Mountain villages border trail stage 4
Light
Hike on and near old district boundaries around the mountain villages of Grünwettersbach, Palmbach and Stupferich (districts of Karlsruhe)
Recommended seasons: the blossoming orchards in spring and the changing colors of the leaves in autumn, both in the forest and on the fruit trees in the meadows and fields.
The circular trail was opened on May 3, 2015 as part of a district project to celebrate the 300th anniversary of the city of Karlsruhe.
Old boundary stones worth seeing along and near the path. A description of the most interesting boundary stones can be found on the homepage of the Wettersbach Black Forest Association ( Schwarzwaldverein Wettersbach e.V.).
Far-reaching views over the Rhine plain and to the northern Black Forest. The wild boar enclosure is also the highest point of the hike.
Tour details
Recommended season
- J
- F
- M
- A
- M
- J
- J
- A
- S
- O
- N
- D
Special features of the tour
Scenic / Cultural highlights
Description
Worth seeing and knowing about the landscape and surroundings
Landscapes:
From Thomashof, we enter open fields again. It is noticeable that the fields are quite large. The reason is that 4 estates were founded here in the 17th/18th century. The Thomashof, Lamprechtshof, Batzenhof and, a little further away towards Turmberg, the Rittnerthof and the former estate of the Barons Schilling von Canstatt in Hohenwettersbach, with its own district boundary (boundary stones with a jug as a coat of arms). Another striking feature is the avenue of poplar trees planted on the way from Thomashof to Batzenhof. It will have to be replaced by lime trees in the next few years as the location is not suitable. We then come to the
- Â Lamprechtshof, courtyard complex, four-sided courtyard, laid out by the Durlach mayor and chamber councillor Johann Friedrich Erhard Lamprecht (1709-1777), he contributed to the reclamation of swampy land and the clearing of wooded areas, for which he received the honorary title of "Princely Chamber Councillor" from the Margrave. Enclosed courtyard complex on three sides with residential and farm buildings, half-timbered buildings on a solid basement, gateway on the eastern narrow side with stone gateposts decorated with small obelisks. Running well with solid trough, inscribed 1892.
Today, sweetcorn is produced here. http://www.karlsruhe.de/b4/stadtteile/bergdoerfer/hohenwettersbach/geschichte/mais-weizen.de
The path then continues along the boundary between Hohenwettersbach and Durlach through orchards with cherry trees. You then cross the edge of the forest (beech trees) to the valley cut of the Tiefentalgraben. Here you can see the Scheffelstein
- "Scheffelstein", low, roughly hewn stone block with the inscription "Scheffel Stein", commemorates the poet Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1826-1886), who was born and died in Karlsruhe, monument erected around 1900.
before the ascent to the Bergwald district begins. The settlement is bypassed to the south and then leads through forest to
HohenwettersbachÂ
Hohenwettersbach was first mentioned in documents in 1262 under the name "Durrenweterspach", as there was probably always a shortage of water due to its geographical location.
From 1250 to 1280 Dürrenwettersbach belonged to the Counts of Eberstein and the Counts of Zweibrücken.
In 1535, the village fell to Baden-Durlach as a result of the partition of Baden. In 1568 there were 32 farmsteads and in 1648, at the end of the Thirty Years' War, there were only a few inhabitants left in Dürrenwettersbach.
In 1706, Margrave Karl Wilhelm bought the village and renamed it Hohenwettersbach. He had a pleasure palace built in what is now the pleasure garden. In 1725, Margrave Karl Wilhelm von Baden-Durlach transferred the Hohenwettersbach estate to his daughter Karoline von Wangen, who came from a morganatic (*) union, on the occasion of her marriage to Wilhelm Friedrich Schilling von Canstatt. The first schoolhouse was built in 1740 and the Protestant church in 1742.
(*) Explanation: morganatic compound
Around 1760, the lords of the manor employed workers and day laborers to build the castle and run the farm. They were allowed to settle on manorial land, but were dependent on their lords for the rest of their lives and often had to live in abject poverty.
It was not until 1864, when the revolution had strengthened the Hohenwettersbachers' desire for freedom, that an independent municipality of Hohenwettersbach was founded. The new town had around 650 inhabitants.
In 1931, the districts of the Hofgut and the village, which had been separate since 1864, were united.
Further information at http://www.karlsruhe.de/b4/stadtteile/bergdoerfer/hohenwettersbach/geschichte.de
Buildings worth seeing, taken from the list of monuments of the city of Karlsruhe
- Boundary stones Am Lustgarten
- Farm building and caretaker's house of the Schilling von Canstatt estate.
Steward's house, two-storey building with crippled hipped roof, late 18th/early 19th century (Spitalhof 2). Farm buildings, with horse and cattle stables and barn parts, rebuilt in unrendered sandstone over an angular ground plan after major fires in 1897 and 1903, coat of arms stone, inscribed 1898. Wagon shed, detached half-timbered building, erected 1917-18. Forge, small unrendered sandstone building with Prussian cap vault, inscribed 1898. Enclosure of the property with sandstone walls. Barn building has been partially converted into condominiums since 2013 - Protestant church, built in 1741-42 under Karl Friedrich Freiherr Schilling von Canstatt as the property of Johann Heinrich Arnold's estate.
- Gasthaus "Zur Hochburg", 1902-03 for master butcher and innkeeper Jakob Morlock, today a residential building.
- "Batzenhof" estate, formerly an inn for travelers on the so-called Ochsenstraße between Durlach and Langensteinbach, north wing inscribed 1753, associated barn and stables 19th century, associated residential building, smithy, associated open spaces within and in the immediate vicinity of the three-sided complex
- Day laborers' houses on the Schilling von Canstatt estate, residential buildings in rows, associated farm buildings. First half of the 18th century. To be found at Reihenstr. 5, 7, 9, 11, Am Lustgarten 13, 19, Wolfartsweierer Weg 1
- Cemetery: Hereditary burial ground of the Barons Schilling von Canstatt, continuously occupied since 1772.
- Manor house of the Schilling von Canstatt estate, so-called castle with park and park enclosure. Built under Karl Friedrich Freiherr Schilling von Canstatt 1760-63 by Dominik Berckmüller.Â
- Hohenwettersbach brown wheat http://www.karlsruhe.de/b4/stadtteile/bergdoerfer/hohenwettersbach/geschichte/mais-weizen.de
 past the remains of a 12th century hilltop castle down to Wolfartsweier, the end point of this stage and also the start of the circular route.
Wolfartsweier
Wolfartsweier lies at the end of the Wetterbach valley, which is spanned by a bridge over the A8 highway at the outdoor pool. As you continue along the border path, you find yourself in the foothill zone (edge of the Rhine rift valley) with views across the Rhine plain to the Palatinate mountains. The area is very damp in places, as there are numerous hillside springs. In spring there are extensive stands of wild garlic. Towards the Rhine plain, we come across narrow, steep gorges. The Hornklamm gorge is crossed on the hike. The whole area is overgrown with beech trees, which have ideal growing conditions here.
Historical:
Here are excerpts of some information on the history of the respective places. If you want to know more, you can find it on the homepage of the city of Karlsruhe, the appropriate link can be found at the end of the respective town chronicles.
WolfartsweierÂ
1261, 2 Dec. First written mention of the village. In a document, Pope Urban IV confirms the monastery of Gottesaue, among other things, monastery estates and rights in "Wolvoldeswilere".
1329 First documented mention of a church and a priest in "Wolf hartswilre". A document from 1488 mentions "St. Margarethen" as the name of the parish church.
1416 Heinrich von Gärtringen buys part of the village from Margrave Bernhard. The margrave's son reacquires this property in 1439.
1419 A gravestone on the church marks this year as the year of death of the knight Pleich von Waldeck. His family probably owned a castle above the village, which may have been built on the remains of the walls of a Roman keep. (Gleichen Castle
1480 Gottesaue Monastery acquires the "Steinhof" in "Wolferzwilr" from Mathias Wihlin and Bernhard Luz. In 1531, the municipality acquires the Steinhof and sells it on to the margrave in the same year. In the 1950s, a new residential area was built on this historic site.
1535 At the partition of Baden, Wolfartsweier falls to the Margraviate of Baden-Durlach.
1556 Appointment of the first Lutheran pastor by Margrave Charles II.
Further information at http://www.karlsruhe.de/b4/stadtteile/bergdoerfer/wolfartsweier/chronik.de
Buildings worth seeing, taken from the list of monuments of the city of Karlsruhe
- Scrap tower Am Zündhütle
- In the Steinkreuzstraße, stone cross with vine knife, today stands at the western end of the village in a green area.
- "Zum Rössle" inn, today a residential building. Two-storey eaves gatehouse with side building. First mentioned in 1767
- Inn "Zum Schwan", first mentioned in 1746
- Protestant Jakobskirche, late Romanesque at its core, nave 1744-45 by Johann Heinrich Arnold, extended in 1984/85. With quarry stone wall and arched gate to the cemetery, 19th century, memorial to the fallen in 1870/71, gravestones.
- Wolf fountain at the town hall
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Author's tip
Refreshment stops:
Hohenwettersbach: Pizzeria Salento, Restaurant Gatto Nero at SV Hohenwettersbach
Wolfartsweier: Wirtshaus zum Schwanen or kiosk at the outdoor pool, if it is open.
Directions
Stage 4: From Thomashof via the Schöpfungsweg, Bergwald to Wolfartweier
From the "Thomashof Tagungsstätte", cross the road and continue on the path turning left to Lamprechtshof, where old boundary stones can be viewed at the servants' quarters, then continue uphill past the paddock to the "fifty acres" signpost. The path then continues along Ochsenstraße for a short distance until you turn left onto the Schöpfungsweg (Creation Path ), a path that follows in the footsteps of creation and also serves as a place of peace and contemplation, continuing through the orchards planted with cherry trees to the Grünberg. The path leads left into the forest and to the "Scheffelstein" signpost, further down to Tiefentalstraße, cross it - only there do we find the Scheffelstein (low, roughly hewn stone block with the inscription "Scheffel Stein", commemorating the poet Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1826-1886), who was born and died in Karlsruhe, monument erected around 1900) - and walk up to the Bergwald settlement and the signpost of the same name. Keep to the left and then walk through the forest towards Fallbrunnen, passing a few boundary stones along the way. They stand on the boundary between Durlach and Hohenwettersbach or the boundary of the former estate of Baron Schilling von Cannstatt (the emblem is a jug).
If you want to see more boundary stones, you can find them in Hohenwettersbach in the Lustgarten (behind the Catholic church). The hike now leads downhill at the "Im Wald" signpost to the end of the Wetterbach valley with the castle hill to Wolfartsweier. You will pass the remains of the former "Gleichen" castle, a tower hill castle from the 12th century, before reaching the starting point of the circular route again at the outdoor pool. From there, walk to the Wolfartsweier-Süd bus stop (lines 47, 27) or continue to the Wolfartsweier-Nord streetcar stop (lines 2, 8).
Equipment
Suitable footwear, camera, binoculars, drinks for on the way.
Book recommendations by the author
Further information
Links
City of Karlsruhe (local history of the mountain villages http://www.karlsruhe.de/b4/stadtteile/bergdoerfer.de City of Karlsruhe (monument protection, buildings and monuments http://web1.karlsruhe.de/db/kulturdenkmale/
Black Forest Association Wettersbach local group http://www.swv-wettersbach.de/
Karlsruher Verkehrs Verbund (KVV) www.kvv.de