The Henfenfeld Castle, also called Pfinzing Castle, was built around 1200 and was initially owned by the ministerial dynasty of the von Henfenfelds. In the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the castle changed hands frequently until it passed to the Herren von Egloffstein from 1405 to 1530.
In 1530 Martin I Pfinzing acquired the castle. It thus passed into the possession of an old Nuremberg patrician family, after which it is occasionally called Pfinzing Castle to the present day. At the beginning of their landlordship, Henfenfeld was also caught up in the destruction of the Second Margraviate War and, like many other fortifications in Middle Franconia, was burned down in 1553 when Margravial troops invaded, whose partisan Hans von Egloffstein saw himself deprived of his property by the Pfinzings. The most famous family representative and lord of the castle was Paul Pfinzing (1554-1599). The Pfinzing von Henfenfeld contributed the castle to a family foundation, which was administered by the family elder. They remained the lords of the castle until the extinction of the main branch of the family in 1764, after which the administration fell to the brothers of the widow, a native of Haller von Hallerstein.
Karl Benedikt Schwarz, a merchant from Nuremberg, acquired the landlordship in 1817, whereupon the Bavarian King ennobled him to exercise it. During the 135 years that the Schwarz family was lords of Henfenfeld, the estate underwent many renovations and remodeling, especially between 1826 and 1838, turning the Baroque garden into a contemporary landscape garden.
In the 1920s, the von Schwarz family ran a catering business on the upper floor and, as early as 1929, gave rooms to the NS-Lehrerbund for training purposes. In 1939, a camp for the female Reich Labor Service was established at the castle.
With the purchase by the Deutsche Bundesbahn in 1952 the era of the von Schwarz on Henfenfeld ended. Until its reprivatization in 1983, classes of a federal railway school were held in the buildings. Subsequently, mainly business premises were housed in the facility. In the meantime, it was used again under public law from 1989 to 1995 as a transition camp for ethnic German immigrants.
In the 21st century, Pfinzingschloss has been in private commercial use throughout. The current owner Denette Whitter runs an opera academy in the castle and uses the premises, among other things, for cultural events. To entertain guests, a catering business is run on the first floor.
The current condition of the well-preserved castle largely corresponds to the original appearance of the 16th century plus the castle park newly created in the early 19th century.
References:The Beckov castle stands on a steep 50 m tall rock in the village Beckov. The dominance of the rock and impression of invincibility it gaves, challenged our ancestors to make use of these assets. The result is a remarkable harmony between the natural setting and architecture.
The castle first mentioned in 1200 was originally owned by the King and later, at the end of the 13th century it fell in hands of Matúš Èák. Its owners alternated - at the end of the 14th century the family of Stibor of Stiborice bought it.
The next owners, the Bánffys who adapted the Gothic castle to the Renaissance residence, improved its fortifications preventing the Turks from conquering it at the end of the 16th century. When Bánffys died out, the castle was owned by several noble families. It fell in decay after fire in 1729.
The history of the castle is the subject of different legends.