Chapter

Staufer Imperial & Monastic Swabia

The Staufer (Hohenstaufen) dynasty held the Duchy of Swabia from 1079 and the imperial crown from 1138, making this region a heartland of the Holy Roman Empire. Climb the Hohenstaufen hill near Göppingen and look across the Rems-Fils valley — the ruined castle walls are all that remains of the dynasty's ancestral seat, but the view reveals the dense medieval landscape they ruled. The Staufer era also produced the institutions that still organize Swabian life: the Cistercian Maulbronn Abbey (founded 1147) became a model monastic economy whose pond-and-channel system you can still trace on foot. Free imperial cities — Ulm, Ravensburg, Schwäbisch Hall, Rottweil — governed themselves under the emperor, and their wealth funded the great Gothic minsters and trade networks. Ravensburg's Große Ravensburger Handelsgesellschaft traded cloth and spices across Europe. This is also the era when Fastnacht customs first appear in written records: 13th-century sources mention pre-Lent festivities, and by the 14th century, dances, parades, and Fastnacht games are documented. The Christian civitas-diaboli framework — not pagan survivals — gave these customs their theological logic, as scholars Mezger and Moser have shown.

1120 - 1500
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Places connected to this chapter

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political

Hohenstaufen Castle

The ruined castle on the Hohenstaufen hill near Göppingen gave the Staufer dynasty its name; built in the 11th century as the family's ancestral seat when they held the Duchy of Swabia (from 1079) and the imperial crown (1138-1268). The ruin is a tangible link to the dynasty that made Swabia an imperial heartland, though the visible walls are fragmentary. Anchor modes: material_layer | signal | Search hooks: Hohenstaufen Castle; Burg Hohenstaufen; Staufer dynasty seat; Göppingen castle ruin; imperial Swabia; ducal castle

Climb the conical Hohenstaufen hill to the ruined castle walls; information panels explain the Staufer dynasty's role, and the panoramic view across the Rems-Fils valley reveals the landscape the Staufer ruled.

knowledge

Maulbronn Monastery

Founded in 1147 as a Cistercian monastery, Maulbronn is the best-preserved medieval monastic complex north of the Alps (UNESCO World Heritage). Its pond-and-channel water management system, cloister, refectory, and church demonstrate the Cistercian economic and spiritual model that shaped rural Swabia. After the Reformation, the monastery was secularized and became a Protestant seminary — the institutional layering of Catholic foundation and Protestant reuse is legible on-site. Anchor modes: custodian | material_layer | living_ritual | Search hooks: Maulbronn Monastery; Kloster Maulbronn; Cistercian 1147; UNESCO World Heritage; monastic water system; Protestant seminary

Walk the UNESCO-listed cloister with its Romanesque-Gothic arcades, view the parlatorium and refectory, and trace the medieval water-management channels and ponds that still function around the complex.

trade

Ravensburg Medieval Old Town

Ravensburg was a Free Imperial City and headquarters of the Große Ravensburger Handelsgesellschaft (Great Ravensburg Trading Society), one of medieval Europe's largest trading companies, with shops and agents across the continent. The Humpis-Quartier museum preserves the family house of the trading company's co-founders. The medieval towers (Blaseturm, Mehlsack) still mark the city skyline. Ravensburg sits in Upper Swabia, a Catholic Fasnet stronghold area. Anchor modes: material_layer | network_route | custodian | Search hooks: Ravensburg Medieval Old Town; Große Ravensburger Handelsgesellschaft; Humpis-Quartier museum; imperial city towers; Upper Swabia trade; medieval market square

Walk between the medieval towers (Blaseturm, Mehlsack), visit the Museum Humpis-Quartier's permanent exhibition on the Great Ravensburg Trading Society, and explore the well-preserved market square and council buildings.

trade

Schwäbisch Hall Medieval City

Schwäbisch Hall was a Free Imperial City whose wealth came from salt production (Hall = salt) and the Kocher river trade. The medieval market square with its baroque city hall, the St. Michael church towering above on an island in the Kocher, and the extensive timber-framed old town make the imperial-city legacy directly legible. Hall went Protestant in the Reformation, and its Fasnet was accordingly suppressed — a contrast to Catholic towns. Anchor modes: material_layer | network_route | living_ritual | Search hooks: Schwäbisch Hall Medieval City; Hall salt trade; Kocher river; imperial city market square; timber-framed old town; Protestant Fastnacht suppression

Cross the Kocher to St. Michael's church on its river island, walk the broad market square with its baroque Rathaus and fountain, and explore the timber-framed old town on steep lanes above the river.

spiritual

Ulm Minster

Begun in 1377 by the Free Imperial City of Ulm, this Gothic church has the tallest steeple in the world (161.5 m). The minster embodies the civic ambition and wealth of the imperial cities, funded by Ulm's trade guilds. Its construction spanned centuries — the main structure was largely complete by the Reformation, when Ulm went Protestant in 1530, and the church became Protestant while retaining its Catholic-era fabric. Anchor modes: custodian | material_layer | signal | Search hooks: Ulm Minster; Ulmer Münster; Gothic cathedral; tallest steeple; imperial city church; 1377 foundation

Climb the 768 steps to the top of the 161.5-meter steeple for panoramic views; view the Gothic choir stalls (the oldest in Germany) and the Schmerzensmann sculpture inside the minster.

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Chapter

Carolingian Christianization & Monastic Foundation

496 - 1120

Frankish conquest brought Alemannia into the Carolingian orbit and with it systematic Christianization. The founding of Reichenau Abbey on Lake Constance in 724 by the itinerant bishop Pirmin was the region's decisive cultural event — a monastery that became a center of manuscript illumination, learning, and liturgical practice whose influence shaped the very calendar rhythms that later anchored Fasnet. Stand in the Reichenau church and you are inside the institution that gave the Alemannic southwest its Christian temporal frame. The Duchy of Swabia emerged from this Carolingian county structure, and by the 11th century the Zähringer dukes were founding planned market towns — Freiburg im Breisgau in 1120 — whose street grids and Münster squares still structure the towns you walk today. The Weingarten monastery (founded 1056 on an earlier Altdorf foundation) began the Blutritt procession tradition that still fills the streets each Corpus Christi.

Chapter

Reformation & Confessional Geography

1500 - 1648

The Reformation carved a confessional frontier across the southwest that still shapes which towns celebrate Fasnet and which do not. Duke Ulrich introduced Protestantism in Württemberg in 1534 and founded the Tübinger Stift seminary in 1536 to train Protestant clergy — stand in the Stift's chapel and you are inside the institution that made Württemberg Protestant. The Margraviate of Baden split along religious lines: Baden-Durlach went Protestant, Baden-Baden stayed Catholic. In Catholic enclaves — Villingen, Rottweil, the Black Forest valleys, Upper Swabia — the old Fasnet continued within the liturgical calendar; in Protestant areas, carnival customs were suppressed or attenuated. The Villingen Fasnet is first documented in 1467 (Urfehde brief), and Rottweil's Narrenzunft tradition traces to medieval roots. But avoid absolutes: the confessional frontier shaped survival patterns rather than strictly determining them, and some Protestant towns later revived Fasnet in modified form. The Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) devastated the region — Württemberg lost 57% of its population between 1634 and 1655 — leaving deep material and demographic scars visible in rebuilt city centers.

Chapter

Roman Frontier & Alemannic Migration

1 - 496

The Roman Empire extended its frontier into southwest Germany along the Upper Germanic-Rhaetian Limes, building major forts at Aalen (the empire's largest cavalry fort) and at Arae Flaviae (modern Rottweil, founded c. 73 AD). Walk the Limes trail and you cross the old border between Roman order and Germanic lands beyond. From the mid-3rd century, Alemanni groups pushed into the abandoned Agri Decumates; by 260 AD Roman rule had retreated behind the Rhine and Danube. The Alemannic settlement layer is still legible in the landscape through toponyms ending in -ingen (Villingen, Überlingen, Tübingen) that mark early Alemannic farmstead clusters. In 496, the Frankish king Clovis I defeated the Alemanni, bringing the region under Frankish control and setting the stage for Christianization.

Chapter

Early Modern Absolutist States

1648 - 1806

Post-Westphalian recovery produced two distinct state traditions whose rivalry still echoes in the hyphenated name Baden-Württemberg. The Dukes of Württemberg built Ludwigsburg Palace (1704-1733) as their Versailles — walk its restored baroque gardens and you see how absolutist display reshaped the landscape. The Margraves of Baden founded Karlsruhe as a planned capital in 1715, its palace radiating streets outward like a sun. Heidelberg Castle, destroyed by French troops in 1693, became a picturesque ruin that would later fuel Romantic imagination. The Swabian Hohenzollern branch maintained its ancestral castle on the Zollernalb. In Catholic towns, Fasnet continued under guild custodianship — the Markgröningen Schäferlauf (sheep run), documented since the 17th century as a Bartholomäus-kirche dedication festival that evolved into a shepherds' Zunftfest, shows how Catholic and guild-maintained traditions anchored communal life alongside the Protestant court culture of the capitals.