Castle Ruins

in #art6 years ago (edited)


I've explored a few ruined castles now and Emmerberg would have to be one of the best. The extensive fortifications are not only disappearing because their own collapse, but the surrounding forest has also taken refuge in its walls. But it was quite different in centuries gone by.


Built in the 12th century, Emmerberg was of a chain of castles that dominated the valley and trade routes that wound their way deep into the alps. Its purpose was to defend all of this against the Hungarians. The ruling family ended without an heir in the mid 1400's and thus the castle started to pass to many different hands.


The castle was occupied right up until 1760, but then the Holy Roman Emporer hit upon a grand money making scheme, a roof tax. Many of the aristocracy chose rather to remove the roofs and not pay the tax on many of their buildings. This left castles such as Emmerberg open to the mercy of the weather, causing it to deteriorate and then ultimately become cannibalised for other building projects. 


Poking around what's left, I was naturally trying to visualise what it used to be like. Many of the floors have now collapsed and just the crumbling shell of the buildings remain teetering on eventual collapse.


Peter @gric and I hiked up a forgotten pathway to the top of the hill with our cameras, determined to document this archetypal castle ruin. It was everything you would image one to be, minus treasure and magical creatures. Although, who knows what you might find if you returned late on moonlit night. We did find evidence that some one was making nocturnal visits.


Clambering around the ruins, we did have to be mindful of where we were stepping. While it was tempting to climb up onto some parts of the castle, abundant evidence of structural collapse made us err on the side of caution and choose more stable vantage points to take it all in.


Two buildings were identifiable, that being the chapel and the Great Hall. As for the other spaces, I'm left guessing what their function might have been. Oh, except for the "throne room", aka the toilet. Medieval plumbing consisted of a room high on the walls that projected slightly out with a bench and hole to position your posterior over. I image it was quite chilly in Winter and Summer would have been on the nose.

This was our second visit to the castle and I'm sure we'll return again in the future to see how its appearance and mood changes with the seasons. There is so much character to this place that your imagination easily runs wild.

Leave a comment below, upvote and resteem if you like it.

And if it takes your fancy, subscribe to my newsletter.


Sort:  

Old castles and ruins have such a special vibe!

There's always an air of mystery as we wonder what it used to be like, who was there before us, what happened, there's so much fertile soil for the imagination.

I love this kind of stuff. Every time we visit the UK to visit in-laws we try to find some ruins to explore. Being from America we obviously don't have this kind of stuff. Living history!

Hi @nuthman! Likewise, we have no such thing in Australia either.

Mate, you should pin this to steemit worldmap so we can curate it for you in tomorrow's Travel Digest (which I am one of the curators of).

If you're interested, go to Steemitworldmap
Click the code slider at the bottom
Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
Copy and paste the generated code in your post
Wait for the auto response and you're done.

Hi @choogirl! That's a well built site.
I added the code to one of my other posts as a tester. Where do I see the auto response?

I can't see where in your post you added the code. You need to copy it into your post to make it stick to the map. If you did this in markdown (so it's invisible) let me know and I'll get a dev to check what's going on.

It worked. I guess everything just took some time and a browser refresh.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.15
TRX 0.16
JST 0.028
BTC 67684.16
ETH 2412.87
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.33