The castle has a panoramic view over the Elbe valley. It has a long-established link to many artists as a Romantic subject. It is currently (2023) run partly as a hotel, taking advantage of its romantic location and atmosphere.[2]
History
Some 19th century records link the castle to Henry the Fowler and dates it from 938 A.D. However, there is no evidence to support this claim.[3]
The original castle dates from around 1200 A.D. of which some of the western boundary walls and entrance gate remain. Archaeological digs found a circular keep to the west, dating from 1220. The castle is first mentioned in 1227 in a church document in Meissen and it is in the control of the Bishop of Meissen.[4]
In 1390 it is controlled by Bernhard von Maltitz and in 1403 Dietrich von Miltitz. The castle remained in the ownership and control of the Von Miltitz family until the Second World War. During this time the castle was badly damaged in the Thirty Years War. As a result, large sections of the inner castle date from the late 17th century.
The castle was again besieged and successfully defended against the Swedish army in 1706 during the Great Nordic War.
In 1783 an accidental fire destroyed the timber built north side of the courtyard. The timber-built south side survives.[5]
For various reasons the castle fell empty during the Second World War. It was occupied by various persons displaced by the war in a hostel fashion and was under state control under the Soviet regime. This continued into the 1950s. Although the castle is relatively large it is far from any city and is not a good area to house workers.
In the 1960s it opened as a museum, but was generally only of local interest in relation to its neighbouring cities. It still had a residential function and an artist community linked itself to the building, also keen to preserve the castle. These included Achim Freyer, Emil Nolde, Achim Heym, Andreas Reinhardt, Karl-Heinz-Schäfer and Otto Walchau.
Through the 1970s and 1980s it was used for civil defence purposes, partly due to its strategic views over the River Elbe.
At the reunification of Germany in 1989 all state functions ceased. It was sold privately.
Since 2007 it has housed an annual festival of Romantic poetry.
^Dieter Stuchly: Archaeological investigations at the castle Scharfenberg near Meissen in the years 1981 to 1983. In: Work and research reports on the Saxon Bodendenkmalpflege. 50, 2008, pp. 307-331.
^Yves Hoffmann: Scharfenberg and the Scharfenberg silver mining in the Middle Ages. In: Messages of the Freiberger antiquity club. Issue 98, 2006, pp. 15-37.