CH CH JULY 2014 Rotteln Castle
The castle has probably
existed since the beginning of the 11th century. In the year 1102 is the first
documented mention of a lord of Rötteln,
one Dietrich von Rötteln,
the bailiff of St.
Albans near Basel.
This year is also considered the date of the founding of the city of Lörrach.
In 1204 Dietrich III of Rötteln
died, having amassed a large holding in the Wiese
valley. His sons held high offices; Walter I was the Kapitular (a priest who is
authorized to say the mass in a cathedral
and perform other duties of a bishop) of Konstanz and Basel, Luithold I was the
bishop of Basel, Konrad I was the founder
of the city of Schopfheim, which was important to the later formation of
the Markgräflerland. The first documented mention of the castle itself is
from the year 1259.
Luithold II von Rötteln,
the last male of his line, gave the lordship of Rötteln to
the Margrave Rudolf I of Hachberg-Sausenberg and
his heiress Agnes von Rötteln in the
year 1311. As a result, the Margrave of
Hachberg-Sausenberg, based in Emmendingen
at Hochburg
Castle, also became lord of the former domain of Rötteln. The Margrave then
moved from Sausenburg to Rötteln Castle to more easily administer his new
domain and appointed a bailiff
to oversee Sausenburg
Luithold II von
Rötteln died on May 19, 1316, and the passing of Rötteln to Hachberg-Sausenburg
was an important step in the eventual formation of the Markgräflerland. In 1332 the castle was besieged by the
people of Basel because the Margrave Rudolf II
stabbed the mayor of Basel during an argument. The conflict was
resolved at the last moment through an agreement to settle the argument. Arrowheads,
crossbow
bolts, and other finds near the castle attest to this siege.
The Basel earthquake of 1356 destroyed large
portions of the city, and the castle suffered severe damage.
In 1444 the
domain of Badenweiler passed from the last Count Johann von
Freiburg to the son of Margrave Wilhelm, Rudolf IV von Hachberg-Sausenberg.
The combination of the three dominions, Rötteln, Sausenburg, and Badenweiler
formed the foundation of the Markgräflerland.
In 1503 the
castle came into the possession of the Margrave of Baden. In 1525
revolting farmers briefly took possession of the castle.
From 1618 to
1648 during the Thirty Years War the castle was occupied by both Swedish
and Imperial forces.
During the Franco-Dutch
War, on June 29, 1678, the castles of Rötteln, Sausenburg,
and Badenweiler
were destroyed by the army of the French Marshall François de Créquy. Due to the extreme poverty
after the war, the castle ruins were thereafter used as a source of building
stone (quarry).
The Black Forest
Society of Baden(Schwarzwaldverein) began to survey the ruins in
1884 in order to preserve it. Since 1926 this has been the concern of the Röttelnbund
e.V. club based in Lörrach-Haagen. Today the ruins have been restored to
approximately their condition after their destruction in 1678
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