


A little history
De Haar Castle is probably the most visited castle in the Netherlands, after Muiden Castle.
This Gothic fairy-tale castle we see today however was built from 1892 till 1912 with incorporation of the large
15th century ruins of the original castle.
De Haar Castle was founded in the 14th century on sediment deposits along a blind arm of the river Rhine. It
was first mentioned in 1391. Originally the owner of De Haar Castle was a member of the Van de Haar family, who
as a manservant of the Prince-bishop of Utrecht, had enough prestige to have a fortified residence built for
himself and his family. What this residence looked like was never registered. In 1449 the castle became property
of the Van Zuylen family through the marriage between Josyna van de Haar and Dirk van Zuylen. It probably got
its pentagonal shape after the castle was destroyed in 1482 as a result of the quarrels between the bishop and
the city of Utrecht.
The ground plan at that time consisted of a ragged pentagon with heavy round towers with a diameter of 8.35
meters on 2 of the 5 corners. There were no towers on the other corners, but there was a smaller round tower in
the middle of the back wall, which was used as a dovecot. The entrance was situated in the northwestern wall,
protected by two square towers, 5x5 meters each. Inside this moated pentagon the living quarters were situated
on the southeast and southwestern sides around a courtyard. The present groundplan is shown alongside.
In the 17th century the descendants of Josyna and Dirk became extinct and the castle was inherited by the Van
Stembor family who lived in the Southern Netherlands (present-day Belgium). During 1672/1673 the castle was
damaged by French troops. A female family member married to a Rudolf van Zuylen van Nijevelt and when their son
died childless in 1801 the castle was inherited by a distant cousin JJ. van Zuylen van Nijevelt. By then the
castle had been in a ruinous and desolate state for almost 2 centuries.
In 1890 his son, baron Etienne van Zuylen van Nijevelt, inherited the impressive ruins of De Haar Castle. He
had always been fascinated about his family history and had fantasized about rebuilding De Haar Castle on a
grand scale as a monument of his family history. In 1887, however, he had married the French baroness Helene
de Rothschild (member of the extremely wealthy De Rothschild family), which enabled him to make his fantasy
come true.
In 1892 the rebuilding of the castle started under the direction of the famous Dutch architect dr. PJH. Cuypers
who also built the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and rebuilt Oude Loo Castle.
It's his neo-Gothic interpretation of the medieval De Haar Castle we see today. Cuypers followed the
original outline of the castle and based the layout of the castle as much as possible on what was left.
On other parts he built his views of an ideal medieval castle. The interior of the castle was rebuild in a
luxurious style, it was equipped with electricity and the former courtyard, covered with a large roof, was
turned into a large hall. Also the entrance was relocated to the northeastern wall. A new bailey with an
entrancegate was rebuild on the original foundations.
The castle is now surrounded by a large park but this wasn't always so. From medieval times until 1898 the
village of Haarzuilens had been situated around the castle. The entire village was torn down and rebuild 1.5
kilometers to the west. The village chapel however was rebuild and incorporated in the new park. This park,
which had to be a full-grown park as soon as possible was created by transporting 7000(!) 40-year-old trees to
De Haar Castle from all over the province of Utrecht.
The castle's interior is luxuriously decorated with a large but incoherent collection of valuable antiques from
all over the world, such as a 18th century Japanese palanquin from the powerful and feared Tokugawa family,
collected by the baron and his De Rothschild baroness during their travels.
Although this may not be an entirely medieval castle I do recommend it. The 50-minutes tour shows a lot of the
great aristocratic splendor of the beginning of the 20th century. It's now used as a museum except in September
of each year when its privately inhabited by the Van Zuylen van Nijevelt family.
More pictures!
The castle has its own website at:

Location and contact information
At Kasteellaan 1 in Haarzuilens, tel.nr. 030-6778515.
Open: from 28 May till 2 September all week from 13:00 till 16:00, from 7 October
till 18 November all week except mondays (same times) and for the remainder of
November only on sundays (same times).
Only guided tours and photographing inside the castle is prohibited.
De Haar Castle Links
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