Château de la famille d'Eplingen explained

Château de la famille d'Eplingen
Image Alt:A grey building, in two sections, one two storeys tall with tall, angled, brown tiled roof, the other two intersecting square towers, three storeys tall, each with tall square-pyramidal slate roofs.
Map Type:France
Map Alt:Line map of France, with a spot right where the eastern border meets both Germany and Switzerland (indistinguishable on this scale from the location of Basel)
Status:In public ownership
Building Type:Château
Architectural Style:French Renaissance
Classification:Historical monument
Location:Hagenthal-le-Bas, Haut-Rhin, Alsace
Address:2 rue de Bettlach
Location Town:-->
Location Country:France
Coordinates:47.524°N 7.4767°W

Château de la famille d'Eplingen is a château in the commune of Hagenthal-le-Bas, in the department of Haut-Rhin, Alsace, France. Built in either the 16th or 17th century, the château became a national property in 1799 and remained so until it moved into private hands in the 1840s. The remodeling performed by its new owners were mostly to the external structure of the building. It has been owned by the town since 2003 and listed as a historical monument since 2010.[1]

References

47.524°N 7.4767°W

Notes and References

  1. Ancien château de la famille d'Eplingen