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-- Heidelberg Castle
Decimal
Lat: 49.409385 / Lon: 8.713853
Degree
The extension and building up of Heidelberg to the level of a Prince Elector’s residence and the
founding of the university, both of which occurred in the second half of the 14th century, gave
the previously insignificant spot growing status as a city. As the city of residence of the German
Prince Elector, Heidelberg also got its famous castle, the construction of which, however, took
more than 200 years (1400 – 1619).
Started as a fortress, the Castle developed its representative character under Frederick V,
Elector Palatine (reigned 1610 – 1623). The greatest structural achievement of this Elector, who
has gone down in history as the “Winter King,” was the laying out of the Hortus Palatinus.
Contemporaries declared this garden to be the eighth wonder of the world. However, its completion was delayed by the Thirty Years’ War.
The phase of high culture in the Castle ended
when the Prince Elector and his wife went
to Bohemia in 1619. After being destroyed several
times – the last time in 1693 – it was initially
allowed to go to ruin. In 1720 Prince Elector
Carl Philipp moved the residence from Heidelberg
to Mannheim, and built one of the biggest
European baroque castles on the model of
Versailles there.
Already made widely popular by the romantic
poetry and art at the beginning of the 19th
century, the Heidelberg Castle ruins found their
savior in a refugee from the French Revolution,
Charles de Graimberg. Graimberg came here in
1810 to make a landscape painting including the
Castle. He stayed another 54 years until the end
of his life, and as a collector built up the basis
of today’s Kurpfälzisches Museum (Palatinate
Museum), and dedicated himself to preserving
the Castle ruins.
With the passage of time, the location above
the Neckar, the rich history of its construction,
the exhibitions and museums incorporated
into it, the outsized “Great Wine Barrel” and not
least the Castle gardens have made the Castle
one of the great European cultural monuments.
The Ottheinrichsbau of the Castle houses the
Deutsche Apothekenmuseum (German Pharmacy
Museum), which contains a unique collection of
pharmacist’s dispensing equipment, containers
and various medicaments.
The most exciting and easiest path to the famous
cultural monument is offered by the Bergbahn
(funicular railway), which starts at the Kornmarkt
(Grain Market). In its capacity as the oldest German
cable railway it attests to the long-standing
popularity of Germany’s biggest castle ruins to
a large number of visitors. Every year nearly a million
people make the pilgrimage to the heights
in order to take in the romantic ambience high
above the Neckar.