| Krásna Hôrka Castle | |
|---|---|
Krásna Hôrka | |
| Krásnohorské Podhradie, Slovakia | |
Krásna Hôrka Castle, during the reconstruction works after 2012 fire (October 2013) | |
Interior furniture | |
| Location | |
| Coordinates | 48°39′30″N20°36′01″E / 48.658307°N 20.600336°E /48.658307; 20.600336 |
| Site history | |
| Built | since the 13th century[1] |
| Events | 10 March 2012 – fire |
TheKrásna Hôrka Castle (Slovak:Hrad Krásna Hôrka,Hungarian:Krasznahorka vára) is acastle inSlovakia, built on a hilltop overlooking the village ofKrásnohorské Podhradie nearRožňava, inKošice Region. The first recorded mention of the castle was in 1333. In 1961 Krásna Hôrka was designated a National Cultural Monument of the Slovak Republic.[2] It was said to be one of the country's best-preservedcastles. On 10 March 2012 the castle was extensively damaged by fire, due to some teens carelessly discarding a cigarette which set the grass on fire.[3]
The name means "a beautiful mountain" (Slovak:krásna - beautiful,hôrka - a little mountain).[4] Another explanation, unlikely but possible, is a derivation from the wordkras (karst), because the karst is in the neighbourhood.[4]
The castle was built in the 13th century by the Hungarian Ákos brothers[note 1] on atrade route leading fromTransylvania throughKošice toSpiš and today'sPoland.[1] The Ákos family (which later changed its name toBebek) lived in Krásna Hôrka from the mid-13th century to 1566, apart from a short period when the Mariássy family seized control of the castle.[1] In 1578 the castle passed into the hands of [the Hungarian] Péter Andrássy and remained in the possession of the Andrássy family up until 1918 (the year theFirst Czechoslovak Republic was founded).[1]
During 2010 and 2011 the castle underwent renovation and was re-opened to public in April, 2011.[5]
On 10 March 2012, the castle was badly damaged by fire. The fire was caused by two boys who attempted to light up a cigarette and accidentally lit grass on the hill, from where it spread to the castle.[6][7]
The castle building suffered extensive damage. The roof, the exhibition area in the Gothic palace and the bell tower were completely destroyed.[8][9] Three bells in the bell tower were melted by the heat.[10] Initially, it was thought that many of the building's historic artefacts had been destroyed.[3] However, according to the Interior Minister of SlovakiaDaniel Lipšic, "...the vast majority of exhibits remained undamaged".[11]Daniel Krajcer, Minister of Culture, commented that only the upper part of the castle (including collections) had been destroyed.[5] TheSlovak National Museum has stated that 90% of the collections were undamaged.[10]
Hungarian folk balladKrasznahorka büszke vára (The Proud Castle of Krásna Hôrka), traditionally played on atárogató, is inspired by the castle.[12]