Castle Viamala

Episcopal Palace

Bischöfliches Schloss
Fürstenau im Winter
The town walls of Fürstenau frame the episcopal castle.

Description

There is hardly another historic town in Switzerland of such dainty proportions as Fürstenau in Domleschg. It looks out from a rocky promontory onto the meadows of the Princes on the right bank of the Rhine. This is what the bishops of Chur called themselves as the former lords of this town and the surrounding estates. In its more recent history, the building served as a boarding house for children who were employed in the Albula spinning mill. The Münstertal Capuchin priest Theodosius Florentini, one of the great social reformers of the 19th century, was the driving force behind the project. After Florentini's death, the building housed the newly founded secondary school from 1871 until it was bought by a private owner in 1876. The buyer was Peter von Planta from the Zuoz line, a shrewd businessman who had retired from the cotton export business he had founded with his cousin in 1877. He remodelled and renovated the castle in 1877 and 1896 and initially had it converted into a hospital. However, this "second country hospital in Bünden" had to be abandoned in 1896, partly due to a lack of staff.

Access

The Episcopal Castle in Fürstenau is privately owned and is not open to the public. The complex is located directly on the Domleschg Castle Trail.

Directions

Public Transport

accessible by post bus

Parking

PPs are available to the north of the town

Contact

Responsible for this content: Viamala Tourism.

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