Dankwarderode Castle

Dankwarderode Castle
Burg Dankwarderode
Braunschweig

Burg Dankwarderode
Dankwarderode Castle
Coordinates 52°15′53″N 10°31′27″E / 52.26472°N 10.52417°E / 52.26472; 10.52417Coordinates: 52°15′53″N 10°31′27″E / 52.26472°N 10.52417°E / 52.26472; 10.52417
Type lowland castle
Code DE-NI
Site information
Condition Reconstruction from the 19th/20th centuries
Site history
Built 12th century
Garrison information
Occupants higher nobility
Museum Burg Dankwarderode

Dankwarderode Castle, rebuilt 1887–1906
Established 1963
Location Brunswick
Type Medieval Division of the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum
Architect Ludwig Winter (Reconstruction 1887–1906)
Owner Niedersächsische Landesmuseen Braunschweig
Website http://www.haum.niedersachsen.de

Dankwarderode Castle (German: Burg Dankwarderode) on the Burgplatz ("castle square") in Braunschweig (Brunswick) is a Saxon lowland castle. It was the residence of the Brunswick dukes for centuries and, today, is part of the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum.

Construction and history of use

Dankwarderode Castle was built between c. 1160 and 1175 as the Pfalz of Duke Henry the Lion on an island in the river Oker. Next to the castle, construction of Brunswick Cathedral began in 1173. The castle lost its military significance as a defensive structure early, when it became surrounded completely by the growing city.

During the 15th century, the dukes of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel moved their Residenz out of the city and to the nearby town of Wolfenbüttel.[1] In 1616 the palas was remodelled in the renaissance style, while the rest of the castle was demolished or left to decay. During the 19th century, the castle keep served as a barrack, plans to demolish it completely were stopped by public protests in 1873. The present structure was rebuilt in 1887 by Ludwig Winter, based on archaeological investigations. Today the ground floor of Dankwarderode Castle houses the permanent collection of medieval objects of the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum.[2]

Sources

References

  1. Moderhack, Richard (1997). Braunschweiger Stadtgeschichte (in German). pp. 60–69.
  2. Duke Anton Ulrich Museum. Retrieved on 8 May 2013.
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