European Castles
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Austrian and German Castles

Prince Eugene,  Vienna Austria

Prince Eugene commissioned the renowned architect Fischer von Erlach in (1721-1724) to build the Upper and lower Belvedere for him. From the beginning the whole complex consisted of two buildings separated by a park. The upper Belvedere was built in Baroque and a palatial splendor. Eugene used the Upper Belvedere as a frame for his grandiose receptions, and ceremonies. The lower Belvedere was his summer residence .(1714-1716)

Prince Eugene was offered an officers commission by Ludwig XIV. He offered his services to the Emperor of Austria and took upon himself to defend Vienna against the Turks. He had a meteoritic rise in the Austrian army. After winning battle after battle he earned the baton of a field Marshall of the Austrian army, and then later on in 1703 Eugene was made adviser to the war cabinet of the emperor of Austria. 

 Prince Eugene was not only an exceptional field Marshall but also an outstanding statesman. He was also the advisor to three Emperors: Leopold T., Josef I., Karl VI . Eugene was a great collector of great art and paintings. His library, castles and Palaces, especially the Belvedere points towards his exceptional fine taste for the better things of life.

 

 

Upper Belvedere 1714 -1721, Vienna Austria

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 Entrance Upper Belvedere

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Stair Case Upper Belvedere

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Great Marble Hall Upper Belvedere

Upper and lower Belvedere

Upper and lower Belvedere.jpg (64303 bytes)

Lower_Belvedere.jpg (55770 bytes)

Lower Belvedere

Schloss Niederweiden 1693, Lower Austria, Austria

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 In 1726 prince Eugene of Savoy took over the castle and let his favorite Architect, Fisher von Erlach rebuild it . He turned it into an astatically pleasing example of a French hunting castle.

Schloss Schlosshoff, Lower Austria, Austria

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Schloss Schlosshoff, was owned by Prince Eugene of Savoy, who commissioning the architect   Master Hildebrandt to rebuild it into a luxurious Baroque building.

Schloss Marschegg 1783

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Marschegg was created by King Ottokar in 1268.  Schloss Marchegg was changed into a Baroque Castle in the year of 1793.  At the present time it is a hunting museum.

Mespelbrunn 1419-1432, Spessard, Bavaria, Germany

Mespelbrunn.jpg (74008 bytes)Surrounded by green, wooded hills and crystal waters, Mespelbrunn is one of  the loveliest castles in northern Bavaria. Hidden in a small, romantic valley, it was not destroyed in the thirty Years War nor any later. It is so well hidden it was almost impossibly to find. For that reason, Mespelbrunn is one of the few castles in Germany that has retained its original form and furniture. The oldest part of the castle is the mighty tower. Its origin goes back to the thirteenth century. In that time it had to protect the road "running through the valley, a by-road of the Wuerzburg highway, which already in the middle-ages was the most important road through the Spessard. The chief part of the tower was built by the knight Hamann Echter in the early fifteenth century (1419-1432). It now contains the family-archives and the library. The oldest document you find in it is of the thirteenth century.

The other part of the castle was erected by the knight Peter Echter It was to replace a smaller building which stood between the tower and the chapel. The northern and eastern aisles of the castle are supported by picturesque columns. Those on the north side are of wonderful stone-cutting, decorated with rosettes, heads of angels and masks, very typical emblems of the Renaissance style. This part of the castle is entirely built in German Renaissance style. On one of the columns you see the alliance coat of arms of the knight Peter Echter and his wife, a Lady Adelsheim. The three rings are the coat of the Echter Family, the horn that of the Adelsheim. Carved above is the date 1564.

The Knight’s' Hall: We begin our walk through the castle with the knights' hall. This is the room where formerly the knights assembled, a very imposing room. The porches, windows and the columns are of red sandstone, showing excellent craftsmanship. The hands at the base of these columns symbolize the steadfast clinging of the house and its inhabitants to the soil. There is a tale that as long as these columns in the knights hall are standing, the Ingleheim-Echter family will flourish. Between the double columns you see a well, that is the Mespelbrunn, in English "medlar-tree-well". In the middle-ages a spring was the symbol of life, and this spring with Its caring of a man and woman symbolize the same. The armor and pikes are of the sixteenth century. The tables and cupboards were made about sixteen hundred. The windows were painted by Countess Antoinette Ingleheim. They show the genealogical tree of the last Lady Echter, her coat of arms below, above the coat of arms of her parents, grandparents, great grand parents and so on. The other windows on the left show the genealogical tree of her husband: Count Philip Ludwig von Ingleheim. By grant of the Kaiser he combined his name and coat of arms with that of the Echter family~ So the possessors of the castle, his decedents, are now called: Count Ingleheim Echter von Mespelbrunn. The old parchment bill with the Kaiser's grant is still in the family archives .Chapel: The low tower at the north-west corner of the castle contains the chapel. It is a lovely room with painted windows and arches, late Gothic style. It belongs to the older part of the castle. The knight Hamann Echter had it built and established a farm for a priest to live on. Until recently a priest lived there and celebrated Holy Mass here every day. The fifteenth century pictures in the stained glass windows are very precious. The alter was established in about sixteen hundred by another member of the family. It is made of alabaster by the Wuerzburg master Michael Kern. The wall paintings were made in 1729.

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