The site of the present Fortress Marienberg…
742 CE
The site of the present Fortress Marienberg in Würzburg, an inland port situated on the Main River, was once the site a Bronze Age (Urnfield culture) refuge castle.
The former Celtic territory had been settled in the fourth or fifth century by the Alamanni, and in the sixth to seventh centuries by the Franks.
Würzburg was from about 650 a Merovingian seat, Christianized in 686 by Irish missionaries Kilian, Kolonat and Totnan.
The city is mentioned in a donation by Hedan II to bishop Willibrord, dated May 1, 704, in castellum Virteburch.
The Ravenna Cosmography lists the city as Uburzis at about the same time.
The name is presumably of Celtic origin, but based on a folk etymological connection to the German word Würze "herb, spice", the name is Latinized as Herbipolis in the medieval period.
The first diocese is founded by Boniface in 742 when he appoints the first bishop of Würzburg, Burkhard.