The Gelmel Castle or Hoogstraten Castle ( or ) is a moated castle in Hoogstraten, Belgium. Legend links its origins to a wooden tower raised by the Viking Gelmel in the 9thâ¯century, but the first stone fortifications date from the late 12thâ¯century. rebuilt it as a Gothic stronghold in the early 15thâ¯century. Elisabethâ¯ofâ¯Culemborg and her husband Antoine of Lalaing turned it into a princely Renaissance-style residence betweenâ¯1525 andâ¯1555. Although fires, sieges and French confiscation destroyed much of its fabric, key Renaissance elementsâÂÂmost visibly the massive gatehouse and corner towersâÂÂstill stand. Used since 1810 for social and penal institutions and now housing a penitentiary school centre, the castle remains state property.
Possibly dating back to the 9thâ¯century, the castle began life as a timber residential tower ringed by a moat fed by the Riverâ¯Mark. Legend credits its foundation to Gelmel, a Viking leader. In later centuries it became a forward bastion of the Margraviate ofâ¯Antwerp. The tower was probably rebuilt in stone at the end of the 12thâ¯century, and in the first half of the 15thâ¯century Janâ¯IVâ¯vanâ¯Cuijk (1360âÂÂ1442) transformed it into a Gothic stronghold protected by two concentric walls and moats. Through inheritance, the castle passed to the Vanâ¯Culemborg family.
The last lady of Culemborg who owned the castle was Elisabeth of Culemborg (1475 â 1555), who was also a dame d'honneur of Archduchess Margaret of Austria. She spent most of her life at the court of the Netherlands, where she was an important and leading figure. In 1509, she married Antoine of Lalaing (1480âÂÂ1540), a nobleman who held various high offices in the Habsburg Netherlands. In 1518, emperor Charles V promoted Antoine to 1st count of Hoogstraten.
Between 1525 and 1540, Elisabeth and Antoine transformed the castle into transformed into a magnificent and luxurious princely residence with the help of architect Romboutâ¯II Keldermans . The complex was a showâÂÂpiece renaissance-style palace: three rings of fortifications with watchâÂÂtowers and drawbridges, an armoury, two chapels, colonnades, richly decorated halls and galleries, extensive gardens and fountains. Next to the castles in Hoogstraten and Culemburg, the couple had luxurious city-palaces in Antwerpen, Brussels, and Mechelen â the main cities of the Netherlands.
After the deaths of Antoine and Elisabeth, the castle and lands of Hoogstraten passed to the Philip vanâ¯Lalaing, the second count of Hoogstraten. The county of Culemborg passed to the Van Pallandt family.
The castle withstood Maartenâ¯vanâ¯RossumâÂÂs siege of 1542, yet its fortunes changed dramatically during the early phases of the Dutch Revolt. Its owner at the time, Antoine II van Lalaing (1533âÂÂ1568), the third count of Hoogstraten, allied himself with Prince William of Orange. In April 1566, at the summons of the prince of Orange, Dutch high noblemen met at the castle in Hoogstraten where they discussed the political situation in the Netherlands resulting in the Smeekschrift der Edelen (). In this document, signatories urged king Philip II of Spain to halt the Inquisition and grant wider religious freedom in the Netherlands âÂÂan appeal that helped set the Eighty Yearsâ War in motion. Two years later the crown confiscated the countâÂÂs estates; part of the castle library was shipped to the royal collections in the Escorial.
Hoogstraten castle was returned to the Lalaing family under the Pacification ofâ¯Ghent in 1576, but calamity soon struck again. Fire in 1581 and a siege during the Mutiny of Hoogstraten in 1603, left it badly scarred; partial repairs followed in 1615, but when the great powers declared the area neutral in 1618 the outer defences had to be razed. Although restoration plans were drafted in the 17thâ¯century, they were never carried out due to lack of funds. The inner castle remained in ruins.
MariaâÂÂGabriëllaâ¯deâ¯Lalaing (1640â¯âÂÂâ¯1709), was the last representative of the Lalaing line that held the County of Hoogstraten as the 9th countess. Inâ¯1657, she married Count CharlesâÂÂFlorentinâ¯zuâ¯Salm (1638â¯âÂÂâ¯1676), who was killed during the Siege of Maastricht. Their son, WilliamâÂÂFlorentin (1670â¯âÂÂâ¯1707), married Mariaâ¯Annaâ¯vonâ¯Mansfeld (1680â¯âÂÂâ¯1724). When WilliamâÂÂFlorentin died two years before his mother, his eightâÂÂyearâÂÂold son, NicholasâÂÂLeopoldâ¯zuâ¯Salm, became heir to Hoogstraten. On MariaâÂÂGabriëlla's death inâ¯1709 the household inventory revealed a castle reduced to a single great hall and barely ten habitable roomsâÂÂno fine furniture, precious artworks, or even fruit treesâÂÂprompting her executor, A.â¯M.â¯Vanâ¯Kessel, to launch immediate repairs and refurnishings.
NicholasâÂÂLeopold's marriage inâ¯1719 to his distant cousin Dorotheaâ¯vonâ¯Salm reunited two branches of the princely house. Under their patronage a tall oak altar dedicated to Stâ¯Johnâ¯Nepomuk was installed in the castle's north side chapel inâ¯1721 (the altar itself has since vanished, though the statue survives). The couple resided at Hoogstraten intermittently untilâ¯1729, gradually restoring a measure of courtly life to the estate. Imperial favour followed: onâ¯6â¯Januaryâ¯1740 Emperor Charlesâ¯VI elevated the county to a duchy, making NikolausâÂÂLeopold the first Duke of Hoogstraten.
Next to Hoogstraten, the principal residence of the princes of Salm-Salm remained the abbeyâÂÂtown of Senones in the Vosges until revolutionary forces expelled them inâ¯1793.
A fire in 1729 destroyed the kitchens. NicholasâÂÂLeopold succeeded his fatherâÂÂinâÂÂlaw in 1738, becoming Prince ofâ¯Salm, Duke in 1740 and Prince ofâ¯SalmâÂÂSalm in 1743. Also, it added Anholt Castle in Westphalia to his holdings. Bridges were repaired (1743) and new ponds dug (1750). After another blaze (1752) the lower court was refurbished as a hunting lodge. Ambitious plans of 1753âÂÂ55 to enlarge and modernise the palace are undocumented, so their execution remains uncertain.
In 1768 a fire gutted the residential core on the inner court; it was never rebuilt. When Prince Maximilian died in 1773 only the armoury and wardrobe are mentioned in the inventoryâÂÂthough the gardens still boasted orange, laurel, myrtle, jasmine and fig trees, and even pineapples. Prince Louisâ¯ofâ¯SalmâÂÂSalm (1770âÂÂ78) repaired the roof and a tower; new furniture arrived in 1774 and again after a restoration campaign in 1782. That year, while the minor Prince Constantine was under guardianship, extensive works went ahead against his wishes: the ruined inner castle was demolished, the inner moats likely filled, and a new wing (dated 1782 on its keystone) rose southâÂÂeast of the forecourt, serving the last resident duchess, Princessâ¯Louise, for about a decade.
The French confiscated the property in 1796, plundered and partly demolished it, then used it as a gendarmerie barracks and a residence for the justice of the peace. King William I lifted the seizure in 1815 and the princely Salm-Salm family regained the estates, but the castle itself remained property of the Dutch state as the buildings were needed for public service or charity. The princely family shifted its main residence to Schlossâ¯Anholt in Westphalia, where it still lives.
In 1808, Napoleon created a shelter for beggars. Initially housed in Mechelen, it moved to Hoogstraten castle in 1810. Fromâ¯1880, the castle was used as an agricultural colony, and, sinceâ¯1931, has served as a penitentiary education centreâÂÂa function it continues to perform today.
Little survives of the original 15th century pentagonal moated castle âÂÂknown as the inner castleâÂÂbeyond the broad moat (once the second defensive ring) and what are thought to be its buried foundations, later reused for the 16th century reconstruction. The complex that grew atop those footings was the work of Romboutâ¯IIâ¯Keldermans, whose mighty gatehouse, flanking ranges and northern corner tower still define the south west wing; they are clearly recognisable in Fransâ¯Ertinger's 1678 engraving.
Over the centuries this ensemble was repeatedly adapted: the northern tower became a dovecote in the 17thâ¯century, the former armoury was turned into a chapel in 1845 51, and the paired right hand wingâÂÂtogether with the southern corner towerâÂÂwas refitted in the 18thâ¯century as a residence for the princely Salm Salm family.
Later additions reshaped the castle into the institutional complex we see today. A south east wing (now the visitorsâ hall) was raised in the late 18thâ¯century, and around 1810 two vast cell block wings to the north east and north west were erected, reportedly modelled on Paris's Hôtelâ¯desâ¯Invalides . The gatehouse acquired its present 19th century façade, while the forecourt service quarters, farm buildings and workshopsâÂÂfirst laid out circaâ¯1810âÂÂhave been enlarged or altered many times since. Together these densely layered structures chart Hoogstraten's evolution from late medieval stronghold to a modern penitentiary.