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Altdahn Castle

Altdahn Castle
Burg Altdahn
Dahn
Burg Alt-Dahn 0012a.jpg
The castle group at Dahn
Altdahn Castle is located in Germany
Altdahn Castle
Altdahn Castle
Coordinates 49°09′00″N 7°48′05″E / 49.1499°N 7.8014°E / 49.1499; 7.8014Coordinates: 49°09′00″N 7°48′05″E / 49.1499°N 7.8014°E / 49.1499; 7.8014
Type hill castle, rock castle
Code DE-RP
Height 337 m above sea level (NN)
Site information
Condition ruin
Site history
Built between 1200 and 1236
Materials rusticated ashlar
Garrison information
Occupants ministeriales

Altdahn Castle (German: Burg Altdahn) is a castle ruin in the Palatinate Forest, the German part of the Wasgau region, and is located near the town of Dahn in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It stands 337 metres (1,106 ft) above sea level (NN).

The rock castle of Altdahn belongs to the group of castles at Dahn, which also includes Grafendahn and Tanstein. Although the three castles are sited next to one another on a low, rocky ridge, they were not built at the same time. A similar type of castle arrangement is also found e. g. in the nearby French Vosges in the upper Alsace where there is a cluster of three castles at Husseren-les-Châteaux.

Other sights nearby include the castle of Neudahn and the natural rock formation of Jungfernsprung.

Altdahn was probably built in the early 13th century. Certainly in 1236 the castle was being run by Frederick of Dahn as a vassal (Lehnsmann) of the Bishop of Speyer who, at that time, was Conrad IV of Dahn and may well have been a relative. The subsequent history of the castle is characterized by many wars and frequent destruction, that was, time and again, followed by rebuilding.

Altdahn was first destroyed in 1363 in the course of a feud between the Dahns and the Fleckensteins. In the end a squire took possession of the castle and carried out temporary repairs. In 1372 it was destroyed again and the squire driven out. In 1406 the castle was destroyed in the War of the Four Lords, which played out from 1405 to 1408 especially in the Bliesgau, 40 kilometres to the west. In 1426 and 1438 the castle caught fire without being caused by any military action.


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