Fairytale and Saga Days Since 1995, yearly on the last weekend in October, the
Reichelsheimer Märchen- und Sagentage are held, during which the
Wildweibchenpreis (or “Wild Woman Prize”, this “wild woman” being a character in German legend) is awarded. Many
mediaeval sets and costumes are on show to admire.
Regional museum This is housed in the former town hall, Germany’s oldest
timber-frame town hall with the stud bracing called a
Mannform in
German. Exhibition highlights are
mining, typical
handicrafts such as
gingerbread baking,
Gäulchesmacher (woodcarvers who carve horses),
shakemakers and shoemakers along with village school life of yore and the old Reinheim-Reichelsheim
railway.
Schloss Reichenberg Today’s
Schloss Reichenberg (palace) came into being as Richenburg Castle in the 13th century, and had its first documentary mention in 1307. Worth noting is the
Herrenhaus (“Lord’s house”), or
Palas. The
Palas was called the Crooked Building (
Krummer Bau) for its crooked footprint. The castle was owned by an ancient German
House of Erbach. Here on 14 February 1776,
Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck, who later became a prominent
botanist,
zoologist and
mycologist, was born. He was a friend of
Goethe’s, a cofounder of the
University of Bonn and the Bonn Botanical Garden, President of the
Leopoldina for 40 years and Director of the Botanical Garden in Breslau (now
Wrocław in
Poland), where he died on 16 March 1858. Until the mid 19th century, the castle was undergoing continual changes in ownership of various
German noble families. From 1876 to 1924, the castle, now styled
Schloss Reichenberg, was used as a private upperclass boys’ school. Thereafter, the Siefert family from the
Frohnhof took over the palace. They sold some of the buildings in 1963 as a holiday home to
Deutsche Bundespost. In July 1979,
Schloss Reichenberg was bought by the ecumenical community
Offensive Junger Christen (OJC, literally “Young Christians’ Offensive”, but known in
English as the
Reichenberg Fellowship). They converted it into a publicly accessible international meeting and conference centre with a palace café. The upper, older part of the palace, the so-called Crooked Building, is currently being renovated. ==Economy and infrastructure==