritter von Sulmetingen. Grafen Fugger von Kirchberg. Klosters Ochsenhausen. Reichsfürsten von Metternich-Winneburg und Beilstein. Fürsten von Thurn und Taxis.
http://schloesserrundschau.de/bawue/schloesser/biberach01.html
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