Genovevaburg
Appearance
Genovevaburg is a
counts palatine, Siegfried and his wife, Genevieve of Brabant (German: Genoveva), were supposed to be on the same hill in (or above) Mayen. The earliest references linking the legend to this region date to the 17th century. Since when the castle and its bergfried
, the so-called Golo Tower (Goloturm), have been linked to the legend is unknown.
Literature
- Fridolin Hörter: Die kurfürstliche Burg und das Landschaftsmuseum in Mayen (= Rheinische Kunststätten. Heft 236). 1st edn., Gesellschaft für Buchdruck, Neuss, 1980, ISBN 3-88094-322-2.
- Matthias Kordel: Die schönsten Schlösser und Burgen in der Eifel. 1st edn.,Wartberg, Gudensberg-Gleichen, 1999, ISBN 3-86134-482-3, pp. 44–45.
- Udo Liessem: Die Burg in Mayen. Eine gotische Anlage westlicher Prägung. In: Burgen und Schlösser. No. 1, 1982, ISSN 0007-6201, pp. 2–6.
- Michael Losse: Hohe Eifel und Ahrtal. 57 Burgen und Schlösser. Konrad Theiss, Stuttgart, 2003, ISBN 3-8062-1775-0, pp. 62–65.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Genovevaburg.
- Entry on the Genovevaburg in European Castles Institute
- Website of the Eifel Museum
- Website of the Eifel Library Archived 2020-07-01 at the Wayback Machine