Photo courtesy of the Austrian Tourism Board.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Visit the beautiful Danube River Valley
Dürnstein  is a small town on the Danube river in the Krems-Land district, in the  Austrian state of Lower Austria. It is one of the most visited tourist  destinations in the Wachau region and also a well-known wine growing  area. The municipality consists of the Katastralgemeinden Dürnstein,  Oberloiben and Unterloiben. The town gained its name from the medieval  castle which overlooked it. The castle was called "Duerrstein" or  "Dürrstein", from the German duerr/dürr meaning "dry" and Stein,  "stone". The castle was dry because it was situated on a rocky hill,  high above the damp conditions of the Danube at the base of the hill,  and it was built of stone. Dürnstein was first mentioned in 1192, when,  in the castle above the town, King Richard I Lionheart of England was  held captive by Duke Leopold V of Austria after their dispute during the  Third Crusade. Richard had personally offended Leopold by casting down  his standard from the walls at the Battle of Acre, and the duke  suspected that King Richard ordered the murder of his cousin Conrad of  Montferrat in Jerusalem. In consequence Pope Celestine III  excommunicated Leopold for capturing a fellow crusader. The duke finally  gave the custody of Richard to Emperor Henry VI, who imprisoned Richard  at Trifels  Castle. Dürnstein Castle was almost completely destroyed by  the troops of the Swedish Empire under Field Marshal Lennart Torstenson  in 1645. Dürnstein Abbey (Stift Dürnstein) was established in 1410 by  Canons Regular from Třeboň and from 1710 rebuilt in a Baroque style  according to plans by Joseph Munggenast, Jakob Prandtauer and Matthias  Steinl. The monastery was dissolved by order of Emperor Joseph II in  1788 and fell to the Herzogenburg Priory. During the War of the Third  Coalition the Battle of Dürenstein was fought nearby on November 11,  1805.
Photo courtesy of the Austrian Tourism Board.
Photo courtesy of the Austrian Tourism Board.
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