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Festung Ehrenbreitstein
'Festung Ehrenbreitstein' is a
fortress on the same-named mountain on the right side of the
Rhine opposite to the town of
Koblenz in the
Bundesland of
Rhineland-Palatinate in
Germany.
It was built as the backbone of the regional fortification system, 'Festung Koblenz', by
Prussia between
1817 and
1832 and guarded the middle Rhine region, an area that had been invaded by
French troops repeatedly before. The fortress was never attacked.
Early fortifications at the site can be dated back to about
1000 BC. At about
1000 AD Ehrenbert erected a castle. Its initial name "Burg Ehrenbertstein" became:''Burg Ehrenbreitstein''. The Archbishops of
Trier expanded it with a supporting castle ''Burg Helferstein'' and guarded the
Holy Tunic in it from 1657 to 1794. Successive Archbishops used the castle's strategic importance to barter between contending powers; thus in 1672 at the outset of war between France and Germany the Archbishop refused requests both from the envoys of Louis XIV and from Brandenburg's Ambassador, Christoph Caspar
von Blumenthal, to permit the passage of troops across the Rhine. French revolutionary troops, however conquered Koblenz in 1794. After a one-year siege, starvation forced the defenders of Ehrenbreitstein to hand over the fortress to French troops in 1799. When the French departed in 1801, the castle was destroyed.
After the defeat of
Napoleon and the
Congress of Vienna in
1815, the
Rhineland became a Prussian province, and the fortification of the Koblenz area a military priority. Festung Ehrenbreitstein represented the largest military fortress in Europe save for
Gibraltar and was able to be defended by 1500 soldiers. Unchallenged, it remained in service until
1890.
In 1822 the English translation of the castle's name,
The Broad-Stone of Honour, was used as the title of
Kenelm Henry Digby's exhaustive work on
chivalry.
In 1897, a Monument to
Emperor Wilhelm I was erected right below the Festung, but on the west side of the Rhine, known as the ''Deutsches Eck'' (German Corner). Both fortress and monument were considered as symbols for the "Guard at the Rhine", as in the song
Die Wacht am Rhein.
During
World War I the fortress was used as military headquarters. After World War I,the American General T. Allan, convinced of its historical value as a premier 19th century fortress, prevented its intended destruction. During
World War II, it served as a place of safekeeping for archives and cultural objects but also harbored three
flak guns.
After World War II, it was used first by the French Army before it was handed over to the State of
Rhineland-Palatinate. It now has multiple uses including a
youth hostel, restaurant, museum and
archive.
Quote
''...this pulpit, I see, is a self-containing stronghold --a lofty Ehrenbreitstein...'' (
Herman Melville,
Moby Dick)
Here Ehrenbreitstein, with her shattered wall
Black with the miner's blast, upon her height
Yet shows of what she was, when shell and ball
Rebounding idly on her strength did light;
A tower of victory! from whence the flight
Of baffled foes was watch'd along the plain:
But Peace destroy'd what War could never blight,
And laid those proud roofs bare to Summer's rain--
On which the iron shower for years had pour'd in vain.
(
Lord Byron,
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage Canto III, v.58)
See also
List of forts
External links
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Ehrenbreitstein pictures and information