'' with its ditches and western rampart The main area of the castle measures about 20 by 21 metres and is surrounded today by an easily recognisable, circular
ditch, whose outer boundary is marked by an outer rampart or embankment (
Wallrippe). On the steep eastern hillside, the circular ditch transitions directly into the slope; on the other sides, the remnants of an outer bank can still be made out. The flat northern side of the site is guarded by a high embankment and a roughly 2.5 metre deep ditch, which is interrupted at the northwestern corner of the site. Clearly there was a (probably more recent) entrance between this corner and the western section of embankment. On the western side the embankment is markedly lower, but still easy to make out, on the south side it has slipped to form a terrace with a slight eminence. Local accounts locate the story of
Christoph von Schmid's
Rosa von Tannenburg (the Old Castle representing the Tannenburg) and the demolished
New Castle (Fichtenburg) in Raderach. As a result there is a road called the
Fichtenburgstraße in Raderach and a
Tannenburgstraße in nearby Unterraderach. == References ==