Wörth Castle
The Wörth Castle is a fortification in the municipality of Neuhausen am Rheinfall in the canton of Schaffhausen, Switzerland, located on a small island in the Rhine Falls' basin.
Geography and name
The water castle is located in the plunge pool of the Rhine Falls, built on a small island in the Rhine river in the municipality of Neuhausen am Rheinfall in the canton of Schaffhausen, opposite of the Laufen Castle in the canton of Zurich. The Schlössli owes its name to the location on a small island, washed by the water of the Rhine Falls, which used to be known as Werd, meaning literally a river island.History
Wörth was first mentioned in the 13th century AD, serving up to the middle of the 19th century as a major transhipment point on the east-west trade route, that led from Lake Constance and the city of Basel, and was interrupted by the waterfall.The present castle was built in 1348 AD, according to the excavations by the archaeological team of the canton of Schaffhausen in 2004. Like the predecessor building, which was built in the mid-11th century as Burg im Fischerhölzli, it served as a customs house and to secure the area, where the goods were transferred to evade the waterfall. Earliest owner of the Habsburg fief were the Herren von Jestetten, followed by the Schultheiss of Randenburg and the Herren von Fulach, and in 1429 by the Kloster Allerheiligen Schaffhausen. After the monastery's abolition in 1524, Wörth was a department of the city of Schaffhausen.
In the late 1790s, a so-called Gertzler was the custodian of the then Schlösschen Wörth. It was given as a so-called Schupf-Lehn by the Kloster Allerheiligen in Schaffhausen along with the salmon fisheries, customs, vineyard, forest etc. The Gertzler moved the customs for the monastery and had to deliver 2/3 of the salmon catch. For subsistence, he was allowed to fell timber out of the forest, and had to pay a lease of 30 Thaler per year for the use of the vineyard and the fields. The term Schlupf-Lehn derives from the Swiss German word for "slide out", as the feudal hereditary could be revoked if the administrator did not meet its obligations to the monastery.
When the railways was built, the water traffic route lost its importance, and the canton of Schaffhausen rebuilt the building as a restaurant in 1835/36. The former customs station and salmon farming was converted to the tourism promotional restaurant «Caffé- und Speisewirtschaft Schlösschen Wörth», that was opened on 2 February 1837. The construction costs for the renovation had to be paid by the former owner, the Kloster Allerheiligen in Schaffhausen.