The castle was probably built in the second half of the 12th century as a
fief of the
count palatine. The first record of the castle can be found in an 1192 document, in which the brothers Godfrey and Frederick of Virneburg gave their castle
Vernenburgh together with the county and all its estate to the Archbishop of Trier,
John I, as a fiefdom. This document is not preserved in the original, the 16th-century copy is either a faulty translation or a forgery due to the wording contained therein, which was not yet customary around 1200. The
lords of Virneburg, later elevated to the rank of count, are first mentioned in a document by the Archbishop of Trier,
Poppo, in 1042 where a certain
Bernhardus de Virneburch is recorded. At that time, feudal sovereignty had passed to the counts of
Sayn, but John of Sayn relinquished it in 1358 to the counts palatine, with the exception of the castle, which was still mentioned in 1506 as a male fief to the counts of Sayn, even though the counts of Virneburg no longer recognised their feudal sovereignty. In 1339, Count
Rupert of Virneburg gave part of the castle to the Elector of
Trier,
Baldwin to pay off a debt. It refers for the first time to the
hoechste thurn ("highest tower"), probably the old
bergfried built when the castle was constructed. In 1414, the counts of Virneburg had to hand over the rest of the castle to the Archbishop,
Werner of Falkenstein, to whom the county had always been a thorn in the side. Only a few years later, however, the people of Virneburg succeeded in redeeming their castle from being an enfeoffment of Trier. On the death of Count Cunos of Virneburg in 1545, the Virneburg family died out. Its heirs were the counts of
Mark-Arenberg and then the counts of
Manderscheid-Blankenheim before being confiscated a little later by
Trier as a terminated fiefdom. Following an objection by the counts of Manderscheid-Schleiden, however, it was returned to them in 1549 as a fiefdom. The property was acquired in 1600 by
Löwenstein-Wertheim. An inventory of the castle made at that time lists twelve rooms. The
bergfried had been replaced and was given a new
chemin de ronde in 1623, but by 1663 the castle was described as being very dilapidated, especially "on the sides with the high walls and well". A restoration was postponed at that time and, in 1665, the walls in the front and upper courtyard of the castle had "completely fallen down and unrestored". In 1670, the dilapidated
bergfried was demolished and rebuilt the following year. The dilapidated
enceinte was repaired and the most necessary construction work was carried out in the castle. When the
French invaded the
Eifel, the castle was blown up in 1689, the tower was completely destroyed, its residential buildings went up in flames, and the enceinte was
slighted. On the initiative of the Royal District Court of Adenau, the castle ruin was sold publicly on 19 January 1914 for 1,080 Marks to the Rhenish Society for the Preservation of Monuments and Landscape (
Rheinischer Verein für Denkmalpflege und Landschaftsschutz). == Description ==