The Constitution Column (Konstitutionssäule) is a 32 metre high landmark in the village of Gaibach, now a district of the town of Volkach in Lower Franconia in Germany.
The column commemorates the Bavarian Constitution of 1818, in which Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria voluntarily limited his powers and shared them with elected representatives.
It was built by count Franz Erwein von Schönborn-Wiesentheid, who had to give up all rights as prince due to German mediatisation in 1803 but still advocated the idea of a "magna charta Bavariae".
It has a triple pedestal and an observation deck at the top - its overall form is neoclassical and reminiscent of Trajan's Column in Rome.
In 1832 supporters of German unification tried to have a meeting at the column on the anniversary of its inauguration in sympathy with the Hambach Festival and tried to put black-red-gold flags on it, but their ringleaders were arrested.