Schloss Stolzenfels
Stolzenfels Castle (German: Schloss Stolzenfels) is a castle in the Middle Rhine Valley in Koblenz. It stands on the left side of the Rhine opposite the mouth of the Lahn above the Stolzenfels district named after the castle. The complex was finally developed in the 19th century by the Prussian Crown Prince Frederik Willem and dates back to a Keur-Trier toll castle from the 13th century, which was destroyed in 1689. The neo-Gothic castle is the most beautiful building of the Rhine Romanticism, an art and culture movement within Romanticism in which the river landscape of the Rhine and the legends and myths surrounding the history of the GermanRhine Valley emerged, were central and exerted a major influence on German Romanticism. The complex also includes the so-called Klausenburg in the valley of the Gründgesbach, which housed the stables, staff houses and guest houses, and a 9-hectare landscape park. About 50,000 tourists visit the castle every year.
Schloss Stolzenfels
Stolzenfels Castle (German: Schloss Stolzenfels) is a castle in the Middle Rhine Valley in Koblenz. It stands on the left side of the Rhine opposite the mouth of the Lahn above the Stolzenfels district named after the castle. The complex was finally developed in the 19th century by the Prussian Crown Prince Frederik Willem and dates back to a Keur-Trier toll castle from the 13th century, which was destroyed in 1689. The neo-Gothic castle is the most beautiful building of the Rhine Romanticism, an art and culture movement within Romanticism in which the river landscape of the Rhine and the legends and myths surrounding the history of the GermanRhine Valley emerged, were central and exerted a major influence on German Romanticism. The complex also includes the so-called Klausenburg in the valley of the Gründgesbach, which housed the stables, staff houses and guest houses, and a 9-hectare landscape park. About 50,000 tourists visit the castle every year.