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Burgruine Dürnstein

Dürnstein Castle
Burgruine Dürnstein
Dürnstein, Lower Austria,
Austria
Burgruine Dürnstein 2 - panoramio.jpg
Coordinates 48°24′03″N 15°31′36″E / 48.4008333333°N 15.5266666667°E / 48.4008333333; 15.5266666667Coordinates: 48°24′03″N 15°31′36″E / 48.4008333333°N 15.5266666667°E / 48.4008333333; 15.5266666667
Type Rock castle
Site information
Open to
the public
yes
Site history
Built about 1130
Built by Hadmar I of Kuenring
Demolished 1645

Burgruine Dürnstein is a ruined medieval castle in Austria. It is located in Dürnstein, in the Lower Austrian Wachau region on the Danube river, at 312 metres (1,024 ft) above sea level.

The rock castle was erected in the early 12th century at the behest of Hadmar I of Kuenring (d. 1138), a ministerialis in the service of Margrave Leopold III of Austria, on the estates his ancestor Azzo of Gobatsburg had acquired from Tegernsee Abbey in the late 11th century. Hadmar, who also founded nearby Zwettl Abbey, had the fortress constructed in a strategic location overlooking the river Danube. It is connected to Dürnstein through a defensive wall extending from the city walls.

The castle is known for being one of the places where King Richard I of England, returning from the Third Crusade, was imprisoned after being captured near Vienna by Duke Leopold V of Austria, from December 1192 until his extradition to Emperor Henry VI in March 1193.

In 1428 and 1432, Hussite forces plundered the city and castle of Dürnstein.

In 1645, near the end of the Thirty Years' War, a Swedish contingent under Lennart Torstensson conquered Dürnstein. Upon their withdrawal, the troops destroyed parts of the gate system. As of 1662, the castle was no longer inhabited permanently, but was still listed as a possible shelter in the Austro-Turkish War (1663–1664).


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