The Wolfsbrunnen-Anlage was built in the 16th century as a hunting lodge and pleasure house.
Around 1800, the Wolfsbrunnen-Anlage became a popular destination for the many Romanticists who lived in Heidelberg or visited the city, and they often expressed their enthusiasm for it it in their works.The facility is also home to a diverse amphibian population in which many species are represented.
The gastronomy (Restaurant Wolfsbrunnen) was revived in 2015. Today, it offers about 50 seats and serves a small selection of high-quality seasonal dishes. The beer garden, with its city-typical hearty beer garden dishes, is particularly idyllic.
The Wolfsbrunnen-Anlage is a registered monument.
The following legend is told about the Wolfsbrunnen:"Once, Witch Jetta, who lived on the castle hill near Heidelberg, left her home in an old chapel on a sunny day to refresh her tired spirit with a walk on the mountain. Fate guided her steps across the hills into a small valley, where a dense forest covered the mossy ground. Enchanted by the rushing water and the cool shadows, she knelt down by the spring to refresh her burning lips in the clear waves. A hungry wolf spotted her there and, suddenly bursting out of the bushes with her cubs, tore the prophetess into pieces as she raised her hands to the sky, begging in vain for rescue."
(Badisches Sagenbuch, 1846)