Irmelshausen

Irmelshausen
Irmelshausen
Coordinates: 50°21.75′N 10°28.15′E / 50.36250°N 10.46917°E / 50.36250; 10.46917Coordinates: 50°21.75′N 10°28.15′E / 50.36250°N 10.46917°E / 50.36250; 10.46917
Country Germany
State Bavaria
Admin. region Unterfranken
District Rhön-Grabfeld
Municipal assoc. Bad Königshofen im Grabfeld
Government
  Mayor Helmut Kürschner (Höchheim)
Population (2015-12-31)[1]
  Total 1,136
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 97633
Dialling codes 09764
Vehicle registration NES
Irmelshausen from the west
Irmelshausen from bridge
Irmelshausen from the north-east
Irmelshausen from the south-west
Irmelshausen Print
Epitaph of Bernhard and Sibylle von Bibra at Irmelshausen church
Ground plan

Irmelshausen is a village in the municipality of Höchheim in the district of Rhön-Grabfeld in Bavaria in Germany.

Castle

Irmelshausen is best known for its castle and related church. Irmelshausen, on the old border between East and West Germany, is one of the most appealing castles in this region of Germany (Franconia). Irmelshausen is first mentioned in the year 800 when Emhild, the Abbess of Milz and a relative of Charlemagne, gave the village to the Counts of Henneberg. In 1354, upon the marriage of Countess Elisabeth with the Count Eberhard of Württemberg, the village was sold to the Bishopric of Würzburg. Twenty-two years later the bishopric transferred it to Berthold von Bibra. Since that time, it has been greatly enlarged and has been one of the main seats of the Bibra family. Parts of the castle were previously taller but during a remodeling in 1854 the half-timbered sections were lowered to the present height.

Until recently it was the site of the Bibra family archives which were fortunately moved to Irmelshausen from Bibra prior to the German Peasants' War in 1524-25. The second seat of the von Bibra family, through diplomacy it escaped attack and destruction in both the Peasants' War of 1525 and the Thirty Years' War of 1618-48 when almost all the surrounding castles were taken and sacked.

It is said that the first enemy soldier to enter the castle during World War II did so on April 8, 1945. The American Col. Vennard Wilson was served tea, noted the contents of the castle and ordered it off limits to troops.

The castle itself, the two farms and the forest is owned by the Bibra family (older and younger lines) and the adopted daughter of the Bibra family who is by birth a Guttenberg and by marriage a Stauffenberg.

Besides the five-sided castle, the late Gothic church with its numerous and beautiful Bibra gravestones from the 16th and 17th centuries is worth visiting.

Notes and references

Bibliography

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Irmelshausen.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Irmelshausen St. Jakobus.
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