Trenčín Castle

The Trenčín Castle (Slovak: Trenčiansky hrad, Hungarian: trencséni vár) is a castle above the town of Trenčín in western Slovakia.

Trenčín Castle
Trenčín, Slovakia
Trenčín castle
Trenčín Castle
Coordinates48.894167°N 18.044722°E / 48.894167; 18.044722

History

History of the castle goes back to the age of the Roman Empire, testified by the inscription telling about the victory of the II. Roman legion at Laugaricio (the Latin name of Trenčín) in 179 AD.[1] The oldest building is a stone rotunda, plausibly founded in the Great Moravian period. In the midst of the 13th century the castle was the seat of the Baron Jakab Cseszneky, who was King Béla IV's swordbearer. Later in the 13-14th century, the castle became the residence of Matthew III Csák, the legendary "Lord of the river Váh and the Tatra Mountains". He gave name to the Matúš Tower, a keep dominating both the castle silhouette as well as that of the town. Within the precincts of the lower castle can be found the water well , also known as the "well of love." Which according to legend was dug by an Turkish prince called Omar, who had great love for the beautiful Fatima, whom he had to redeem by digging a well in the rock. In fact the well was dug by a garrison in the 16th century, it took them 40 years and is approximately 80m deep.

Present

Roman writing on a rock below castle

The castle houses exhibitions of the Trenčín Museum, documenting the history of the region and of the castle – exhibitions of historic furniture, weapons, pictures and other artifacts as well as a castle gallery, archaeological collections and findings. The castle is protected as a National Cultural Monument of Slovakia. In 2006, it attracted about 100,000 visitors.

Further reading

  • Györffy, György. Az Árpád-kori Magyarország történeti földrajza [The historical geography of Árpádian Hungary]. OCLC 7509419.
gollark: Linguistic code-golf!
gollark: Or make it explode. No way *that* can go wrong.
gollark: They could replace the actual sign with a screen of some sort, and have it figure out its location from GPS and display it. That way it'll be useful even if someone steals it.
gollark: Ah, I see.
gollark: Do you mean abnormal or something?

References

  1. Linder, Vladimir (2000). Trenčín Castle. Slovak Heritage and Cultural Society of British Columbia. 8. Slovak Heritage Live. Retrieved 2019-10-12.
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