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Present castle was first mentioned in 1220. The castle was burned down in 1943. Some parts of the castle were renovated later. Frescoes in the old chapel are still very beautiful.

 

(Castle, Detail of the castle door)

 

Slovenija - my country

View On Black

 

A view of the Island not normally taken. Roughly taken in the same place as the previous shot. By the time I had taken this the clouds rolled in and the light was gone very dull. With only levels and a slight de-saturation this is it in all its glory.

The castle at Castle Park was built in the 1880s. For a long time it served as a hotel. Today it is a community center for the private community.

Castle Dyck (German: Schloss Dyck) is a moated castle in the Rhineland region of Germany. It is located in the municipality of Jüchen in Rhein-Kreis Neuss, North Rhine-Westphalia, between Grevenbroich and Mönchengladbach.

The history of the castle began in 1094 when the knight Hermannus de Disco was mentioned in a record of the Archbishop of Cologne as the lord of a simple fortification. Over time the site was converted into a fortified moated castle. In 1383 the castle was besieged by the cities of Aachen and Cologne, as well as by the archbishop Friedrich III von Saarwerden and Duke William I of Guelders and Jülich. They accused Lord Gerard van Dyck of being a robber knight. When Gerard van Dyck died without male offspring, the castle was inherited by Johann V von Reifferscheidt, the ancestor of the counts and princes of Salm-Reifferscheid. This family owned the castle for more than 900 years until it became the Centre for Garden Art and Landscape Design in 1999. The last heiress of the family, Countess Marie Christine Wolff Metternich, turned it over to a foundation to secure the future of the castle.

 

The castle is the center of Salm-Reifferscheid-Dyck, a former independent territory located between the Electorate of Cologne, Guelders and Jülich. The small territory was called "Dycker Ländchen" and is still recognizable for its unique cultural landscape.

 

Fujifilm X-S10

Fujinon XF23mm F2 R WR

This photo was taken in the North of Spain (Galicia) in a village called Torés . Can you see the hidden castle?

Königswinter, Germany, North Rhine-Westphalia.

The ruined castle Burg Drachenfels, on the summit of a hill, was built between 1138 and 1167 by Archbishop Arnold I of Cologne. The castle was slighted in 1634 during the Thirty Years' War by the Protestant Swedes and never rebuilt.

Castle De Haar is one of the most famous and visited castles in all of Holland and was originally founded in the late 1300’s by the Van de Haar family, whose standing in society allowed them the comfort of building a fortified abode.

By 1449, the castle became the property of the Van Zuylen family thru marriage. In 1482, the castle was destroyed due to differences of opinion (quarrels) between the city of Utrecht and its bishop

  

By the 17th century, the Van Zuylen family line had become extinct and the castle was inherited by the Van Stembors, who originated from the south of Holland - present day Belgium. French soldiers attacked and damaged the castle during the years 1672 and 73.

  

In 1801, Castle De Haar passed to JJ.van Zuylen van Nijevelt, a distant cousin of the Zuylen family. JJ had inherited a castle that was in a poor state of repair due to 200 years of neglect. Upon his death, these magnificent ruins passed to his son Baron Etienne van Zuylen van Nijevelt in 1890.

  

The rebuilding of the castle was started in 1892 under the guidance of one of Holland’s most famous architects Dr PHJ Cuypers. It is his influence on Castle De Haar that we see today. PHJ Cuypers rebuilt the castle as close as possible to the original outlines and were there was not sufficient material to work with he used his own ideas of what a medieval castle should look like. The interior was rebuilt to a luxurious standard with the inclusion of electricity. A new bailey with an entrance gate was built on its original foundations.

  

Today the castle is surrounded by parkland but this was not always the case. From the medieval period to the end of the 19th century, the village of Haarzuilens had been surrounded the castle. Haarzuilens was completely demolished and relocated some one and a half kilometres away to the west. The village chapel however was saved from this wilful destruction and incorporated into the new park.

 

Castle De Haar is now a museum and opens to the public except during the month of September when the Van Zuylen van Nijevelt family turn it back into a home for their month long stay.

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The adres for the car navigator, Kasteel de Haar,

Kasteellaan 1,3455 RR Haarzuilens.

I shot this during the late evening as the sun was going down. The side lighting on the building and the warm tones enhance the overall quality of the image. Process using HDR technique from 3 different exposures.

Castle Stalker long exposed with incoming tide.

 

Appin, Scottish Highlands, United Kingdom.

 

_61B5481

Castle Assumburg Heemskerk

Castle Stalker

Scotland

Raby Castle is a medieval castle located near Staindrop in County Durham, England, among 200 acres of deer park. It was built by John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby, between approximately 1367 and 1390. Cecily Neville, the mother of the Kings Edward IV and Richard III, was born here. It is the seat of the Vane family & currently home to the 12th Baron Barnard.

Castle Schaloen (also written as Chaloen) is situated in Oud-Valkenburg in South Limburg, The Netherlands.

 

The castle is situated in the beemde of the Trench in Oud-Valkenburg. The moat around the house is supplied with water from the mill, a Geultak, who in the 16th century, the true course of the Trench formed. Behind a gatehouse leads to a square, where the castle and a castle are located. At the mill rotates, from marl stone built watermill from 1699, the Schaloen Mill. This ban mill, is now only used as a demonstration model. In the castle, the local association of the IVN a Limburg botanical garden.

A few hundred meters, the John the Baptist Church, the Three Statuettes and other old castle, Genhoes.

 

The castle is a national monument.

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media

without my explicit permission.

 

Thank you all for your visits and comments!

Castle Berlepsch in northern Hesse, Germany. Shortly after sunset.

Ardvreck Castle on Loch Assynt, Sutherland.

 

Copyright www.neilbarr.co.uk. Please don't repost, blog or pin without asking first. Thanks

Powis Castle, a medieval fortress built in the 13th century by the Welsh ruler of Powys, Gruffudd ap Gwenwynwyn, sits high on a rock above its world-famous garden, near the town of Welshpool.

Once home to the kings of ancient Northumbria, Bamburgh Castle is one of Northumberland's most iconic buildings. The castle sits on a basalt outcrop overlooking the Farne Islands and Lindisfarne.

Herstmonceux Castle East Sussex

Edinburgh Castle from Princes Street Gardens.

 

Copyright www.neilbarr.co.uk. Please don't repost, blog or pin without asking first. Thanks

Evening shot tonight of Castle Sant Angelo

The Castle Hill of the ruin of Drachenfels Castle at Sunset seen from a field of clover

Vianden Castle (French: Château de Vianden, German: Burg Vianden Luxembourgish: Buerg Veianen), located in Vianden in the north of Luxembourg, is one of the largest fortified castles west of the Rhine. With origins dating from the 10th century, the castle was built in the Romanesque style from the 11th to 14th centuries. Gothic transformations and trimmings were added at the end of this period. A Renaissance mansion was added in the 17th century but thereafter the castle was allowed to fall into ruins. It has, however, recently been fully restored and is open to visitors.:

Urquhart Castle situated on the banks of Loch Ness. The castle was one of Scotlands largest.

 

Thank you for all your comments and visits

© Ralph Stewart 2015

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

Castle Geyser Temperature 200°F . The large sinter cone is nearly 12 feet high with a diameter of 20 feet at the top. Castle was an irregular geyser, with periods of dormancy, before the 1959 earthquake. Since the earthquake, it has been a regular, easily predictable geyser. The water phase of an eruption lasts about 15 minutes and a steam phase, similar to a steam locomotive, lasting an additional 45 minutes. Subterranean connections exist between Castle and Crested Pool.

Medieval castle in Fénis - Valle d'Aosta - Italy

Werfen Castle is about an hour out of Salzburg. In the mountains above Werfen are the indoor ice caves...quite a sight and well worth a visit.

Rosenborg Castle is a renaissance castle located in Copenhagen, Denmark. The castle was originally built as a country summerhouse in 1606 and is an example of Christian IV's many architectural projects.

Another shot from Castle Stalker, this time from a different angle. This is 6 portrait shots stitched together, I tried to keep the castle centre frame with the rock to the left and the lit up mountains to the right.

 

Copyright ©2014 Sarah Louise Pickering

 

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Portchester Castle is a medieval castle built within a former Roman fort at Portchester to the east of Fareham in the English county of Hampshire. It is located at the northern end of Portsmouth Harbour.

Castle Altenhausen with a light autumnal mood.

Waiting for m+b to arrive at Berkhamsted Station I took a quick trip round the dried up moat of Berkhamsted Castle...

 

Lomo LC-Wide + Kodak Ektar 100

Castle Bridge connecting castle park and Finzels Reach lit up as part of the Bristol festival of light which saw a number of prominent Bristol landmarks illuminated

 

Taken with a Nikon D7000

Edinburgh Castle

Part of Whittington Castle and moat. Shropshire England. Hasselblad X1D.

Copyright © Silent Eagle Photography

Thanks so much all My Flickr Friends The Comments & Faves..... ;-)

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamburgh_Castle

 

Flickriver

Castle Howard is a stately home in North Yorkshire, England, 15 miles (24 km) north of York. It is a private residence, the home of the Carlisle branch of the Howard family for more than 300 years.

 

Castle Howard is not a true castle, but this term is also used for English country houses erected on the site of a former military castle.

 

Building of Castle Howard began in 1699 and took over 100 years to complete to a design by Sir John Vanbrugh for the 3rd Earl of Carlisle.

The house is Grade I listed

 

It is familiar to television and film audiences as the fictional "Brideshead", both in Granada Television's 1981 adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited and a two-hour 2008 remake for cinema.

Part of my 'Duffus Castle through the seasons' project.

 

The castle is situated on the Laich of Moray, a fertile plain that was once the swampy foreshore of Spynie Loch. This was originally a more defensive position than it appears today, long after the loch was drained.

 

The motte is a huge man-made mound, with steep sides and a wide ditch separating it from the bailey. The whole site is enclosed by a water-filled ditch, which is more a mark of its boundary than it is a serious defensive measure.

Duffus Castle was built by a Flemish man named Freskin, who came to Scotland in the first half of the 1100s. After an uprising by the ‘men of Moray’ against David I in 1130, the king sent Freskin north as a representative of royal authority.

 

He was given the estate of Duffus, and here he built an earthwork-and-timber castle. Freskin’s son William adopted the title of ‘de Moravia’ – of Moray. By 1200, the family had become the most influential noble family in northern Scotland, giving rise to the earls of Sutherland and Clan Murray.

In about 1270, the castle passed to Sir Reginald Cheyne the Elder, Lord of Inverugie. He probably built the square stone keep on top of the motte, and the curtain wall encircling the bailey. In 1305, the invading King Edward I of England gave him a grant of 200 oaks from the royal forests of Darnaway and Longmorn, which were probably used for the castle’s floors and roofs.

 

By 1350, the castle had passed to a younger son of the Earl of Sutherland through marriage. It may have been then that the keep was abandoned, possibly because it was beginning to slip down the mound, and a new residence established at the north of the bailey.

 

Viscount Dundee, leader of the first Jacobite Rising, dined in the castle as a guest of James, Lord Duffus in 1689, prior to his victory against King William II’s government forces at Killiecrankie. Soon after, Lord Duffus moved to the nearby Duffus House. The castle quickly fell into decay.

The splendour falls on castle walls

And snowy summits old in story:

The long light shakes across the lakes,

And the wild cataract leaps in glory.

Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,

Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.

O hark, O hear! how thin and clear,

And thinner, clearer, farther going!

O sweet and far from cliff and scar

The horns of Elfland faintly blowing!

Blow, let us hear the purple glens replying:

Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.

 

O love, they die in yon rich sky,

They faint on hill or field or river:

Our echoes roll from soul to soul,

And grow for ever and for ever.

Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,

And answer, echoes, answer, dying, dying, dying.

 

Alfred Lord Tennyson, "Princess: A Medley: The splendour falls on castle walls".

The Bobolice Castle – a royal castle in the Polish Jura (The Kraków-Częstochowa Upland), in the village of Bobolice. The castle in Bobolice was built by King Casimir III the Great in the middle of the 14th century, probably in place of an earlier wooden structure. The castle was a part of the defence system of royal strongholds protecting the western border of Poland on the side of Silesia.The beginning of the decline of the castle dates back to 1587, when it was heavily devastated during the invasion of Maximilian III, Archduke of Austria, a rival of Sigismund III Vasa to the Polish throne. The castle was reconstructed by the then owners, the Krezowie family, but in 1657, during the Deluge, it was plundered and totally ruined by Swedish troops. Now the castle belongs to the Lasecki family, who decided to rebuild it in 1999. The shape of the castle was reconstructed on the basis of preserved ruins with using only traditional materials (mainly limestone). The official opening of the castle after twelve years of work took place on 3 September 2011.

  

Zamek Bobolice – zamek królewski na Jurze Krakowsko-Częstochowskiej, w systemie tzw. Orlich Gniazd, we wsi Bobolice. Królewski zamek Bobolice został zbudowany przez króla Polski Kazimierza Wielkiego najprawdopodobniej ok. 1350-1352 roku. Należał do systemu obronnego zachodniej granicy państwowej Królestwa Polskiego. Zamek miał bronić od najazdów ze strony Śląska, będącego terytorium granicznym Królestwa Czech. Podczas najazdu Maksymiliana III Habsburga na ziemie polskie w 1587r. zamek został zdobyty przez jego wojska. Uległ on wówczas poważniejszym uszkodzeniom, jednak po wojnach szwedzkich w XVII i XVIII w. zamek zaczął popadać w ruinę. Pod koniec XX w., rodzina Laseckich – obecnych właścicieli zamku – podjęła wyzwanie uratowania tego zabytku przed całkowitą zagładą. Kształt zamku odtworzono na podstawie zachowanych ruin, posiłkując się wiedzą historyków i archeologów. W pracach wykorzystywano wyłącznie tradycyjne materiały (głównie kamień wapienny), opracowano też specjalną zaprawę murarską. Oficjalne otwarcie zamku po dwunastu latach prac nastąpiło 3 września 2011r.

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