In 1301, Dohm had its first documentary mention when the knight Fridericus von Daun (or Dohm) was enfeoffed by the
Archbishopric of Trier with Castle Manderscheid, where he was to perform services. In the earlier half of the 13th century, one of his forebears, Heinrich von Daun, who had been a marshal in Count of Luxembourg, Duke Walram von Limburg’s service, had acquired the Luxembourgish lordship over Densborn, which included Dohm and Lammersdorf, right up until the time of
French rule, as a Luxembourgish lower lordship. Of the castle itself, little remains but a 4 m-high and 20 m-long quarrystone wall, although written reports from the time say that there were still castle ruins in 1758. It is believed that in 1528,
Prüm Abbey drew tithes from Dohm and Lammersdorf through its holding of Densborn. The Lords of Densborn (and then beginning in 1654, the
Electoral-Trier chancellor Johann von Anethan and his heirs) held the high, middle and low jurisdiction here as well as the hunting and fishing rights. The Trier Cathedral Capitulary, Baron Johann Sigismund Otto von Quadt called himself “a lord of Dohm and Lammersdorf” in an inscription under a
coat of arms in a
Mürlenbach church window in 1720. It is unknown how he was related to the lordly family. The lordly landholdings in Dohm and Lammersdorf were divided in 1758 among four leaseholders, who in return were obliged each year “to deliver 2
Malter 1
Sester of
rye, 4
Malter 6
Sester of
oats, 4
Malter 6
Sester of
spelt and 3 pounds of
flax as rent”. Furthermore, they were also “bound to various statute labours and performances”. The Luxembourgish lordship over Densborn also meant that the
Catholic faith was maintained in Dohm and Lammersdorf in the late 14th and early 15th centuries, whereas the rest of the Parish of Gerolstein turned from the Church. == Politics ==