The use of the fortress as a prison is responsible for the fact that Hohenasperg is jokingly referred to as "Württemberg's highest mountain" as they say "it takes only five minutes to come to the top, but years to come back down again."
Holy Roman Empire In 1737,
Joseph Süß Oppenheimer, a Jew and the financial adviser to the Duke of Württemberg, was arrested and held at Hohenasperg for seven months before being executed in Stuttgart. The poet
C. F. D. Schubart was held prisoner there between 1777 and 1787;
Friedrich Schiller was mindful of Schubart's fate when he wrote his play "The Robbers," inspired by one of Schubart's short stories. Schiller himself escaped imprisonment in the Hohenasperg by fleeing to
Mannheim in the neighboring
Electorate of the Palatinate.
19th century During the rule of King
Frederick of Württemberg, deserters, military prisoners, and separatists from the Radical
Pietist group from the circle of
Rottenacker were kept at Fort Hohenasperg. By 1813, about 400 prisoners were arrested on the fortress. When his son
King William I of Württemberg became ruler in 1817,
corporal punishment, such as
running the gauntlet, was abolished. Further inmates in Fort Hohenasperg included the writer
Berthold Auerbach, who was kept here between 1837 and 1838; Friedrich Kammerer (1833); the doctor and poet Theobald Kerner (1850–1851); the theologian
Karl Hase; the satirist Johannes Nefflen; the poet Leo von Seckendorff, the writer Theodor Griesinger; and many more, mostly political dissidents, who in general were held prisoner because of their anti-monarchistic views. In 1887 and 1888 a
water tower, was constructed, which also supports police radio antennas. Since 1894, a prison for the civil penal system has been located on Hohenasperg hill. In the meantime the central hospital for the Baden-Württemberg penal system was placed on the Hohenasperg.
Early years of the Nazi era During spring and summer 1933, numerous members of Hitler's opposition, the
Social Democrats and
Communists, were imprisoned at Hohenasperg. Amongst these prisoners was the Governor of Württemberg,
Eugen Bolz, who was murdered during
Aktion Gitter in Berlin in 1945. At least 101 prisoners died in Hohenasperg under its hard penal system, and 20 of their names have been identified by the
Ludwigsburg VVN, an antifascist organization. These names are remembered on a plaque in the Prisoner's Cemetery.
Transit camp for deportation to concentration camps (1940–1943) In May 1940, the prison was used as a way station during the first centrally planned
deportation of
Sinti out of southwest Germany, west of the Rhine River (
Mainz,
Ingelheim,
Worms). The deportation was carried using a special train, families were escorted through the village by foot, with police surveillance. In the prison, examinations were conducted by the Ritter Research Institute, which decided the fate of the inmates. The institute was named for the scientific racist
Robert Ritter. Further deportations were sent to the
General Government, the area of Germany-occupied Poland. Non-gypsies were sent back. At least until the beginning of 1943, the prison was used as a way station for Sinti who were being sent to concentration camps. Later deportations led to the Gypsy Family Camp, the concentration camp of
Auschwitz-Birkenau, where prisoners were murdered.
Post-war period The U.S. Seventh Army used Hohenasperg as an Internment camp 1946-1947. In the book, "The Prison Called Hohenasperg", American born and raised author Arthur D. Jacobs provides his experience as a twelve- and thirteen-year-old prisoner in Hohenasperg. In June 1959
Karl Jäger, a former
Einsatzgruppe officer,
hanged himself in Hohenasperg prison.
Today The prison later became a civil prison for the detention of non-political prisoners and now also houses the central hospital of the prison service in Baden-Württemberg. The serial killer Heinrich Pommerenke died in Hohenasperg in the central hospital on 27 December 2008. There is a small museum detailing the lives of some of the prison's notable inmates ("Hohenasperg. Ein deutsches Gefängnis"). ==References==