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Sooneck Castle

April 12, 2016 by tigermucha 3 Comments

On Saturday I told you I would tell you about Sooneck Castle, the next castle I sailed by on my Viking River Cruise along the Rhine.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

It is still considered to be part of the village of Niederheimbach, yet is also very close to Trechtingshausen and it’s strip mines, which you can see behind the castle in the picture above.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Vineyards

There are also lots of vineyards lining the steep banks of the Rhine here, as in many of the other little towns we have sailed by on this lovely afternoon.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Tower-above-the-vineyards

I even spotted this tiny little tower above the vineyards.  Not sure what it was, but there were people going inside exploring.  As with most of the castles and villages in this area, they were heavily destroyed during the Nine Years War, so it could be a casualty of that time.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

Sooneck gets its name from the Soon Forest that surrounds it.  It also borders the Bingen Forest and dates originally to about 1271.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

You can see that the castle also sits high above the Rhine.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

I can imagine it must have incredible views, except for the strip mine next to it.  From what I read though, the quarries in this area provide stone for the coastal areas of the Netherlands to help provide protection from the water.  Interesting little fact.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle-Squared

Sooneck Castle was destroyed several times, including lastly during the Nine Years War and was rebuilt by Prince Frederick William IV of Prussia as a hunting lodge in the mid part of the nineteenth century during the Romantic Reconstruction period.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

After World War I it came to be owned by the state, as most other historic castles did at the time.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

It is now owned by the Ministry of Castles and is open for tours.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

The public areas are furnished in Biedermeier and neo gothic styles and there are lots of paintings by German artists, along with hunting artifacts, since it was reconstructed for that purpose.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

It is hard to tell how large it is compared to the size of the forest that surrounds it.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

But once you start counting the different levels, you can only imagine its size.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

It is one of those castles that is built upward as opposed to outward.  There was such a small outcropping of stone for the foundation, there was nowhere else to go but up.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS BLOG | Sooneck-Castle

And so we said good bye to Burg Sooneck, it was time to sail to our next little village along this stretch of the Rhine.


This is not a sponsored post.  
This is my experience from my trip with Viking River Cruises. 

Email me to find out how you can save $100 when you book your
first cruise with Viking through their referral program.

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Germany’s Upper Middle Rhine Valley
A Little Village Named Niederheimbach
Assmannshausen and Burg Rheinstein
Burg Ehrenfels and Bingen

Filed Under: Europe, Germany, Travel, Upper Middle Rhine Valley, Viking River Cruise Tagged With: 1271, 2014, Bingen Forest, Burg Sooneck, destroyed, empire, europe, franks, Franzosenkopf, Frenchman’s Head, Germania inferior, Germanic, germany, gorge, hilltop, historic, hunting lodge, Niederheimbach, Nine Years War, open pit mine, palatinate, Prussia, rebuilt, rhein, Rhineland, Schloss Sonneck, soon forest, Unesco World Heritage Site, upper middle rhine valley, viking river cruise, winemaking

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Comments

  1. Eunice Donges says

    May 3, 2016 at 9:18 am

    Hi Teresa, I just happened upon your blog as I was researching “castles along the Rhine”.
    We took a Viking River Cruise last August and I am still working on my scrapbook. Your comments and names about the castles have been most helpful. We traveled the Rhine from Basel to Amsterdam. It was a very chilly windy day when we were cruising past the castles so sadly many of our pictures were taken thru windows inside the “KLIN” (our Viking River Boat). I have subscribed to your blog and I will continue to read it–past and future posts. Thanks so much. Eunice

    Reply
    • tigermucha says

      May 5, 2016 at 8:26 pm

      Hi Eunice! Thank you for the comment. I am glad I can help with some info for your scrapbook. Weather is just one of those things no one can control. I hope the rest of your trip was awesome. After I finish telling my story here I hope I can scrapbook my trip like you are doing.

      Regards,

      Teresa

      Reply

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