Fischberg | |
Native Name: | Höhn |
Built: | c. 1100 |
Type: | hill castle, summit location |
Condition: | ditches and wall remains |
Materials: | vaulting |
Location: | Klings und Diedorf (Dermbach) |
Occupants: | counts |
Coordinates: | 50.6556°N 10.1189°W |
Map Type: | Germany |
Code: | DE-TH |
Fischberg Castle (Burgruine Fischberg) was a high medieval fortification in the Felda valley that was sited on an exposed hill above the villages of Klings, Fischbach and Diedorf. Its ruins currently stand in the county of Wartburgkreis (Thuringia) - in the Anterior Rhön, part of a mountain region in central Germany.
The ruins of the hilltop castle are located at a height of on the summit of the Höhn, about 800 metres northeast of the centre of Klings and 700 metres southwest of the neighbouring village of Diedorf. The parish boundary between these two villages runs over the castle hill. The western part of the castle site has almost been destroyed by the adjacent rock quarry.[1]
The medieval site was relatively small and, according to the findings from excavations, comprised a bergfried, a main house and a secondary building as well as an enceinte. The castle used the existing banks and ditches of an earlier fortification. The gateway was probably in the south where, even today, a farm track runs up the hill. On the western slopes of the castle hill was a well, by the mule track, that was used by the castle inhabitants.