Revisiting the Weidelsburg
I've mentioned that we revisited Weidelsburg Castle in my 2016 summer travel post. I wanted to take photos of the place after the restoration work going on in 2008 was finished (1). Here is a bunch of them.
Weidelsburg, the east keep (left) and west palas (right)
I've posted about the
history of the Weidelsburg here and the
architecture here, so this post will be mostly photos, esp. of the parts that had been scaffolded in or were inaccessible in 2008.
The palas seen from the north
I've changed two or three photos in the old posts and added one to make the posts look better, but overall I want to keep the new stuff to its own post.
The east keep
I also got a new camera with a better wide-angle lens, therefore some shots of the castle are better now, like the above one of the east keep, or the outer bailey below.
Outer bailey, remains of the northern curtain wall
The photo below shows a closeup of the northern curtain wall with one of the half towers. One can also see support beams for the battlements. The different surface levels are not original but due to debris accumulating for centuries. The curtain walls had been excavated back in the 1970ies.
Closeup of the northern curtain wall
Besides the restoration work, the Friend's Association (2) in care of the castle has added some features to better explain the Mediaval look of the place. One of those is the portcullis at the entrance to the keep as additonal defense. Even with the castle taken, the keep could have held out, especially since it had its own well.
Entrance to the east keep with portcullis
It was a sunny and warm summer day; nice weather for a little hiking tour, but the sun glared off the freshly sandblased walls and created deep shadows on the other side, which made photographing a bit tricky.
The palas seen from the east
The most outstanding change to my first visit was the west
palas - the great hall - which has been sandblasted and stabilised in 2008. Only the outer walls still exist, but those give a good impression of the size of the building.
Interior of the palas: staircase in the south corner
The
palas has three storeys. One can still see the supports for the floor beams in the wall. A staircase towerlet led to the upper storeys.
Another interior shot of the palas
The ground floor was separated into a great hall and an anteroom which may have been used for household works or as the lord's office. The hall had several large crossbar windows with embrasures and benches.
Toilet oriel in the palas
One of the toilets remains, now high up in the air (with an outflow into the outer trench), but originally situated in the third storey which may have held the lord's and lady's chambers (3).
Great hall seen from the - now open - cellar
The cellar had two storeys. The upper one may have been used as kitchen. The other cellar was used for storage. The vault has been restored, but the second cellar is not open to the public.
Vault opening into another cellar
To give a better impression of what the castle would have looked like when it was still in use, a piece of the battlements has been reconstructed, albeit it is lacking a roof which would have protected the guards - and the powder of the arquebuses.
Reconstructed part of the battlements
As well as one of the many semi-circular half towers in the curtain walls. Those would have had several storeys separated by wooden floors and allowed shooting at the enemy from various angles.
Interior of a half-tower, partly reconstructed
As mentioned in the post about the architecture of the Weidelsburg, the addition of zwingers put the defenses of the castle on the threshold between Mediaeval and Renaissance features.
Gate tower leading into the east zwinger, seen from the zwinger
The south-eastern zwinger is the best preserved one, though at our first visit, it was overgrown with brambles and could only be glimpsed at through a door. Now it has been cleared out and the shrubs growing there are kept in check.
South-east zwinger
One can walk inside the zwinger and imagine how it may have felt to be stuck between two walls full of an angry castle garrison. But in our time it is a quiet and green spot if you can catch a moment without other tourists.
South-east zwinger, different angle
There is a little restoration snuck in between the keep and the eastern curtain wall. We had a glass of lemonade-beer mix callded
Radler (it tastes better than it sounds) after the climb to the castle.
Southern part of the zwinger
Footnotes
1) It was finished in 2014. The County of Hessia gave about a million €, more money came in by private donations.
2) Link to their website, unfortunately only in German.
2) Today the toilets are in a timber barrack outside the curtain wall near the Naumburg Gate. Quite useful after all that cold lemonade-beer mix. :-)