In the sixteenth century local scholars were keen to assert that the town had been founded under the Romans, and sources from this period refer to the medieval Latin name as
Tabernae Montanae (trans. "
taverns of the mountains"). Although the area was indeed under the control of the Roman empire around the beginning of our era, evidence does not support the notion that Bad Bergzabern had its own origins so far back. In 1525 the famous botanist
Jacobus Theodorus Tabernaemontanus was born here. In 1676, during the
Franco-Dutch War, the French under
Louis XIV infamously laid waste the
Palatinate region as part of a scheme to enlarge France. Much of Bad Bergzabern was destroyed in the process. One of the few buildings that did survive the French king's torching of the town was the local duke's administrative office, which later became the Gasthaus zum Engel. Reconstruction began in the eighteenth century under
Gustav, Duke of Zweibrücken. The work involved stone buildings in the newly fashionable baroque style and included a residential Schloss for the duke. The project was directed by the architect
Jonas Erikson Sundahl (1678-1762) who shared the duke's own
Swedish provenance. Friedrich Julius Marx, wrote a short history of Bergzabern „Oratio de Tabernis Montanis“ (Zweibrücken 1730). The overlordship of the dukes of Zweibrücken ended with the
French Revolution. On 10 November 1792 the townsfolk applied for incorporation within the new
French Republic. A generation later former French frontiers were restored after the fall of
Napoleon, however, and under the terms of the
Second Peace of Paris (10 November 1815) the whole region came under the control of the Wittelsbach kings of
Bavaria. ==Population development==