Overview
Neuschwanstein Castle crowns a rugged hill above the village of Hohenschwangau in Bavaria, southern Germany, near the Austrian border. Ludwig II of Bavaria commissioned it in 1869 as a private retreat and homage to Richard Wagner's operatic worlds. Architect Eduard Riedel and later Georg von Dollmann designed a medievalising exterior masking modern steel and brick construction with scenic painting and polychrome rooms.
The Throne Hall evokes Byzantine church architecture; the Singers' Hall stages Grail imagery; Ludwig's bedroom features Gothic wood carving. The king lived there only briefly before his death in 1886 under disputed circumstances. Tourism began almost immediately — the castle that was never meant to be public now receives more than a million visitors yearly.
Neuschwanstein is not medieval archaeology but 19th-century historicism at full volume. Its global fame (especially in German and Chinese search) makes it an unavoidable gap for a heritage atlas tracking what people actually look up.
