The White Lady of Burg Wolfsegg
In the old gothic castle of Burg Wolfsegg in Germany, there is a local castle legend about a White Lady haunting the place. The ghost is supposedly of one of the Countess living there who was murdered by her husband.
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In the old gothic castle of Burg Wolfsegg in Germany, there is a local castle legend about a White Lady haunting the place. The ghost is supposedly of one of the Countess living there who was murdered by her husband.
In the old gothic castle of Burg Wolfsegg in Germany, there is a local castle legend about a White Lady haunting the place. The ghost is supposedly of one of the Countess living there who was murdered by her husband.
Burg Wolfsegg is a wonderful old gothic castle in Germany, built in the 15th century and still standing today in Bavaria. It’s a piece of history and culture that is full of mystery and legends and filled with ghost stories.
This majestic building was once home to German nobility and is one of the few castles that over the years, never was destroyed and rebuilt. The walls still echo the tales of heroism, love, and tragedy, financial trouble and a possible murder. There are stories told around campfires about the haunted old castle— stories of ghosts that roam its corridors and in the underground caves beneath the castle.
One of the ghosts said to roam around the castle to this day is that of the White Lady. There have been tales about her since the 1600s. In European ghost stories, there are often women who are restless spirits that died buried with guilt or shame about something.
At Wolfsegg however, the White Lady is said to be a woman who died in the 1400s. There are many variations to the story today, but one of them is the tale about a woman left to her own devices when her husband was away. To run the castle, she turned to the owner of a neighboring manor for his help in managing the big castle.
When her husband and lord of the castle returned, however, he suspected his wife was having an affair with the man and was overcome with jealousy and rage. The husband ended up hiring two people to murder her.
In another variation of the legend, the husband was even in on the plot of seducing the manager to blackmail him. When the feelings between the two turned out to be real however, he killed her with his own hands.
A legend like this will always be hard to prove, and even harder considering all the different variations of it. The real people behind this legend are thought to be that of Lord von Laaber and his wife. The couple resided in Wolfegg in the 145th and 15th centuries.
Ulrich V. von Laaber and his wife Klara von Helfenstein was struggling with their finances at the start of the 15th century as the owners of Burg Wolfsegg. Although there is not really much evidence to it as the historical records shows that Klara von Helfenstein survived her husband by many years. But the story of the haunting of the castle is very old, and can be found in written accounts back to the start of the 1900s.
The story is about the White Lady though, and according to the castle’s own website, the first written account they have found about the White Lady ghost is from 1952 when it gained traction through travel accounts.
This is not the only castle with a legend about a lady in white haunting the place. Read also: The Haunting of the House of Hohenzollern
From then on the legend about the White Lady and Klara von Helfenstein sped up and the owners of the castle started putting on plays in front of the castle to further drive the legend from the dark corners of the Burg Wolfsegg and into the world.
In 1966, the legend reached its peak when a weekly magazine published an article about the legend inside of Burg Wolfsegg. The castle was visited by a parapsychologist from New York named Hans Holzer in 1968 together with a medium called Edith Riedl.
The medium was contacted by the Lady in White and she was identified as Klara von Helfenstein where she told them about the story that on October 17, 1463, a young man was murdered in one of the chambers known as the Weizkammer and that the husband had been involved with the murder.
Other than tales from the medium aout Klara von Helfenstein and the murder, there are reports about strange light phenomena and strange noises from the underground cave are heard throughout the castle sometimes.
So what reason did the countess have to haunt the Burg Wolfsegg after her death though? Considering Klara von Helfenstein didn’t really get murdered by her husband’s hand, was she rather full of regret about her dead lover then? Or is the White Lady a mystery still not solved of who it’s behind the white vail?