Schloss Lichtenstein, Germany



Lichtenstein Castle is a palace arranged on a precipice spotted close Honau on the Swabian Alb, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. 

Truly, there has been a château on the site subsequent to around 1200. It was twice decimated, once in the Reichskrieg's War of 1311 and again by the city-state of Reutlingen in 1381. The palace was not remade and in this manner tumbled to demolish. 

In 1802, the area came under the control of King Frederick I of Württemberg, who assembled a chasing cabin there. By 1837, the area had gone to his nephew Duke Wilhelm of Urach, Count of Württemberg, who, motivated by Wilhelm Hauff's novel Lichtenstein, included the current château in 1840–42. The sentimental Neo-Gothic outline of the mansion was made by the designer Carl Alexander Heideloff. 

Today, the château is still claimed by the Dukes of Urach, yet is interested in guests. The palace contains an extensive gathering of memorable weapons and reinforcement. 

A Cape Town specialist, Reynier Fritz, who was well known in promoting loops, first saw the nineteenth century Schloss Lichtenstein in the place where there is his precursors, and chose to one day duplicate it in Hout Bay. He could begin assembling in 1986 and after 12 years it was finished. He in the end transformed it into a visitor house before he passed on there. At some point after his passing, his dowager, Christine, sold it to an abroad buyer.
Schloss Lichtenstein, Germany Schloss Lichtenstein, Germany Reviewed by Ali Hamza on 00:49 Rating: 5

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