About this app:
• The audio tour (for adults) and fairy tale tour (for children) conveniently and free of charge via mobile phone
• Via audio guidance, everything worth knowing is transmitted in 9 languages during the tour through the castle
• In the footsteps of the former castle inhabitants you get acoustic impressions in every room and are taken back to bygone times - Very little disk space required for download (between 12-50 MB)
• Works with your headphones to be able to plug in the smartphone during the tour - so the hands are free to take pictures
• Audio guidance (for adults) available on the app in 9 languages: German, English, Italian, French, Spanish, Dutch, Hungarian, Japanese, Mandarin - Fairytale tour (for children) available on the app in 4 languages: German, English, Italian, Dutch
• Access code will be given to you when purchasing the ticket or from the management staff and is valid 24 hours a day
Let yourself be surprised and download the app for audio guidance with one click.
Simply fairytale-like:
Let yourself be enchanted and experience the history in Tratzberg Castle: At the start of the audio tour, there will be a unique 360° Virtual Reality Tour as a highlight to experience the 500-year-old castle history live. Afterwards, former castle owners such as Emperor Maximilian I, Count Fugger or Franz Graf Enzenberg take turns leading through the rooms and armoury by means of their stories. The story is accompanied by lively tones: fanfare tones in the richly decorated Renaissance courtyard, organ sounds in the castle chapel, whirring spinning wheels in the womens quarters and hunting horns in the hunting hall. At the same time, the children will listen to an exciting fairy tale tour (also available via the audio app) and experience some more surprises.
History of Tratzberg Castle:
Tratzberg Castle was first mentioned in the 13th century and served as a former border fortress against Bavaria. Back then, Emperor Maximilian used Tratzberg as a hunting lodge, but the original fortified castle was completely destroyed in a fire in 1492.
The emperor did not rebuild Tratzberg but exchanged the ruins for a castle owned by the rich silver mine owner Tänzel. In 1500 they built the first late Gothic part of today’s Tratzberg Castle in an unusually splendid, lavish manner and had it furnished with extraordinarily artistically designed marble, wood and iron work.
In 1554 the wealthy Augsburg merchant Georg Ritter von Ilsung acquired the castle and expanded and changed Tratzberg, shaped by the spirit of the Renaissance.
By inheritance, Tratzberg became the property of the well-known and wealthy merchant family of the Fuggers, who further equipped the castle. The splendidly painted inner courtyard and most of the inventory that is still preserved today, as well as exquisite Renaissance rooms, date from this period.
After several changes of ownership, a time followed in which Tratzberg remained uninhabited for almost 150 years. When Franz Count Enzenberg married Count Ottilie Tannenberg, the now almost neglected castle passed into the possession of Count Enzenberg in 1847, whose private residence it has remained to this day.
To this day it is only thanks to the great commitment of the family that the approx. 6,800 sqm Tratzberg, with its 5000 sqm shingle roof, has once again become the epitome of a Tyrolean castle from the 16th century and thus one of the most important art and cultural monuments of the country and is open to the general public for viewing.