Seligenstadt_-_Torturm.jpg|Steinheim gate tower in the town wall Seligenstadt Einhardhaus 20110120.jpg|So-called
Einhardhaus (1596) Seligenstadt_-_Strassenzug.jpg|Row of houses in the old town Seligenstadt Romanisches Haus (2).jpg|
Romanisches Haus Seligenstadt Pulverturm.JPG|Town wall with
Bollwerksturm Seligenstadt Rathaus.JPG|Town hall on market square Wasserturm Seligenstadt.jpg|Water tower of Seligenstadt Wasserburg Seligenstadt.jpg|
Wasserburg (former abbot's lodge) in quarter Klein-Welzheim Hans Memling Haus Seligenstadt.jpg|
Hans Memling House
Einhard-Basilika Seligenstadt's most prominent landmark and historic building is the
Basilika St. Marcellinus und Petrus (also known colloquially as
Einhard-Basilika) with Saints
Marcellinus's and Peter's relics. Today's structure is mostly
Baroque, dating to a reconstruction on occasion of its 900th anniversary, but the nave of the original three-aisled church built by Einhard is still extant. The massive crossing tower is Baroque, but the two
Romanesque Revival towers flanking the western main entry only date to 1868. The interior is also dominated by Baroque features, such as the main altar, several altars in the transepts, the pulpit and the wrought-iron choir screen which replaced the medieval
rood screen. The silver shrine containing the relics is today exhibited behind the choir screen. Above hangs a Romanesque crucifix. Since 1925 the church has borne the honorary title of
minor basilica, bestowed by Pope
Pius XI. Although the building was heavily modified over the centuries, this is nonetheless one of the largest basilicas with a basic
Carolingean structure north of the Alps.
Kloster Seligenstadt Nothing remains of the original
Benedictine abbey built in the 9th century. The oldest extant buildings of
Kloster Seligenstadt date from the 11th century. The most prominent are from the Baroque period, including the library and the
Prälatur with its
Kaisersaal (emperor's hall). The abbey was dissolved in 1803. It has been fully restored, including the Baroque garden which combined a herb and vegetable garden with a formal park. A museum was opened in the abbey, showing exhibits on the history of the town and the abbey.
Kaiserpfalz Dating to the reign of the Staufer emperors Friedrich Barbarossa or Friedrich II (12th-13th century), of the
Palatium (
Kaiserpfalz) on the Main's banks, also known as the
Rotes Schloss ("Red Palace""), only the Main façade is still standing with double and triple arcades with arches of red sandstone. With a ground area of 47 m × 14 m, this rectangular
Kaiserpfalz was among the smaller ones. Perhaps the Emperor used it as a weekend residence or a small hunting lodge. The first restoration work took place in 1938; restoration work on the south and west walls has been ongoing since 1996.
Other secular buildings From around the same time comes the so-called
Romanisches Haus built in massive stone with great arcades on the ground floor. On the first floor are double arcades with middle column and arch and a blind arcade under the crow-stepped gable. In 1187, the building was the
Vogtei and in 1188 the showplace for Barbarossa's court, which he held there that year. It was restored in 1984, and in the 21st century, cultural events take place here. The town fortification, built in the 12th century and strengthened in the 15th, originally had four gatetowers and six bulwark towers. Of the town gates, only the
Steinheimer Tor from 1603-1605 is preserved; of the bulwark towers, three are still standing. The
Kaiserpfalz’s Main façade was integrated into the town wall, to which also wall and ditch complexes belonged. The greater part of the town fortification was torn down in the 19th century. The town hall at the marketplace was renovated in 1823 and stands out architecturally as the only
Neoclassical building with great arcades in amongst many
timber-frame houses. Two arms stones with dragon’s heads were integrated into the building from the predecessor building, itself documented in 1539. The square tower goes back to the old parish church, which was torn down once the town parish took over the
Einhard-Basilika in 1812 after the dissolution of the Benedictine abbey.
Timber frame architecture Seligenstadt has a great number of historic buildings and
timber-frame houses from the 17th and 18th centuries, some of which are listed buildings. This is why the town is also on one of the nine routes of the
Deutsche Fachwerkstraße (German Timber Frame Road) (
Rhine-
Main-
Odenwald route). Most of these two- and three-floor timber-frame houses are to be found at the marketplace and in rows along the nearby streets (particularly Steinheimer Straße, Kleine Fischergasse, Große Fischergasse, Kleine Maingasse, Große Maingasse and Freihofstraße). Examples at the marketplace are the
Alte Schmiede (“Old Smithy”, no. 13, now a restaurant), nos. 7 and 10, the historic apothecary with the apothecary's emblem with a mortar, the so-called
Einhard-Haus from 1596 with a richly decorated oriel, the house on Steinheimer Straße at the corner of Stadtmühlengasse (1697), Freihofplatz 3 (1567), the little house at Freihofstraße 4 and many others. The timber-frame neighbourhood along Rosengasse is called
Klaa-Frankreich (
Frankreich means “France” in
German), for which there is a particular historical reason: After the
Thirty Years' War, Abbot Leonhard Colchon settled people from a
Wallonian homeland here after the local population had been decimated by warfare, famine and the
Plague. Names like Beike, Massoth, Bonifer, Dutine, Oger and Assian still bear witness to the earlier
francophone settlers.
Buildings outside the town centre • In the constituent community of Klein-Welzheim near the historic abbey fishponds stands a moated palace in the style of a mediaeval castle, albeit with Baroque additions, which the abbot at Seligenstadt had built in 1707 as a summer seat. • In the constituent community of Froschhausen, the former community's town hall has a special meaning. Before it was built in 1939, the former community church standing at the spot was torn down. The church tower, however, was integrated into the new town hall building. Froschhausen's old community core also offers a few other timber-frame buildings. ==Culture==