Castle of Vianden

  • cha teau de vianden pulsa pictures lft
  • Vianden castle 3
  • info center vianden castle 01 jengel klasen
  • info center vianden castle 02 jengel klasen
  • info center vianden castle 03 jengel klasen
  • cha teau vianden jonathan godin lft
  • Vianden castle 5
  • Castle model
  • Castle inside
  • Castle festival
  • Medieval festival
  • Medieval festival 4
  • Medieval festival 5
  • Medieval festival 6
  • cha teau de vianden pulsa pictures lft
  • Vianden castle 3
  • info center vianden castle 01 jengel klasen
  • info center vianden castle 02 jengel klasen
  • info center vianden castle 03 jengel klasen
  • cha teau vianden jonathan godin lft
  • Vianden castle 5
  • Castle model
  • Castle inside
  • Castle festival
  • Medieval festival
  • Medieval festival 4
  • Medieval festival 5
  • Medieval festival 6

Vianden Castle was built between the 11th and 14th Century on the foundations of a Roman castle and a Carolingian refuge. This Castle-Palace bears the Hohenstaufen characteristics and is one of the largest and finest feudal residences of the Roman and Gothic eras in Europe.

Until the early 15th Century it was home to the powerful Counts of Vianden who could boast of their close connections to the German Imperial Court. The greatest of them, Count Henry I (1220 -1250) was even married to a member of the Capetian family, which ruled France at the time. In 1417, the castle and its lands were inherited by the younger line of the German House of Nassau, which -in 1530- also acquired the French principality of Orange. The castle's most remarkable rooms; the chapel as well as the small and the grand palaces were built in the late 12th and the first half of the 13th Century.

The Jülich building west of the great palace dates back to the early 14th Century, the so-called Nassau quarter was only built in the early 17th Century. In 1820 during the reign of King William I of the Netherlands, Prince of Orange-Nassau, Count of Vianden, the castle was sold to a Vianden spice merchant who proceeded to sell it piecemeal, starting with the furniture and ending up with the roof slates. As a result the castle was exposed to the elements and fell into ruins.

In 1890 the castle became the property of Grand Duke Adolphe of the elder line of Nassau and remained in the hands of the Grand Ducal family until 1977 when it was transferred into state ownership. It has been painstakingly restored to its former glory and today ranks among the most significant historical monuments of Europe.


 

Group informations

Price: Ticket prices for groups from 15 persons (4,5 €) - Guided Tours upon demand, max. 40 persons (55 €) + 4,5 € each person

Localisation

Address

Montée du Château

L-9408 Vianden
Tel.: +352 84 92 91
Fax: +352 84 92 84
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Conveniences

Point of sale Luxembourg Card

Labels

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In the surrounding area