(here as an illustration from the
Externsteine relief). Surface finds show that people lived in the area surrounding the Desenberg from an early age. In 1995, the
Daseburger Kreisgraben (Daseburg Circular Ditch) was discovered while working on a gas pipeline. The facility is oriented towards the Desenberg, which, viewed from the middle of the ditch, shows the setting position of the sun at the summer solstice in the fifth millennium BC. The mountain was probably later a
Germanic place of worship. The Desenberg is discussed as a possible location for the
Irminsul, an early medieval
Saxon-Germanic sanctuary. Another possible location, the
Eresburg near
Marsberg, is only 30 kilometres away. The legend of the mirror knight is often mentioned In connection with the Desenberg. In the legend, a brave Saxon frightens and slays a dragon living on the hill using the reflection off his shield. This may be the origin of the name of the House of Spiegel (zum Desenberg) (e.g. Witukind of Spiegel zum Desenberg or Henry of Spiegel zum Desenberg), whose coat of arms shows three mirrors as an indication of this deed of heroism. But according to legend,
Charlemagne lies sleeping at the Desenberg. Throughout the Middle Ages, enchanted Messiah emperors such as Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, his grandson Frederick II, Charlemagne, Frederick the "Freidige", as well as others of this name "Frederick = Prince of Peace", including the Prince of Light Sigfrid and Widukind (Wittekind), played a role, according to the legend. And so in this sense also Charlemagne, who sleeps enchanted in the Desenberg, should become the expected emperor again. As regards the myth about Emperor Charlemagne, the following legend is told:
The emperor sits deep in the Desenberg with his knights and rests from his victories. His long beard grows through the table. He often asks the dwarfs who are gathered around him for the year. When the time comes, he will go out of the mountain with his generals to restore the great empire and to usher in a golden age of peace and happiness. Shepherds who tended their cattle on the Desenberg often went to see the emperor. They surrounded the mountain with caper spurge. Sometimes they played their most beautiful songs to him and received many gifts. A baker from Warburg once brought the emperor a basket full of white bread and received rich wages for it. (see also:
King asleep in mountain) The Desenberg and Desenberg Castle came into the possession of the von Spiegels around 1250. In the 14th century the family split into the lines of Spiegel zum Desenberg and Spiegel zu Peckelsheim. In the middle of the 16th century the Spiegels left Desenberg and took up knightly seats nearby, in
Bühne, Rothenburg, Klingenburg, Wickelgönne and Dalheim. The mountain and the castle ruins are still owned by the Counts of Spiegel zum Desenberg. The castle on the Desenberg had a strategically advantageous location, as the paths around the castle were visible from there. == Views ==