The
hunting lodge (
Jagdschloss) was built on the highest hill in East Rügen, the high Tempelberg, in the years 1838 to 1846 by order of Prince
Wilhelm Malte I of
Putbus, based on a design by Berlin architect, Johann Gottfried Steinmeyer in the style of the North Italian Renaissance castellos. It was once a popular holiday destination for European nobility and prominent people; for example,
Frederick William IV,
Christian VIII,
Otto von Bismarck,
Elizabeth von Arnim, and Johann Jacob Grümbke numbered amongst its visitors. The lodge was owned by the von Putbus family until 1944 and passed into
Nazi hands on the imprisonment of
Malte von Putbus. The family was finally dispossessed as part of the East German land reforms and the castle remains today in state hands. After the end of the Second World War many of the furnishings were lost or stolen, several works of art were taken to the Berlin Art Depot, the agency for the administration of Soviet assets in Germany, and transferred in 1953 to the state museums in Berlin. Attempts by the grandson of Malte zu Putbus, Franz zu Putbus, to get the family seat returned failed in court. The building is used today as a museum. The castle was renovated at the beginning of the 21st century at a cost of 7.9 million euros. == Design ==