Sonnenberg Castle was built around 1201-1203 by the brothers
Henry II (German:
Heinrich) and
Robert IV (German:
Ruprecht), Counts of the
House of Nassau, for the protection of Wiesbaden against the neighboring
Lords of Eppstein, with whom a permanent border dispute existed.
Friedrich I had awarded the Royal City of Wiesbaden to the House of Nassau in 1154 as a reward for their support. Wiesbaden had been a royal city since the reign of
Charlemagne, first mentioned in 829 as an administrative headquarters of a
Königssondergau (Imperial special district). However, the court system for the region came under the dominion of Eppstein. This complicated arrangement, where both houses claimed jurisdiction, gave rise to constant strife between them. The first written mention of Sonnenberg dates from 1208 or 1209 in the name of the first
Burgmann ("castellan") Ulbert of Idstein-Sonnenberg as
Sonnenburch and
Sunnenberc. It was first called
Sonnenberc in 1221. Ownership of the land was initially disputed by the Saint Martin's
Domstift (cathedral endowment) of
Mainz. This dependence to Mainz had been generally unfavorable to Sonnenberg a long time, because four
Archbishops of Mainz in the 13th century alone were from Eppstein, the enemies of Nassau. The dispute over Sonnenberg was settled by a treaty in 1221, in which Nassau obtained the land on which the castle is built as a fief for 30 Marks. Sonnenberg Castle was one of nine castles ruled by the House of Nassau. In 1240, Henry II became the sole ruler of the Nassau possessions. After his death, the inheritance was divided among Henry's sons,
Walram and
Otto. Sonnenberg became the possession of Walram's
Countship of Nassau-Weilburg. In 1283, Walram's son Count
Adolf of Nassau rebuilt the castle (it had been heavily damaged in conflict with Eppstein). The castle was Adolf's seat when he was crowned
King of the Romans on 5 May 1292. After Adolf's death in 1298, Eppstein, with the help of Archbishop of Mainz, Gerhard II, again occupied and destroyed the castle. Adolf's son, Gerlach I, still a child, was saved. (c. 1840)|285pxLater, under Gerlach's rule, peace was reached between Nassau and Eppstein and the Castle of Sonnenberg was expanded. In 1338, Emperor
Ludwig the Bavarian visited the castle, a testimony to its size and security in those years. On 29 July 1351 the King of
Bohemia, and later
Holy Roman Emperor,
Charles IV awarded the town of Sonnenberg rights to its own jurisdiction. As a result, houses at the foot of the castle could now be surrounded by a wall in an overall integrated complex, providing the residents some security. When Count Gerlach died in 1361, his son Ruprecht (from his second marriage), since 1355 Count of the newly established dominion of Nassau-Sonnenberg, inherited the castle. When Ruprecht died childless in 1390, his wife Anna continued to live there. After her death in 1405, the castle returned to the joint rule of the Counts of Nassau-Idstein and Nassau-Weilburg and deteriorated over the next 200 years. However, under Count Philipp von Nassau-Idstein (1558 to 1566), the castle again became a residence. He, too, died childless and the end of the 16th century the castle was uninhabited. Sonnenberg experienced major damage in 1625 during the
Thirty Years' War, so that only a dozen houses were habitable. The castle served as a quarry for the reconstruction of the houses in the valley. In 1672, the city was again devastated by troops of the
Margraviate of Brandenburg. ==Thalkirche==