It is assumed that there has been continuous habitation at what is now Enkirch for some 2,500 years, but the first traces of this go all the way back to the
Stone Age. Enkirch was already an important centre as early as
Celtic times, and then on into
Roman times. On 1 April 733, Enkirch had its first documentary mention in the noblewoman
Adela’s will as
Anchiriacum. It was mentioned for the second time on 10 February 908 by King
Ludwig IV when he donated the church and manse to Archbishop
Radbod of Trier. The document in question refers to the village as
Ancaracha. The municipality’s name evolved through the forms
Enkricha,
Einkirke and
Enkerich before settling on today’s form, Enkirch. Beginning in the 11th century, Enkirch belonged to the
County of Sponheim. In the 12th century, the Sponheims built the
Starkenburg (castle) above Enkirch. Sometime about the year 1240, the County was divided into the “Further” and “Hinder” County of Sponheim, or Sponheim-Kreuznach and Sponheim-Starkenburg. In 1135, the Ravengiersburg Monastery built a pilgrimage chapel consecrated to
Mary on Enkirch's outskirts. This chapel was later expanded into a collegiate church and then in 1685 it was incorporated into a newly founded
Franciscan monastery. After
Napoleon dissolved the monastery in the late 18th century, the church was turned over to the
Catholic parish for their use. As early as 1248, by virtue of being the Rear County seat, Enkirch was granted town and market rights along with its own jurisdiction. At that time, Enkirch was fortified and girded with a town wall and seven gates. After the feud between Countess
Loretta of Sponheim and the Prince-Archbishop-Elector
Baldwin of Trier, and his capture by the Countess in 1328, Loretta's son
John III, Count of Sponheim-Starkenburg built a new castle near Trarbach, the
Grevenburg. This brought about a shift of the Rear County seat to
Trarbach, and thereby a loss of importance to Enkirch, even though it was considerably bigger than Traben and Trarbach put together, even into the 19th century. Since Enkirch was fortified but now had no castle, the church, which had been mentioned as early as 908, served as a
fortress church. In 1557, Frederick II of Simmern – later
Frederick III, Elector Palatine – introduced the
Reformation into the
Oberamt of Trarbach. Since this time, the church has been
Evangelical. For its outstanding wineries, Enkirch was already well known very early on, as witnessed by 15 formerly ecclesiastical and comital
winegrowing estates. Because of the many
timber-frame houses built in the 15th to 18th century, Enkirch is also called the
Schatzkammer rheinischen Fachwerkbaues (“Treasury of Rhenish Timber Framing”). == Religion ==