Dohna Castle

Dohna Castle
Burg Dohna
Dohna

Remains of the walls of Dohna Castle
Dohna Castle
Coordinates 50°57′05″N 13°51′14″E / 50.951514°N 13.853796°E / 50.951514; 13.853796Coordinates: 50°57′05″N 13°51′14″E / 50.951514°N 13.853796°E / 50.951514; 13.853796
Type hill castle, spur castle
Code DE-SN
Height 155 m above sea level (NN)
Site information
Condition wall remnant
Site history
Built around 950
Garrison information
Occupants burgraves, nobility
The old Dohna Castle.[1]
Dohna in 1690. Right: the castle ruins
The tower of Dohna Castle on the Fleischerbrunnen well, completed in 1912, in the market square

Dohna Castle (German: Burg Dohna, Czech: Donin) on the road from German Saxony to Bohemia was the seat of the burgraves of Dohna. Of the old, once imposing double castle only a few remnants of the walls remain. The ruins of the old castle are located on the hill of Schlossberg near the subsequent suburb of the town of the same name, Dohna, in the district of Sächsische Schweiz-Osterzgebirge in Saxony.

History

Dohna Castle was probably founded around A.D. 950 by Emperor Otto I (936–973) on the Schlossberg hill on the site of a Sorbian fortification. This region around the Schlossberg had been a Sorbian settlement from prehistoric times. The name of the settlement was Donin, from which the castle received its name. The castle was the centre of the imperially immediate lordship of the burgraves of Dohna. They had the task of guarding the trade route to Bohemia, keeping the conquered Sorbs in check and protecting emissaries of the church.

Early history

Dohna Castle was first mentioned in the records in 1040 in connexion with the conflicts between King Henry III (1039–1056) and Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia. The Margrave of Meißen, Eckard II (1038–1046), probably held Dohna Castle as an imperial fief. Later, the castle fell under Bohemian lordship.

In 1076, the Duke, and later King, of Bohemia, Vratislaus II (1061–1092), was enfeoffed by Henry IV (1056–1106) with the Gau of Nisani. He ceded the Gau of Nisani with Dohna Castle to his son-in-law, Wiprecht of Groitzsch, who later became the Margrave of Meißen (1123–1124), as a dowry for his daughter. In 1112 Wiprecht of Groitzsch relinquished Nisani and Dohna Castle to Henry V (1106–1125). On recovering possession of the castle by Groitzsch in 1117, Bohemian supremacy was re-established. At the beginning of the 12th century Dohna Castle was destroyed, but then rebuilt by the Duke of Bohemia, Vladislaus I (1109–1125) around 1121.

The following description of the dungeon is found in August Schumann's State Lexicon of Saxony (Staatslexikon von Sachsen):...and was, as with every strong castle at that time, according to custom of the day, sometimes used as a state prison. At the very least, it is known that the Bohemian king, Sobeslaus [Soběslav], marched several Bohemian lords to the dungeon at Dohna during in 1126....[2]

Of the burgraves installed as imperial officials on a certain Erkembert (from the family of Tegkwitz?) is named in 1113, referred to in the records Erkembertus prefektus de castro Donin.[3] It is also known that the family of the Erkenbertingers (recorded as burgraves in 1113) came from Franconia, established themselves in the vicinity of Naumburg and that their relatively junior Starkenberg line played a role in the Ore Mountains, for example in land development (Landausbau).[4]

Seat of the Donins

The progenitor of the Donins, who ruled from Dohna Castle for some 250 years, was Burgrave Henry I, who is clearly mentioned for the first time in 1143 as Heinricus de Rodewa (Rötha)[5] and 1144, albeit without giving the location, for the first time as documented as burgrave.[6][7] The actual enfeoffment is not recorded, but must have taken place no later than 1156, when Henry is first expressly referred to as the Burgrave of Dohna.[8]

The powerful castle of Dohna perched on a rocky spur, 155 m above sea level (NN) near the River Müglitz, was the centre point of the Burgraviate of Dohna. It was here that the Dohnaer Schöppenstuhl was held, a magistrate's court (Schöffengericht) recorded since 1390 that operated until 1572, predominantly in the field of feudal and inheritance matters and gave legal direction over an area that extended far beyond the borders of Saxony.

One can assume that during the rule of the Dohna hereditary burgraves, the castle was expanded in such a way that it finally appeared as imposing double castle, consisting of an inner and outer castle (Hinterburg and Vorderburg) and a large ward (Vorhof). During the excavations of 1904/06, the exposure of the transverse wall separating the two castles, proved this theory.

The oval-shaped castle tower on the Fleischerbrunnen well in Dohna's market square, created in 1912 by the Dresden sculptor, Alexander Höfer, portrays the tower in the oldest town coat of arms of 1525.

Loss and ruin of the imperial castle

In the wake of the Dohna Feud (1385–1402), which began between Burgrave Jeschke of Dohna and the Saxon noble, Hans of Körbitz (Korbs), the burgraves lost their main seat of power and all the estates belonging to it to the House of Wettin. The present Saxon-Bohemian state border was established in 1406, when the neighbouring Bohemian Pirna Castle with its associated villages and the Bohemian fortress of Königstein, in which Burgrave Jesche was able to seek refuge, were also won for the Wettins.[9]

From autumn 1401 onwards the castle was besieged and, after lengthy resistance, was taken by storm on 19 June 1402 in the presence of Margrave William I the One-Eyed (1349/79–1407). After its capture the castle was not completely slighted. The residential buildings were left standing and served as residences for the margravial officials who managed the caretaking of Dohna. After the Vögte had moved their seat somewhere around 1457 to Pirna, the castle gradually fell into decay. In addition, the townsfolk of Dohna in subsequent times, may have helped themselves to large amounts of stone from the castle for building material whenever it was needed. In a picture from 1690 by A. Nienborg and in a sketch by Goebel in 1793 extensive remains of the walls and tower can still be seen.

M. Christian Bartsch, pastor in Dohna, wrote in 1735: ...on this castle hill you can still find the ruins of old walls, towers and vaults which have withstood the rain and weather for 330 years uncared for; but whose limestone and rock are so strong that you can only pull them down with difficulty, but which do not collapse by themselves. The Swedes when they stood here in 1709, tried to break into a vault in this castle hill, perhaps they thought they would find treasure, but had to give up soon thereafter due to the strength of the walls.....[10]

Today only a small remnant of the wall of the old castle may still be seen. Apart from that there is nothing else left of Dohna Castle.

Construction of castle hill after the decay of the castle ruins

In 1803 Burgrave Henry Louis of Dohna bought the castle hill (Schlossberg) in order to rebuild the castle in the spirit of the growing Romanesque movement. The castle hill was therefore cleared of rubble and the work began on the construction of a round tower. But the Napoleonic Wars prevented his romantic plans from being fulfilled. Eventually the round tower was completed in its present shape in 1830.

The "Privileged Shooting Association of Dohna" (Privilegierte Schützengesellschaft zu Dohna) bought the Schlossberg in 1826 for 700 thalers and levelled the front part of the hill. From the rock material of the castle walls they built the shooting house (Schießhaus) in 1828, the shooting wall and the supporting wall of the access track.

The buildings on the Schlossberg today consist mainly of the former shooting house, now a castle inn (Burgschänke) used as a Handelsorganisation restaurant and dancing hall, and the round tower built in the style of the old castle and last used as a museum area, in which local minerals from the Müglitz valley e. g. amethysts and agates could be admired.

In the castle inn ("Burg Dohna" restaurant) there has been a local history museum on the first floor since 1958, although it was founded in 1906. Today the local history museum is in the old chemist's in the market square. Here there are intera alia interesting exhibits of castle history e.g. discoveries from the Middle Ages, graphic works and documents.

Present use

The buildings of the Schlossberg, the round tower of 1830 and the old castle inn, are currently out of use.

The castle site is protected today as an heritage area, as is the Sorbian hill fort at the back of the spur that was called Robisch (Robsch, Robscher). This fort is still visible on a spur over the railway station yard. This site is mentioned because, even before the settlement of the castle hill (Schlossberg), a Sorbian fortification had stood on the Robisch.

See also

Literature

References

  1. Heckel C. (1736), Historischen Beschreibung der weltberühmten Vestung Königstein, Dresden, 1736.
  2. Vgl. Dohna. In: August Schumann: Vollständiges Staats-, Post- und Zeitungslexikon von Sachsen. Volume 1, Zwickau 1814, p. 755.
  3. Vgl. Digital Historic Index of Places in Saxony - Dohna (1113)
  4. Team of authors with Dr. sc. Werner Coblenz: Historischer Führer Bezirke Dresden, Cottbus, page 118: Dohna (and Dohna Castle). Urania-Verlag Leipzig-Jena-Berlin, Leipzig, 1982
  5. Heinricus de Rodewa in a deed by King Conrad III for Chemnitz Abbey dated February 1143; Henry is named as a witness. See the edition of the document at: The charters of Conrad III and his son Henry, arranged by Friedrich Hausmann (= MGH DD, Vol. 9), Vienna/Cologne/Graz 1969, No. 86, p. 152-154, here p. 154 line 17. For the first record in 1143 see: Karlheinz Blaschke, Dohna, in: Lexikon des Mittelalters, Vol.3, Munich et al. 1983, Sp. 1166.
  6. Heinricus praefectus (without naming the place!) in a deed of King Conrad III dated November 1144, that mediates a dispute between the Bishop and Margrave of Meißen; Henry is named as a witness. The name index of the MGH-Editionsbandes identifies him as the Henry already named in 1143. See: The Charters of Conrad III and his son, Henry, arranged by Friedrich Hausmann (= MGH DD, Bd. 9), Vienna/Cologne/Graz 1969, No. 119, p. 212-214, here p. 214 line 4.
  7. Art. Dohna, in: Digital Historical Index of Places in Saxony, Naming patterns (Ortnamenformen), entry for 1144.
  8. Heinricus castellanus de Donin in a charter of Margrave Conrad I of Meißen dated 30 November 1156; Henry is named as a witness. See: Codex diplomaticus Saxoniae regiae, I A 2: Die Urkunden der Markgrafen von Meißen und Landgrafen von Thüringen 1100-1195, ed. by Otto Posse, Leipzig, 1889, No. 262 p. 176-179, here p. 178 line 37. See also Lothar Graf zu Dohna (1959), "Dohna", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German) 4, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 43–46, p. 43.
  9. Karlheinz Blaschke: Geschichte Sachsens im Mittelalter, Unionverlag Berlin, 1990
  10. Vgl. Christian Bartsch. Historie der alten Burg und Städgens Dohna. Dresden/Leipzig 1735 digitalised version

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