Nordborg Castle (Danish:Nordborg Slot) is a smallcastle which lies on the southern side of Nordborg Lake (Nordborg Sø) inNordborg on the island ofAls inSønderborg Municipality,Denmark. The castle premises are currently used by Nordborg Slots Efterskole as aboarding school. Nordborg Castle has also been the backdrop for a number of years for Nord-Als Musikfestival.[1]
According toSaxo, Nordborg Castle was founded by KingSvend Grathe (c. 1125–1157) under the nameAlsborg. Hence, it can be dated to around 1150. Alsborg was built while theWends still dominated the Danish coast; its location a few kilometers inland meant that the castle could not be attacked without warning, and the local population had a better chance of taking refuge there.[2]
The first written evidence of Alsborg is from the end of the 12th century. From this, it is known thatBishop Valdemar of Slesvig (1158-1236) was held prisoner at Alsborg between 1192 and 1197.[3]
AfterSønderborg Castle was built at the south end of the island of Als (ca. 1158), Alsborg was renamedNordborg, literally "northern fortress" (compare English "Norbury"). Nordborg was for a large part of theMiddle Ages the property of the king, and was on several occasions a source of income for the king's widow.
In 1571,King Frederick II’s brotherHans the Younger (1545–1622) inherited his motherQueen Dorothea's possessions ofAls andSundeved including Nordborg. Hans was an enterprising man, who in the next 50 years constantly expanded and improved his properties. There was a series of building projects in and around Nordborg Slot.[4]
Upon Hans' death in 1622, his possessions were divided into separate dukedoms, including Nordborg, which went to his sonHans Adolf (1576-1624). Hans Adolf died only two years later and so the dukedom then went to Hans the Younger's other sonFrederik (1581-1658).[5][6]
Nordborg was occupied several times during theSwedish wars, first by theSwedes, then by theBrandenburgian andPolish troops and finally by Swedish troops untilpeace came in 1660.
In 1665 fire broke out in the castle, and it burnt down. Duke Hans Bugislav (1629-1679) went bankrupt and forfeited his estate, which reverted next to August, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Plön (1635-1699). In 1678 rebuilding of the castle began, and at this time the ducalcoat-of-arms was placed over the castle entrance. In 1730, Nordborg was taken back into crown possession. Nordborg had an estate of around 400 hectares, but in the following decades the land was turned into farms and in 1766 the castle was sold to a private owner and some of the buildings were demolished and sold for building materials.[7]
In 1909 the castle was purchased by Nordborg town. It was the pro-German Mayor Klinkers' dream to build a high school, which would be a counterweight for the Danish high schools north of the border. The castle was thereafter restored by the architect Eugen Fink, and in 1910 the castle was leased out to the German high school association inNorthern Schleswig.
After the reunification in 1920 the castle was bought by the merchant Johan Hansen (1845-1928). He established at foundation (Stiftelsen Nordborg Slot) which since 1922 has run the boarding school, Nordborg Slots Efterskole, at the castle.
55°03′32.6″N9°44′54.6″E / 55.059056°N 9.748500°E /55.059056; 9.748500