near Windhausen
Buildings The following are listed buildings or sites in
Rhineland-Palatinate's Directory of Cultural Monuments:
Boppard landmarks • Former Electoral
castle (
Alte Burg), Burgplatz 2 – four-winged complex with two round towers, north wing lengthened,
keep, soon after 1312, altered in 1499 after fire and in the 17th century; on the east wing and on the former tollhouse coats of arms of Archbishops
Karl Kaspar von der Leyen-Hohengeroldseck (1652–1672) and Johann VIII Hugo von Orsbeck (1672–1711) • Angertstraße –
Evangelical Christ Church (
Christuskirche); cruciform
Romanesque Revival aisleless church with columned vestibule, 1850–1852, building inspector Althoff,
Koblenz; expansion and west tower 1885–1887 •
Carmelite Catholic Church (
Karmeliterkirche) and former Carmelite monastery, Karmeliterstraße – originally towerless aisleless church, under construction in 1320, aisle 1439–1444; monastery, plain
Baroque complex, marked 1730; whole complex of buildings • Saint Severus’s Catholic Parish Church (
Pfarrkirche St. Severus), Kronengasse 3 – former canonical foundation church,
Crucifixion group, three-naved gallery basilica, earlier half of the 13th century, quire flanking towers possibly from the first fourth of the 12th century; outside Crucifixion group of the former graveyard, marked 1516 • Town wall – remnants of the
Roman castrum, possibly after 364 until 375, Roman tower; mediaeval town fortifications, first expansion of the Roman castrum about the
Friesenviertel ("Frisian Quarter"), 12th century, after 1327 until the mid-14th century wall building about
Oberstadt ("Upper Town") and
Niederstadt ("Lower Town");
Sandtor ("Sand Gate") or
Eisbrechertor ("
Cutwater Gate"),
gate tower with so-called
Nikolauskanzel ("Saint Nicholas’s Pulpit") and tomb slabs; remnants of the
Bingertor ("Bingen Gate"); south wall preserved in almost original height; Burgplatz 1 and 3 see below;
Säuerlingsturm (roughly "Mineral Water Tower"), in 1906–1908 partly torn down and reconstructed;
Ebertor ("Boar Gate"), hipped
mansard roof, about 1750; tomb slab 1595, coat of arms stone, third fourth of the 17th century; corner of Rheinallee/Bahnhofstraße 2 (see below) 15 m long piece of wall;
Hospitaltor ("Hospital Gate"), originally three-floor gate tower, remodelled in the mid 18th century with mansard roof;
Kronentor ("Crown Gate"), gate tower, two twinned windows, 17th century; second upper floor
timber-frame, 18th century; three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, essentially from the 17th century, remodelled in the 18th century;
Lilientor ("Lily Gate"), marked 1857 (reconstruction) with
Late Historicist oriel construction, 1896 • Am Alten Posthof 2 – post office; stately Romanesque Revival plastered building, 1895; former
Kleines Hospital ("Little Hospital")
"Gotteshaus" ("House of God", a synonym in German for "church"), later
Alte Posthalterei ("Old Coaching Inn"); hook-shaped timber-frame building, partly solid, hipped roof; essentially possibly from the 16th century, remodelled in the 17th and 18th centuries; whole complex of buildings • Auf der Zeil 20 B –
Haus Bethseda; plastered building, staircase, 1858/1859, expansion 1904 • At Bahnhofstraße 2 – town wall remnant on the side of the house on Rheinallee • Binger Gasse 18 –
Gothic Revival winery building, brick, about 1860 • Binger Gasse 21 – three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, essentially from the 16th century • At Binger Gasse 34 – two carved wooden brackets, marked 1607 • Buchholzer Straße 4 –
Haus Sabelshöhe; villa, about 1900; whole complex of buildings with garden • Burdengasse 1 – timber-frame house, partly solid, marked 1681 • Burdengasse 7 – building with half-hipped roof, timber framing plastered, 17th century • Burgplatz 1 – three-floor plastered building, 19th century, part of the town wall • Burgplatz 3 – Hotel "Römerburg"; two-floor solid building, about 1910; part of the town wall • Burgstraße 2 – brick corner building, now plastered, about 1880, Ladenlokal, about 1928 • Eltzerhofstraße 2 – three-floor plastered building, partly timber framing, about 1900/10 • Eltzerhofstraße 21 – Hotel "Zum Römer"; timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, latter half of the 17th century • Eltzerhofstraße 25 – building with hipped mansard roof, marked 1925 • Flogtstraße 48 – brick villa, about 1900 • Hintergasse 3 – stately timber-frame house, marked 1551, 1553, gable and roof from the 19th century • Humperdinckstraße 12 – plastered building, partly timber framing in 17th-century style, about 1890 • Humperdinckstraße 14 – plastered building with low-key gable
risalti, about 1910 • Humperdinckstraße 25 – so-called
Humperdinckschlösschen;
Late Classicist villa, about 1870, from 1897 to 1900 composer
Engelbert Humperdinck's main residence; whole complex of buildings with park • Karmeliterstraße 1/3 – former Hotel "Karmeliterhof"; three-floor double house in
Tudor Gothic style, after 1867 • At Koblenzer Straße 194 –
stucco tondo with allegorical woman figure, mid-19th century • Koblenzer Straße 205 – villa, partly timber framing (brick infill), round tower,
Swiss chalet style, about 1900 • Koblenzer Straße 236 – brick villa with
sandstone framing around brickwork,
Renaissance Revival, about 1900 • Koblenzerstraße 248 – so-called
Königsvilla ("King's Villa"); two-winged Gothic Revival brick building, about 1890; coachman's house, 1½-floor brick building, partly timber framing, half-hipped roof; hearth heating plate, 18th century; whole complex of buildings with garden • Kreuzweg 1 – timber-frame building, mansard roof, marked 1737, slated west wing with tower, 19th century • Kreuzweg 4 –
Weiße Villa ("White Villa"), representative villa; Classicist building with tower, 1875; whole complex of buildings with garden • Kreuzweg/Ecke Rheinallee – so-called ''Schunk'sches Kreuz'' (cross); Crucifixion group, marked 1739 • Kronengasse 8 – three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, half-hipped roof, 16th century • Mainzer Straße 8 – former Saint Martin's
Franciscan Convent; aisleless church, 1766–1768, portal with Gothic Revival sculpture of Saint John; west wing of the former convent building, essentially from the 18th century, altered in the 19th and 20th centuries, north wing from the 19th century; so-called
Hohes Kreuz ("High Cross"), marked 1620, renovated in 1947 after destruction; whole complex of buildings • At Mainzer Straße 15 – plastered villa façade, about 1870 • Mainzer Straße 16/18 – stately double villa, mezzanine, about 1890; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 17 – villa, Tuscan style, about 1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 20 – brick villa, Renaissance Revival, about 1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 24 – Kantgymnasium (school); three-floor two-winged plastered building, Renaissance Revival, 1903–1906, expansion in 1945; two-floor headmaster's dwelling wing • Mainzer Straße 29 – Gothic Revival brick villa, three-floor polygonal corner tower, 1863; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 40 – brick villa, hipped mansard roof, about 1902; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 41 – villa, about 1890; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 46 – Late Classicist villa, about 1875; whole complex of buildings with garden • Mainzer Straße 54 – Late Classicist plastered villa, mezzanine, about 1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Marienberger Hohl 1 – former Marienberg
Benedictine Convent; Baroque convent complex; four-winged complex with tower, abbess's building with columned portal, priory building, livestock building, 1739–1753, architect Thomas Neurohr, Tyrol; park complex • Marienberger Straße 7 – Gothic Revival Villa, about 1905 • Marktplatz –
basalt fountain, marked 1854 • Marktplatz 1 – three-floor, plastered timber-frame house, essentially from the 17th century • Marktplatz 2 – plastered building with rounded corner, about 1860 • Marktplatz 3/4 – no. 3 four-floor timber-frame house, 16th century; no. 4 four-floor timber frame house, partly solid, essentially
Late Gothic, extensively renovated in the 18th century • Marktplatz 5 – "Ratsstube" Inn; timber-frame house, marked 1905 • Marktplatz 6 – three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, essentially possibly from the 17th century • Marktplatz 17 – former town hall; brick building, Renaissance Revival, 1884/1885 • Michael-Bach-Straße 1 – Late Classicist plastered building, corner
bay window, about 1870 • Michael-Bach-Straße 2 – representative building with hipped roof, about 1870 • Mühltal –
Heiligenhäuschen (a small, shrinelike structure consecrated to a saint or saints) with Baroque
Madonna • Mühltal 8 –
Fondelsmühle (mill); timber-frame house, partly solid, towerlike risalto, hipped mansard roof, about 1760/1762; timber-frame house, hipped roof, 19th century; whole complex of buildings • Niederstadtstraße 5 –
Haus zum Heiligen Geist ("House to the Holy Ghost"); timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, essentially possibly from the 16th century, conversion in the 18th century, marked 1732 • Niederstadtstraße 7 – three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, marked 1655; two-floor side wing, partly timber-frame, 18th century • Niederstadtstraße 8 – timber-frame house, half-hipped roof, 17th century; high-water marks, among others, 1683, 1784; in the garden town wall remnant • Oberstraße 58 – stately brick building, after 1885 • Oberstraße 62 – cadastral office; Gothic Revival plastered building, 1903; adjoining wall with portal; whole complex of buildings with Franciscan church and teacher's college • Oberstraße 86 – Hotel "Deutsches Haus"; three-floor plastered building, polygonal corner oriel tower, half-hipped roof, marked 1912 • Oberstraße 90 – rich three-floor timber-frame house with veranda, essentially possibly late mediaeval, radical conversion marked 1615 • Oberstraße 92 – residential and commercial house,
Art Nouveau, 1906 • Oberstraße 115 –
Wasserfasshof ("Water Barrel Manor"), so-called
Arche; two-winged timber-frame house, partly solid, essentially from the mid 16th century, conversion and expansion marked 1623/1624, stable addition 19th century; gravestone • Oberstraße 142 – former
Eltzer Hof; building with half-hipped roof, timber framing, partly solid, plastered, Late Gothic profile, marked 1566; Baroque building with hipped mansard roof, about 1738, with old building linked to the town wall by a walkway; whole complex of buildings, partly on Roman town wall • Oberstraße 147 – timber-frame house, partly solid, hipped mansard roof, 18th century • Pastorsgasse 9 – former Evangelical parish office; ten-axis Early Classicist plastered building, dormer with Palladian elements, late 18th century • Pützgasse 1 – timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, 18th century • Rheinallee – accident cross, 18th century • Rheinallee 19 –
Baroque Revival villa with mansard roof, staircase, about 1910/1920; whole complex of buildings with fence and big park • Rheinallee 22 – Saint Michael's episcopal college; seven-axis plastered building with three-floor decorative façade, Renaissance Revival, 1902–1904 • Rheinallee 23 –
Ritter-Schwalbach-Haus; Late Gothic castle house; three-floor building with hipped roof, staircase, essentially possibly from the 13th century • Rheinallee 24 – former monastery church and teacher's college; long towerless aisleless church, 1683–1686, Gothic Revival Baroque; teacher's college, irregular three-and-a-half-floor four-winged complex, 1864–1868; whole complex of buildings with cadastral office • Rheinallee 26, Seminarstraße (no number) – Rheinallee 26: former
Knoodt’sches Haus; seven-axis plastered building, marked 1778, architect possibly Nikolaus Lauxen, Koblenz, expansion 1896; Seminarstraße (no number): so-called
Templerhaus; Late
Hohenstaufen plastered building, second fourth of the 13th century, integrated into the
Ursuline school as a
chapel in 1896 and expanded in Romanesque Revival style, conversion 1956, three-floor towerlike plastered building with three Late Romanesque double-arcade windows • Rheinallee 32 – Hotel "Zum Hirsch"; four-floor timber-frame house, partly plastered, wooden loggia, about 1900 (partly dismantled in 2009) • Rheinallee 44 – Catholic rectory; three-floor plastered building, Rococo Revival, 1901 • Rheinallee 47 – former orphanage; originally two-floor plastered building, 1863–1865, expanded in 1886/1887, raised in 1901/1902 • Rheinallee 51 – Hotel "Rheinvilla"; representative building with hipped roof, Classicist gabled portal, about 1865/1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Rheinallee 52 – 2½-floor villa, about 1865/1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Rheinallee 53 – 2½-floor villa, about 1865/1870; whole complex of buildings with garden • Rheinallee, near the Ebertor – monument; gabled stele with relief,
artificial stone, marked 1915 • Ritter-Schwalbach-Straße 1 – plastered building, partly decorative timber framing, about 1900 • Sabelstraße 25 – partly timber framing, stained glass windows, rich Art Nouveau décor, about 1910/1920 • Sabelstraße 26 – plastered building, partly timber framing, rich Art Nouveau décor, about 1900/1910 • Sabelstraße 27 –
Berufsfachschule St. Carolus (professional school); originally a villa with park and gatehouse, 1910; castlelike plastered building, staircase, gatehouse, partly timber framing; whole complex of buildings with garden and gatehouse • Sabelstraße 28 – plastered building, rich Art Nouveau décor, about 1910 • Simmerner Straße 12 – brick villa, about 1865 • Simmerner Straße 19 – villa, about 1890 • Steinstraße 31 – timber-frame house, latter half of the 17th century, expansion in the 18th century • Untere Fraubachstraße 1 – villa with residential tower, about 1865/70 • Untere Fraubachstraße 2 –
Villa Belgrano; representative brick building, Renaissance Revival, 1890; whole complex of buildings with garden • Untere Marktstraße 5 – three-floor timber-frame house, 17th century • Untere Marktstraße 7 – four-floor timber-frame house, essentially from the 16th century, alteration marked 1767 • Untere Marktstraße 8 – three-floor timber-frame house, plastered, essentially from the 17th century • Untere Marktstraße 9 – three-floor timber-frame house, partly solid, plastered, 17th century • Untere Marktstraße 10 – timber-frame house, latter half of the 16th century • Untere Marktstraße 24 – four-floor timber-frame house, 16th century, mansard roof from the last third of the 18th century • Zelkesgasse 12 – "Heilig Grab" winehouse; plastered building, about 1800 • Hunsrück-Bahn (monumental zone) – section of the
railway line built in 1906–1908, one of the Prussian State Railway's steepest lines; two viaducts: Rauschenlochviadukt (at rail kilometre 49.4) and Hubertusviadukt (150 m long; at rail kilometre 49.6) and five tunnels: Hinterburden-Tunnel 1 (at rail kilometre 48), Hinterburden-Tunnel 2 (at rail kilometre 48.3), Rauerberg-Tunnel (at rail kilometre 49.9), Talberg-Tunnel (at rail kilometre 50.2) and Kalmut-Tunnel (at rail kilometre 51.1) •
Kreuzbergkapelle (chapel) with
Way of the Cross, south of the town – Stations of the Cross 1851/1852; chapel, 1709–1724;
wayside cross, marked 1760; forest house, timber-frame building, partly solid, marked 1769, expansion in the 19th and 20th centuries; whole complex of buildings • Milestone on
Bundesstraße 9 going towards
Rhens – obelisk, about 1820 • Milestone on
Bundesstraße 9 going towards
Sankt Goar – obelisk, about 1820 • Votive cross on Proffenstiege – basalt, marked 1735 • Wayside cross, Kreuzer Flur (cadastral area) – so-called
Stang’sches Kreuz (cross), marked 1760 • Wayside cross on
Landesstraße (State Road) 210 going towards Buchenau – basalt, marked 1724 • At Jakobsbergerhof 1 – basalt portal, marked 16.., of the former monastery building • East of the Jakobsbergerhof –
Jakobskapelle (chapel); aisleless church, essentially post-mediaeval, conversion in the 18th and 19th centuries;
cast-iron wayside cross, late 19th century; bough cross, early 20th century; 15 border stones
Bad Salzig •
Saint Giles's Catholic Church (
Kirche St. Aegidius), Weilerer Weg – Gothic Revival pseudobasilica, 1899–1902, architect Lambert von Fisenne,
Gelsenkirchen; Late Gothic west tower and quire, 15th century; outside: Crucifix, second fourth of the 15th century; Mount of Olives, about 1480; graveyard: 22 grave crosses, 16th to 18th century; border stone, eagle coat of arms, marked 1607; whole complex of buildings with graveyard and rectory • Am Bahnhof (no number) –
railway station; chevron-shaped slate quarrystone building group, "hometown" style, 1937 • Bopparder Straße – Crucifixion group, 19th century • Dammigstraße 16 – timber-frame house, partly solid, earlier half of the 19th century • Rheinbabenallee 1 – Hotel "Anker im Burgfrieden"; plastered building with flat-roofed porch, about 1925; Crucifix, 18th century • At Rheinbabenallee 15 – coat of arms, marked 1743 • Rheinblick 4 – villa, hipped mansard roof, 1920s/1930s • Rheinuferstraße 2/2a – timber-frame house, partly solid, mansard roof, staircase, marked 1647 • At Salzbornstraße 14 – bathhouse; three-part building complex, Baroque Revival plastered building, 1907 • St.-Ägidius-Straße 6 – Catholic rectory; plastered building, partly timber-frame, Swiss chalet style, 1905 • Sterrenberger Straße – wooden wayside cross, marked 1738 and 1813,
bronze Body of Christ renovated in 1930
Buchenau • Graveyard – graveyard building, 1875; cast-iron graveyard cross, latter half of the 19th century; cross, 1724; J. B. Berger tomb, about 1888, Gothic Revival, C. Berger tomb, about 1888 • Bridge on
Landesstraße 210 – 1824, renovated •
Jewish graveyard on
Landesstraße 210 (monumental zone) – opened in early 17th century (?), 130 gravestones, mainly from the late 19th century and the first third of the 20th century, oldest from 1605
Buchholz • Auf den Gärten 17 –
Quereinhaus (a combination residential and commercial house divided for these two purposes down the middle, perpendicularly to the street), timber framing plastered, earlier half of the 19th century • Heidestraße 27 – former
school; slate quarrystone building, about 1840 • Heidestraße 29 – former
Saint Sebastian's Catholic Church (
Kirche St. Sebastian); Romanesque Revival brick aisleless church, 1892–1896
Herschwiesen •
Saint Pancras' Catholic Parish Church (
Pfarrkirche St. Pankratius), Pankratiusring – aisleless church, 1744–1746, master builder Johann Neurohr, Tyrol, two sculptures, about 1750, sculptor Joseph Kindtgen, Ehrenbreitstein • Im Schiessgraben 1 – timber-frame house, half-hipped roof, oven addition, 18th century • Pankratiusring 6 – former rectory; timber-frame house, partly solid, essentially possibly from the early 17th century, conversion marked 1715, expansion 1930; timber-frame barn, 18th century • Pankratiusring 21 – timber-frame house, marked 1700 • Wayside cross, on
Kreisstraße (District Road) 119 going towards Buchholz – marked 1798 • Wayside cross, on
Kreisstraße 119 going towards Windhausen – marked 1748 • Wayside cross, on
Kreisstraße 119 going towards Windhausen – marked 1819
Windhausen • Schönecker Straße –
Wallfahrtskapelle Zur Schwarzen Muttergottes ("Pilgrimage Chapel to the Black Madonna"); aisleless church, about 1770/1780 • Schönecker Straße 9 – timber-frame house, half-hipped roof, first third of the 18th century •
Schloss Schöneck, south of the village, on the
Kreisstraße 120 extension – mentioned in 1222, Imperial ministerialis Philipp von Schöneck's fief, after the
Eltz Feud (1331–1336) partly held by the
Electorate of Trier, after 1354 wholly held by the Electorate of Trier, destroyed in 1618; terrace-shaped complex on a mountain ridge: only preserved parts are the girding wall with round open-backed towers and the outer bailey as well as two gateway arches on the way in; in the outer bailey former forester's dwelling from 1805; main castle expanded in 1846 and the early 20th century
Hirzenach •
Saint Bartholomew's Catholic Church (
Kirche St. Bartholomäus), Kirchstraße – former Benedictine provostry church, Romanesque columned basilica, possibly begun soon after 1110, nave,
crossing,
bay before the quire,
apse and tower's lower floor from the first fourth of the 12th century; west façade and tower's upper floors from the early 13th century (about 1220/1230); Early Gothic quire; main portal and paradise about 1250; churchyard with grave crosses; whole complex of buildings with provostry • Kirchstraße 6 – so-called
Villa Brosius, former Saint Bartholomew's Parish Church; aisleless church, expansion in the 19th century • Propsteistraße – former provostry garden; rectangle with paths laid out at right angles and with
Box hedges, in the centre a small fountain; earlier half of the 18th century • Propsteistraße 2 – former Benedictine provostry; stately Baroque building with hipped mansard roof, marked 1716; remnant of a fountain complex, marked 1569; whole complex of buildings with church and garden • At Propsteistraße 3 – coat of arms • At Propsteistraße 4 – coat of arms, marked 1664
Holzfeld • Evangelical church, Röhrenbornstraße 1 – aisleless church, 1769, mediaeval tower; whole complex of buildings with graveyard • Jewish graveyard "Untern Budbach", Kellerchen district, in the forest (monumental zone) – opened in the mid 19th century, 15 gravestones from 1847 to 1924
Oppenhausen • Wayside chapel, on the road to Herschwiesen, corner of
Kreisstraße 120/
Kreisstraße 119 – slate quarrystone aisleless church, marked 1850
Rheinbay • Saint Sebastian's Catholic Church (branch church;
Kirche St. Sebastian), Hauptstraße/corner of St.-Sebastian-Straße – slate quarrystone aisleless church, 1897–1899 • Villa Ludwigsruh, southwest of the village – Late Historicist villa, about 1900
Weiler •
Saint Peter in Chains Catholic Church (
Kirche St. Peter in Ketten), Zur Peterskirche – quire, second fourth of the 13th century, aisleless church, latter half of the 13th century, roof frame from time of building;
ridge turret 18th century; whole complex of buildings with graveyard
Fleckertshöhe • Rheingoldstraße –
Saint Anne's Catholic Chapel (
Kapelle St. Anna); Gothic Revival plastered building, 1888
Further information on local buildings and sites Over on the other side of the Rhine stand two castles,
Burg Liebenstein and
Burg Sterrenberg, known as the
Feindliche Brüder ("Adversarial Brothers") after a German legend that arose in the 16th century, and the
pilgrimage centre of
Kamp-Bornhofen with its mediaeval monastery. What follows expands somewhat on the entries in the Directory of Cultural Monuments: • Roman castrum wall – Near the marketplace is the
Römerpark with ruins of the Roman castrum fortifications from the 4th century AD. In the course of renovation work in Boppard's main townsite in 2009, parts of the western Roman wall were unearthed. Renovation work is still incomplete (as at December 2009) • Mediaeval town wall – The Roman castrum walls were still used on into the
Middle Ages. In the 14th century, the town was expanded in the west (
Niederstadt or "Lower Town") and east (
Oberstadt and "Upper Town") and girded the new parts of town with walls with towers. The
Säuerlingsturm was part of the western fortifications. Major parts of the walls were first removed when the railway was built. Even so, many parts of the mediaeval town wall still stand today. • Saint Severus's Church – At the marketplace stands the Late Romanesque Saint Severus's Church (1236), built on the foundations of a Roman military bath. During excavations under the church, remnants of a 6th-century early Christian church were found, with a keyhole-shaped pulpit facility (ambo) and a baptismal font. Comparable baths can be found in
Cologne,
England,
Spain,
Italy and the south of
France. • Electoral castle (
Alte Burg, or "Old Castle") – Standing on the Rhine is the castle built by Baldwin of Trier. Today it houses Boppard's municipal museum. • Carmelite Church – The church itself dates from the 14th and 15th centuries and was formerly the monastery church at the now long vanished Carmelite monastery, founded in 1265. The décor is opulent with monumental tombs, choir stalls and memorial plaques. • Marienberg Convent – The convent was founded as early as 1120. After a fire, it was built again from the ground up (1738). At this time, it finds itself in a very poor state. • Former synagogue – This was built in 1867 and was destroyed by
Nazi vandals on
Kristallnacht (9–10 November 1938). • Noble estates – In the Middle Ages, many noble families lived in town. Some of their houses have remained preserved: Ritter-Schwalbach-Haus (15th century), Eltzer Hof (1566 and 1738), Templerhaus (essentially from the 13th century) and remnants of the Boos von Waldeck estate. • Burg Schöneck – The castle stands on the Ehrbachklamm, part of a local river otherwise called simply the Ehrbach. This is near the outlying centre of Windhausen. It was built in 1200 under Imperial ministerialis Konrad von Boppard. • On the Fleckertshöhe (heights) stands the
Sender Boppard-Fleckertshöhe, an
FM and
microwave radio transmitter. The main antenna-bearing tower in this complex is of a unique construction. It was built as a 121 m-tall hybrid tower with a steel-framework support structure. • Hunsrückbahn – This railway line from Boppard to
Emmelshausen is among Germany's steepest. Among German railway lines still in operation, only the
Rübelandbahn (
Saxony-Anhalt) and the Rennsteigbahn (
Thuringia) are steeper. The Hunsrückbahn is said to be one of Rhineland-Palatinate's most scenic railway lines. The train runs on this line across two viaducts and on the stretch between Boppard and Buchholz through five tunnels. It has stood under monumental protection since 1987.
Natural monuments The
Vierseenblick mentioned above offers a rather obscured view of the Rhine. However, another lookout point nearby affords an outstanding view of the great bow in the Rhine at Boppard. This is the
Gedeonseck. In 2006 in this same area, the
Mittelrhein-Klettersteig, a
via ferrata, was opened. A complete circuit involves eleven different climbs.
Dialect People in Boppard speak a dialect known as
Bubberder Platt,
Bubberder being the dialectal form of
Bopparder.
Platt is a word used to designate a dialect; it does not refer here to
Plattdeutsch (that is,
Low German), for
Bubberder Platt actually belongs to the
Moselle Franconian dialects, and is closely akin to
Luxembourgish. A certain degree of kinship with Rhenish and Hessian speech can also be heard. Furthermore,
Bubberder Platt also features sporadic
Yiddish influences, for until the time of the
Third Reich, Boppard had a considerable Jewish community. Outlying
Ortsbezirke, too, have their own local Moselle Franconian forms of speech. South of Boppard runs the "Boppard Line", a linguistic boundary that marks the separation of speech populations who say
Korf (to the north) or
Korb (to the south).
Regular events •
Närrischer Abendumzug – a "parade of fools" staged by KG Schwarz-Gold Baudobriga 1955 e. V., a local
Carnival club, at 18:11 on
Quinquagesima (the Sunday before
Ash Wednesday); the parade proceeds through the inner town. •
Mittelrheinischer Weinfrühling ("Middle-Rhenish Wine Spring") – a wine festival held along the vineyard paths in the
Bopparder Hamm on the last Sunday in April. •
Bopparder Mai – a whole series of events and small festivals in mid May. •
Bälzer Kermes – a
kermis held at
Whitsun. •
Mittelrhein-Marathon – a
marathon run from
Oberwesel to
Koblenz in June. •
Rheinuferfest ("Rhine Bank Festival") – held on the third weekend in July. •
Niedersburger Kirmes – a kermis held by the neighbourhoods of Upper and Lower Niedersburger Neighbourhoods •
Rhein in Flammen ("Rhine in Flames") – The
Bopparder Hamm is the starting point for the convoy of over 80 ships that take visitors to the site of each
fireworks display on the second Saturday in August. •
Weinkost ("Wine Sampling") – a small wine festival held in the castle's inner ward on one weekend in August. •
Quetsche-Kirmes in Bad Salzig – a kermis held in early September. •
Zwiwwelsmat (dialectal for
Zwiebelmarkt, or "Onion Market") – held on the second Wednesday and Thursday in September. •
Weinfest ("Wine Festival") – held on the last weekend in September and first weekend in October. •
Feuerwehrfest ("Firefighter Festival") – staged by the volunteer
fire brigade on the first weekend in September. ==Economy and infrastructure==