English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am asking about the area near Aggstein. I have heard that medieval Lords put chains across the Danube to stop boat traffic and make them pay tribute. I know this did happen on the Hudson River upstream from New York during the Revolutionary War (not for tribute, but for defense). But did it really happen during the Middle Ages? Is there any evidence?

2007-12-15 09:11:26 · 2 answers · asked by Lisa B 7 in Travel Austria Other - Austria

Thanks for your answer, Ines. I am fluent in German, so no problem with German-only info.

2007-12-16 08:04:35 · update #1

2 answers

Have a look here:
http://www.sagen.at/texte/sagen/oesterreich/niederoesterreich/waldviertel/kuenring.html

Stefan Fadinger (Bauernführer) tried to put a chain across the Danube near Aschach (Upper Austria) to block the Bavarian transports.

Also have look here:
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turmbefestigung_Linz
scroll down to "Donauanschlüsse"

So it was more or less common practice - either to collect tolls or for defense.

2007-12-19 02:38:39 · answer #1 · answered by Martin S 7 · 0 0

http://www.stadt-wien.at/index.php?id=burg-aggstein000
it is a legend, i think nobody knows it for sure, the name of the lord is kuenring - maybe you find more information in english about it...
greets from austria,
ines

2007-12-16 07:45:13 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers