Reinhardsbrunn was part of the Ernestine duchy of
Saxe-Weimar from 1572. Duke
Friedrich Wilhelm I had parts of the monastery rebuilt as a local administrative seat. His brother,
Johann II, planned a reconstruction of the palace, but died before construction could start, however, his widow, Dorothea Maria of Anhalt, initiated some renovations on the site. The main castle building, restored in about 1706 under Duke
Frederick II of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, was rebuilt as a
pleasure palace -
Reinhardsbrunn Palace - in 1827. Duke
Ernest I of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who had inherited the site the year before, built his summer residence here in an English style, surrounded by the first Romantic park in Thuringia. Ernst I was the father of
Prince Albert, and hence the father-in-law to
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. It was not, as has been alleged, at Reinhardsbrunn that Victoria met Albert for the first time. They met first in London in May 1836, though after their marriage (1840) and after Albert's death (1861)
Queen Victoria did visit Reinhardsbrunn in 1845 and 1862. Remains of the abbey church, the last significant remnant of the monastery, was demolished in 1855 and replaced by a smaller
neo-romanesque palace chapel. In 1874, the effigies of the Landgraves of Thuringia, previously located in the Abbey Church, were moved to St. George's Church in Eisenach, where they remain today. In Duke Ernest II of Saxe-Cobourg-Gotha, Albert's older brother, died in the palace on August 22, 1893. The Saxe-Coburg and Gotha family kept ownership until the end of
World War II, after which it came into possession of the
East German state. The house and estate were used for a short time by Soviet
Red Army forces as a military hospital and then for various functions by the government of East Germany. The palace was opened as a high-end hotel, marketed towards West German tourists and dignitaries, in 1961. Listed in 1891 as one of the artistic landmarks of the duchy, and in 1980 as a landmark of national significance by East Germany, after
German reunification the palace was registered in 1992 by the State of Thuringia as a historic monument. Together with its facilities and park, after the
reunification, it passed from the
Treuhandanstalt into the possession of Western hotel companies, then to a Weimar company, BOB Consult GmbH. None of these companies were able to secure funding to restore the property. BOB Consult and the property was purchased in 2008 for €12,000,000 by a Russian investment consortium, Rusintech, in a case of suspected money laundering. Rusintech did not maintain the palace, and it fell victim to decay and looting. The state of Thuringia performed urgent repairs to prevent structural failure, and in July 2018 legally repossessed it to ensure its safety, the first such action in the Federal Republic. Currently, the palace is being restored by the state of Thuringia. == References ==