Spectacular Slovakia - Bratislava
Spectacular Slovakia - Bratislava
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Includes
pull-out map
slovakiatravel guide
SPECTACULAR SLOVAKIA
content
advisor
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Bojnice Castle
The annual
coronation
ceremony
Hronsek
Štiavnické vrchy
Banská Bystrica
How to use this guide 2
Seven day itinerary 4
Slovakia’sTOP 10 5
History 6
Changing Slovakia 12
Personalities 16
UNESCO 20
Sight by sight
Bratislava 26
Bratislava Region 45
Western Slovakia 60
Central Slovakia 96
Northern Slovakia 118
Eastern Slovakia 166
Feature section
Castles 200
Slovak art 204
Folklore 209
Gothic architecture 212
Religion 214
Wooden churches 216
Jewish heritage 220
Spas 223
Wine 228
Beer & Spirits 232
Food 234
Agritourism 238
Animal watching 240
Horses 242
Cycling 245
Rafting 249
Hiking 252
Caves 256
Skiing 259
Aqua 262
Best deals 265
Extreme - heights 268
Speed, army 270
Out of the city 272
Luxury 274
Golf 276
Genealogy 280
War 282
Mines, technical
monuments 285
Industrial tours 288
Economy 290
Basics for tourists
Language
(inside front cover)
Souvenirs 294
Events 294
Travellers’ needs 300
Restaurants 302
Index
(inside back cover)
Pull-out map
(inside back cover)
CONTENTS
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Live your own story of Slovakia
Top Slovak sights
32 travel
feature stories
Pull-out map
of Slovakia
Suggested
seven day
itinerary
Information and
contact details for more
than 450 tourist spots
Drawings of 28
historical monuments
3D aerial drawings of
7 major city centres
17 maps of city
centres and major
mountains
More than
1,000 photos
Calendar
of events
Selection of top
hotels and restaurants
ISBN 978-80-971719-0-2
The Slovak Spectator
Slovak news you can trust
since
1995
sPecTAcULAR sLOVAKiA
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/26 bratislava
1 Slovenská národná galéria
(SlovakNationalGallery)
city map page 27 Nám. Ľ. Štúra 4 0.45 km
/ 0.28 mile (5 min) Å+421 (0)2 2047-6111
www.sng.sk a Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00 Thu 12:00-
20:00 €3.50 (free entry in 2014) e é WC
The Slovak National Gallery
(SNG) is the most important art
museum in Slovakia, managing
around 60,000 exhibits. Its main
Bratislava site comprises a complex
of three buildings: the historical
baroque Vodné kasárne (Water
Barracks), the neo-Renaissance-style
Eszterházy Palace, and the newer
extension by the Slovak architect
Vladimír Dedeček. Opinions over
the extension are divided, with
some architecture experts praising it
as an example of excellent modern
and functionalistic architecture,
while others condemn it for
damaging the harmony of the
historical setting.
The Water Barracks and the
extension known as bridging,
facing the Danube River
embankment, are currently
closed being under extensive
reconstruction. The SNG
promises that after reconstruction
the premises will be a modern
art institution to compare with
anywhere abroad. But in the
meantime, the gallery’s options
for exhibiting masterworks from
its collections as well as temporary
exhibitions are limited to the
Eszterházy Palace and the gallery’s
courtyard.
2 Reduta
city map page 27 Nám. E. Suchoňa 1 0.45
km / 0.28 mile (5 min) Å+421 (0)2 2047-5233 ¯
www.filharmonia.ska for performances from
€5 å é WC
Bratislava’s Reduta was designed by
the Budapest architects Dezső Jakab
and Marcell Komor and built on
the site of a former 18th
century
granary. Construction started in
1911 but was complicated by the
outbreak of World War I. The
building was fully completed some
years later, and the organ was
installed in 1956. The Reduta was
a place for entertainment, shows,
art performances and meetings,
and for many years there was
a cinema Reduta, a restaurant,
a bookshop and a casino. The
building belonged to the city and
after World War II was assigned to
the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra.
Concerts, balls and other social
events continue
to be held in
the Reduta
to the
1 Bratislava W
map A 5 62 km / 39 miles E of Vienna International Airport (46 min) 411,228 Klobučnícka 2, Bratislava Å+421 (0)2 5441-9410 www.visit.bratislava.sk
2.6 km / 1.6 miles E of centre 1.6 km / 1 mile NW of centre 10 km / 6 miles NE of centre January: Slovakiatour; March: Bratislava Marathon; April: Bratislava
pre všetkých (Bratislava – City for Everyone); National Run Devín – Bratislava; GLOBSEC (Bratislava Global Security Forum); May: Days of Open Wine Cellars; June: Bratislava
Coronation; August/September: Craftsmen Days ÚĽUV; September/October: Bratislavské hudobné slávnosti (Bratislava Music Festival); October: Bratislava Jazz Days; November:
Days of Open Wine Cellars; November-December: Christmas market; December: Partyslava – New Year’s Eve Party
Bratislava, sitting on both banks of the Danube and close
to the Morava River, is the first experience of Slovakia for
most visitors to the country. The city, nicknamed Beauty on
the Danube, is the only European capital that borders two
other countries, Hungary and Austria.Vienna is less than
60 kilometres away, making the cities the two closest capitals
in the world. A tram line launched in 1914 between the
two capitals gives an idea of just how close they were at
different points of history, both geographically but
also culturally.Today, there are regular train and
bus connections between the cities.
Going fromVienna’s Schwechat
airport to Bratislava takes
just as long as from the
airport toVienna’s city
centre.
Bratislava, by that name
at least, was born in 1919. Before that, was
known as Pozsony by Hungarians, Pressburg by Germans,
and Prešporok by Slovaks.
Bratislava, a home to different nations, including
Hungarians, Austrians and Czechs, had always been
a major city in the former Kingdom of Hungary and
the Austro-Hungarian Empire, substituting for the
coronations of several rulers when Hungary was overrun
by the Ottomans. Bratislava underwent a major
development boom in the 20th
century and today the
400,000-strong city, including commuters and temporary
residents, is a thriving business hub with players such
as Volkswagen Slovakia, IBM, Dell, Accenture, Swiss
Re and many others.The easily manageable city boasts
a scenic old town, huddled beneath the castle on the
banks of the Danube, dominated by baroque palaces
and condensed, narrow, mediaeval streets. Just as
any city in the former Soviet bloc, parts of the city
are dominated by communist-era housing
developments with the suburb
of Petržalka being one of the
dominant examples.
The Danube River is not
only a picturesque feature
of the city, but it also offers
a getaway from a city centre. For example one
can travel by boat to Devín’s historical castle ruin,Vienna
as well as to Čunovo, with an artificial island which houses
the Danubiana Meulensteen Art Museum. Bratislava is
also home to a number of universities, including Comenius
University, one of the country’s most prominent education
institutions and a major contributor to the young spirit of
the city.
Rubberneck on Panská Street
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/bratislava 27
present day. The building recently
underwent extensive reconstruction
which included the acquisition of
a new organ by Orgelbau Rieger
from Austria, whose instruments
can also be found in the Vienna
Stephansdome and in the concert
hall of the Paris Conservatory. A
courtyard formerly used for parking
was roofed and now provides
another concert space. Note that
the bronze decoration on the
stuccos was replaced by gold, as
per the original plans. A lack of
money during the inter-war years
necessitated using cheaper metal.
3 Hviezdoslavovo námestie (square)
city map page 27 Hviezdoslavovo nám. 0.23
km / 0.14 mile (3 min)¯ ® ä å e
Slovenské Národné Divadlo - Historická
budova (SlovakNationalTheatre–Historical
building)W Hviezdoslavovo nám. 1
Å+421 (0)2 2047-2111¯ ® www.snd.sk a
Sep-Jun for performances from €4 éåWC
The area now known as
Hviezdoslavovo námestie
(Hviezdoslavovo Square) is today
one of the greenest parts in the
city centre. Some 200 years ago,
a branch of the Danube flowed
through this part of Bratislava, but
in 1781 the river bed was filled
based on a decree issued by Maria
Theresa. The empress also ordered
a city wall to be demolished, which
she said was preventing the city’s
growth. The river branch is now
represented by a long, rectangular
fountain.
The square has had numerous
names throughout the years:
the Promenade, Theaterplatz,
and in 1889 it was named after
Lajos Kossuth, a Hungarian
revolutionary. Since 1932, it has
carried the name of the Slovak
poet Pavol Országh Hviezdoslav.
The most prominent buildings
in the square include the neo-
Renaissance Slovak National
Theatre and the US embassy,
which is now heavily barricaded
behind a fence.
In winter the square hosts the
Christmas market and often
an ice-rink.
The neo-Renaissance building
of the Slovak National
Theatre was designed by
the Viennese duo of Ferdinand
Fellner and Hermann Helmer,
architects with more than 200
notable European buildings to their
names. The current construction
dates from 1886 and replaced the
city theatre which stood on the
site since 1776. The building has
undergone several reconstructions
since then, usually to make it
more functional and to meet
contemporary demands, although
a recent project also allowed for
busts of significant cultural figures –
Liszt, Shakespeare, Goethe, Katona,
Mozart – to be returned to the
niches on the façade.
Nowadays, the building is
known as the historical building
of the Slovak National Theatre
and hosts performances of
drama, opera and ballet as well
as balls and other prominent
events.
4 Čumil (Rubberneck)
city map page 27 Rybárska brána/Panská
0.1 km / 0.06 mile (1 min)
Obchodná Bus
station
17 min
Primaciálne
nám.
Zámocká
Zelená
Hurbanovo
nám.
Klariská
Michalská
Prepoštolská
Františ.nám.
Farská
Riečna
Gorkého
Zámočnícka
Jesenského
Paulínyho
Vajanského nábrežie
Kúpeľná
Uršulínska
Štúrova
Škarniclova
Klobučnícka
Zochova
Palisády
Sedlárska
Veterná
Bradlianska
Svoradova
Kamennénám.
Panská
Strakova
Nám. SNP
Rybnénám.
Panská
Ventúrska
Kozia
HviezdoslavovonámestieRudnayovo
nám.
Fajnorovo nábr.
Rigeleho
Heydukova
Františkánska
Navŕšku
Kapitulská
Biela
MostSNP
Kolárska
Dunajská
Poštová
Staromestská
Jedlíkova
Rybárskabr.
Dvořákovo nábrežie Rázusovo nábrežie
Palackého
Laurinská
Mostová
Tobrucká
Drevená
Hlavné
nám. Radničná
Baštová
Nedbalova
Župné nám.
Medená
Staromestská
Staromestská
Medená
NedbalovaZámocká
Podjavorinskej
Vodnývrch
Žižkova
PilárikovaŽidovská
Židovská
Mikulášska
Beblavého
Konventná
Suchémýto
Train
station19 min
BRaTiSlava ciTy ceNTRe
1 SlovakNationalGallery
2 Reduta
3 SlovakNationalTheatreW
4 Rubberneck
5 Old Town Hall W
6 Primate’s Palace
7 Nedbalka Gallery
8 Main Square W
9 Jesuit church
10 Franciscan church W
11 Michael’s Gate W
12 Mirbach Palace
13 Pálffy Palace
14 city walls
15 Kapitulská Street
16 St Martin’s cathedral W
17 Bratislava castle W
18 HouseoftheGoodShepherd
19 SNP Bridge N
17
1
2
3
4
5 6
7
8
9
13
14
15
16
18
19
10
11
12
Slovak National
Theatre
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/11
13
15
16
28 bratislava
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5
9
10
12
4
3
BRaTiSlava ciTy ceNTRe
3 SlovakNationalTheatreW
4 Rubberneck
5 Old Town Hall W
8 Main Square W
9 Jesuit church
10 Franciscan church W
11 Michael’s Gate W
12 Mirbach Palace
13 Pálffy Palace
15 Kapitulská Street
16 St Martin’s cathedral W
bratislava 29
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/30 bratislava
MuseuM of
viticulture
The museum presents
a history of Bratislava’s
wine-growing culture,
from the vineyards
through production, to
the bottle.
5 Stará radnica (OldTownHall)W
city map page 27 Primaciálne námestie 3 / Hlavné námestie Å+421
(0)2 5910-0847 G www.muzeum.bratislava.ska Tue-Fri 10:00-
16:30 Sat-Sun 11:00-17:30 €6 (bulk) åé(excluding Old
Town Hall Tower) WC
The OldTown Hall, which dominates
Bratislava’s Hlavné námestie (Main Square),
is a complex of historical buildings dating
from the 13th
century. Its current appear-
ance is the result of development spanning
centuries.
The oldest section is the early gothic
edifice belonging to the Jacobus’ House,
which served as a town hall in the 14th
century. The city council gradually bought
neighbouring buildings and re-developed
and extended the complex in Renais-
sance, baroque and neo-gothic styles. The
complex formerly housed mayoral offices,
accommodation for town guards, an
armoury and a prison.
Nowadays the OldTown Hall, with
preserved historical architecture and
decoration, is square-shaped, around a
courtyard in which various cultural events are
held. The tower affords a view over the Main Square
and all of the OldTown.
The town hall houses the Bratislava City Museum, which opened
in 1868 and is the oldest continually operating museum in Slovakia.Today
it is spread across the OldTown Hall and the adjoining Apponyi Palace, the
former home of Count Apponyi, which was built in 1761-62. The museum
houses three permanent exhibitions focusing on city history, viticulture and
a Period Rooms Museum, which provides an insight into the lives of the
Bratislavan aristocracy from the 18th
-19th
centuries.
Period rooMs
MuseuM
The rooms of the apponyi Pa-
lace are furnished to resemble
the interiors of noble town
houses through Bratislava’s
history, featuring restored wall
paintings, interior architecture
and furniture.
city History
MuseuM
The Old Town Hall houses
an exhibition of the history of
Bratislava from pre-history to the
present day.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/700322
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Bratislava
~goes~
classical
NEW PORTAL FOR TOP CLASSICAL
PERFORMANCES IN BRATISLAVA
www.bagoclassical.sk
POWERED BY
NEW PORTAL FOR TOP CLASSICAL
PERFORMANCES IN BRATISLAVA
www.bagoclassical.sk
WWW.BAGOCLASSICAL.SK
700322
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/bratislava 33
6 Primaciálny palác(Primate’sPalace)
city map page 27 Primaciálne námestie 1 Å+421 (0)2 5935-6394
¯a Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30 €3 åé WC
The classicist Primate’s Palace, commissioned in the late
18th
century for Archbishop József Batthyányi, is consid-
ered to be one of the most beautiful palaces in Bratislava.
The first occupant is recalled by the Batthyányi
coat of arms and hat, made from iron and
weighing 150 kilogrammes, which can still be
seen at the top of the tympanum.
The palace’s splendid Mirror Hall, which
extends over two floors, has witnessed sev-
eral important historical events including
the signing of theTreaty of Pressburg on December 26,
1805, which followed Napoleon’s triumph in the Battle of
Austerlitz. The event is commemorated by a board located
near the entrance to the palace.
The city council bought the palace at the beginning of the
20th
century and, it currently serves as the seat of
Bratislava’s mayor, a place for meetings
of the city council, and for
various special
meetings and negotiations. Ordinarily, visitors can only
see certain rooms of the palace, including the Mirror Hall,
but they may also visit St Ladislaus’s Chapel, in the western
part of the palace, during masses and other special occa-
sions. One of the most precious collections owned by the
city comprises six late Renaissance English tapestries – the
Mortlake tapestries – which date from the beginning
of the 17th
century. The tapestries were found
during the reconstruction of the palace in
1903. (Some sources falsely report that they
were found in the palace’s chimneys.) Similar
tapestries, depicting the tragic love story
of Hero and Leander can be seen in the
residence of the Swedish royal family in
Stockholm.
The Fountain of St George in the inner courtyard of the
palace depicts the famous tussle with the dragon and,
according to legend, symbolises the efforts of the Catholic
Church to resist the Reformation. The Primate’s Palace, in
particular its Mirror Hall, is often used for marriages
or concerts.
tHe fountain of
st GeorGe
in the Slovak version of the St George
legend, the brave knight saved the virgin
Dúbravka from the dragon, gaining her
hand in marriage as a reward.
renaissancetaPestries
The tapestries are the work of the english royal
manufacturer in Mortlake, near london.
The chapel of St ladislaus is easily missed. although
it is part of the 18th
century Primate’s Palace and its
impressive space stretches through each of its storeys,
there are no exterior signs of a chapel, not even a
tower. The classicist-style chapel was established by
archbishop József Batthyányi in 1780 with an interior
ceiling decorated by paintings probably by the austrian
artist a. F. Maulbertsch. The chapel continues to serve
its original purpose and holy masses are held here
regularly (Sun 8:30).
cHaPel
of st ladislaus
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/36 bratislava
with crypt that was built in
the 14th
century by Ján, son of
Bratislava’s then a mayor Jakub. It
became the funeral chapel for the
mayoral family. Reconstructed in
1831, the chapel is now one of the
most significant works of gothic
architecture in Slovakia. New
residential wings of the monastery
were added during the 17th
and
18th
centuries. The main altar
representing the annunciation was
constructed between
1720 and 1730.
Another
chapel was
added to the
church in 1708,
dedicated to Santa
Maria di Loreto,
containing a statue of
the Black Madonna with
Jesus.
The church also houses a rare relic:
the torso of Saint Reparat, who
was a 4th
century Christian deacon
from Italy. Reparat died a martyr
in 353 and had his tongue cut out
and his right hand cut off. He was
buried in Rome until 1769, when
his body was moved to Bratislava at
the request of the Franciscan friar
Eugen Kósa.
Today the church and monastery
with garden belong to Franciscan
monks and mass is celebrated every
day in both Slovak and Hungarian.
11 Michalská brána (Michael’sGate)W
city map page 27 Michalská 22 0.26 km
/ 0.16 mile (3 min) Å+421 (0)2 5443-3044 G
www.muzeum.bratislava.ska Tue-Fri 10:00-17:00
Sat-Sun 11:00-18:00 €4.30 e
At one time, there would have
been four main gates through solid
city fortifications into what is now
Bratislava’s OldTown. Michael’s
Gate, built at the end of the
13th
century, is the only one that
remains today. In the past, Michael’s
Gate had a drawbridge, portcullis,
and heavy wooden doors. It is now
most notable for its gothic tower,
which was extended to
its present height
in the mid-18th
century and
has a sculpture
of St Michael
standing on
the top. Its
name is derived
from St Michael’s Church
and a settlement in a suburb
outside the gate. Nowadays
the gate houses the Museum of
Weapons andTown Fortification
and climbing the tower offers a
view over the old city. Beneath
Michael’sTower is the so-called
zero kilometre with marks showing
the distances from Bratislava to 29
major cities around the world.
12 Mirbachov palác (MirbachPalace)
city map page 27 Františkánske nám. 11
0.15 km / 0.09 mile (2 min) Å+421 (0)2 5443-
1556 www.gmb.ska Tue-Sun 11:00-18:00
€4 e¯WC
Mirbach Palace is one of the
best preserved pieces of original
architecture from old Pressburg,
named after its last owner Emil
Mirbach. The palace today
houses the Bratislava City Gallery
and is a fine example of rococo
architecture. It was built on the
site of buildings first mentioned
in 1459, as Curia Civitatis or
Weiter Hof but a wealthy brewer
named Michael Spech had the
old buildings torn down and
built the palace we see today
between 1768-70. Spech sold
the palace after its completion,
and it had a number of owners,
including Koloman Nyáry, whose
beautiful coat of arms decorates
the tympanum in the upper
central part of the façade. On the
palace’s patio is a fountain with a
sculpture of the Greek god Triton
and a nymph by Viktor Tilgner.
The gallery showcases a permanent
exhibition of central European
baroque painting and sculpture as
well as ever-changing temporary
exhibitions, plus numerous concerts
and recitals.
13Pálffyhopalác(PálffyPalace)
citymappage27Panská190.28km/0.17
mile(3min)Å+421(0)25443-3627www.gmb.sk
aTue-Sun11:00-18:00€4eWC
Pálffy Palace offers a thorough
overview of the architectural
styles and historical phases which
marked Bratislava’s developments.
The basement holds evidence of
Celtic settlements from the 1st
century AD, while the Roman
period can be traced through
secondary building materials in
the preserved early mediaeval
walls from the 13th
century.
Michael’sGateFranciscanchurch
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Excavations have also revealed
the basis of a gothic palace with
a chapel in the basement and a
stellar vault from the 15th
century
on the first floor of the building.
The Slavonic period left its traces
in the basement, where four
graves from the 9th
and mid-10th
centuries have been discovered.
Other building alterations
date from the 17th
and the 19th
centuries.
The Pálffy family took ownership
of the palace in the 18th
century.
After the death of the last owner,
count János Pálffy, who was
a philanthropist, supporter
and collector of art, the palace
was assigned to the Bratislava
City Gallery. Today it holds
permanent exhibitions of gothic
table painting and sculpture and
central European painting and
sculpture of the 19th
century.
14 Hradby (city walls)
citymappage27 Staromestská 0.5 km /
0.31 mile (7 min)a exterior views only
In years past, only so-called royal
towns enjoyed the privilege
of having fortifications, and
Pressburg obtained this right in
1297. The city walls encircled
the relatively small area of the
current Old Town, while the
castle had its own fortification
system. What initially helped
the town to thrive behind the
protection of thick stone walls
and a moat later hampered its
development, so Empress Maria
Theresa permitted demolition of
the city walls in 1775 to allow
the town to grow.
Relatively little of the mediaeval
fortification system remains
today, including only one of the
original four gates, St Michael’s
Gate, St Michael’s Bridge,
the barbican and the
moat. The
biggest section of preserved walls
is next to St Martin’s Cathedral,
whose façade used to form part
of the fortification. That is the
reason there is no entrance to the
cathedral from this side. Some
city walls on the north side of
the cathedral became the back
walls of the houses in the Jewish
quarter. They were eventually
destroyed in the 1960s, along
with the rest of the area, during
the large-scale rebuilding.
15 Kapitulská ulica (KapitulskáStreet)
citymappage27 Kapitulská 0.4 km /
0.25 mile (5 min)
Kapitulská Street is one of
the oldest thoroughfares in
Bratislava and has
existed since
at least 1204,
when a canonry
relocated there
from the castle
hill. St Martin’s
Cathedral is also located at one
end, ensuring the street’s great
importance.
City walls built in the 14th
century separated Kapitulská
Street from the castle complex
and the street earned the
nickname cvinger, meaning
the street behind the walls.
It has also remained largely
untouched, without shops, cafés
or restaurants, to this day. Most
of the buildings along the street
are the property of the Catholic
Church and have resisted
development.
Fifteen buildings on Kapitulská
are on the list of cultural and
historical monuments, including
two palaces, the theological
college (Collegium Emericanum)
and some burgher houses.
However a number of them are
waiting for reconstruction and
one of the palaces, the Eszterházy
Palace is the biggest ruin in
Bratislava.
a view of the picturesque Kapitulská Street in the Old Town
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/42 bratislava
18 Dom u dobrého pastiera
(House of the Good Shepherd)
city map page 27 Židovská 1
0.65 km / 0.4 mile (9 min)
Å+421 (0)2 5441-1940 G
www.muzeum.bratislava.sk a
Tue-Fri 10:00-17:00 Sat-Sun
11:00-18:00 €2.30 ä
e WC
The House of the
Good Shepherd is
among the most
beautiful rococo-
style buildings in central
Europe, and is one of few
preserved buildings of the old
settlement around Bratislava
Castle. It was named after the
statue of Christ, the Good
Shepherd, which stands in a niche
on its corner.
The four-floor house was built
between 1760-65, in the shape of
a trapezium, with an extremely
narrow frontal face; the width
of one room and staircase. The
bottom part was used for trade
and craft activities, while the upper
served for accommodation.
The House of the Good
Shepherd has undergone several
reconstructions. In addition to
changes to the interior, there have
been some modifications of the
exterior, including the addition
of white louvre windows. After
a fire in 1913 the windows
were substituted for ones with
glass wings. The building now
houses the Museum of Clocks,
an exhibition of more than 60
historical timepieces from the end
of the 17th
century to the end of
the 19th
century.
19 Most SNP
(Bridge of the Slovak National Uprising)
city map page 27 Most SNP0.7-1.1 km /
0.43-0.68 mile (8-13 min) 3.5 km (4 min)
Most SNP (No. 4, 6, 28, 29, 30, 37, 50, 70, 82,
88, 91, 133, 191, 901 - regional bus to Hainburg,
AT) Å+421 (0)2 6252-0300 a Observation deck
& bar Mon-Sun 10:00-23:00; restaurant
Mon-Sun 12:00-23:00 €6.5 (lift
to observation deck) ä e é
(upon request; access only to the
restaurant/bar) WC
The construction of
the iconic cable-stay
bridge suspended
over the Danube,
between 1967-72,
destroyed significant
sections of the Old
Town and the former
Jewish quarter and cut
the castle away from the city.
Originally named after the Slovak
National Uprising (SNP), the
bridge was officially renamed the
New Bridge between 1993-2012,
reflecting the popular name for
it among city residents. But it
officially reverted back to its
original name in 2012.
The only pylon of the bridge
is topped with a
pod in the shape
of a flying saucer,
and houses
a restaurant
85 metres in
the air.
The original
concept was
that the bridge should resemble
the driver of a carriage, with the
steel cables representing reins
and the pylon the driver with a
hat. Its actual appearance is best
reflected in its colloquial name:
the UFO bridge.
There is an observation deck
above the restaurant offering
360° views across the city and
into Austria, made accessible to
the public after the fall of the
communist regime.
Slavín
Na Slavíne 2 km / 1.2 miles (30 min)
1.8 km / 1.1 miles (4 min) Búdková (No. 41,
147, 203, 207)a non-stop free
The Slavín monument remembers
the lives of the 6,845 Soviet
soldiers who died during the
liberation of Bratislava in April
1945, many of whom are buried
in six mass and 278 individual
graves.
The monument was designed
by the Slovak sculptor and
architect Ján Svetlík and was
built between 1957-60. It was
officially unveiled on April 4,
1960, the 15th
anniversary of
the liberation. On the same day
every year since, representatives
of the Slovak government and the
Russian embassy lay wreaths to
commemorate the victims.
The central and dominant section
of Slavín is a ceremonial hall tiled
with marble, which is surrounded
by a monumental colonnade. The
entrance door is decorated with
a bronze relief by Rudolf Pribiš.
Above the ceremonial room there
is a monumental granite pillar,
towering 39.5m, and topped by
an 11m-tall sculpture, designed
by Alexander Trizuljak
depicting a soldier carrying
a flag and crushing the Nazi
swastika beneath his boot.
A list of Slovak towns
liberated by the Red
Army adorn the walls of
the memorial’s basement.
The monument is
surrounded by a park
containing trees from
various parts
of the former
Soviet Union.
Slavín offers
spectacular views
over major parts
of Bratislava, including the
Bratislava Castle.
chatam Sófer Memorial
Nábrežie armádneho generála Ludvíka Svobodu
24 1.8 km / 1.1 miles (22 min) 2.1 km /
1.1 miles (3 min) Chatam Sófer (No. 4, 6, 28,
29, 30, 31, 39) Å+421 (0)2 5441-6949 G
www.chatamsofer.sk a Mon-Fri, Sun (except
Jewish holidays) booking necessary at +421 (0)948
554-442 (8:00-17:00) €6
The Chatam Sófer memorial is a
Jewish burial shrine built over the
graves of prominent rabbis and
scholars, including that of Chatam
Sófer himself. Sófer (1762-1839),
whose original name was Moshe
Schreiber, is one of orthodox
Judaism’s most significant scholars,
described by www.chatamsofer.sk as
“world renowned for his comments
on theTalmud andTora, and the
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/bratislava 43
founder of conservative Pressburg’s
yeshiva, one of the most prominent
centres of traditional Jewish learning
in Europe”.
This is the sole remaining part of
the Jewish cemetery used until 1847
that was destroyed in 1943 during
construction of the nearby tunnel.
The current memorial is a result
of an extensive redevelopment of
the site from 2000-02 – a project
by the Slovak architect Martin
Kvasnica, who followed the strict
requirements of the halakhah
(Jewish law) when designing the
monument. The memorial, which
is a pilgrimage destination for
many Jews from around the world,
was opened in 2002 on the 240th
anniversary of Chatam Sófer’s birth.
eurovea W
Pribinova1.2km/0.75mile(15min)
2.7km/1.7miles(4min) NovéSNDor
Šafárikovonám.(No.28,133,801,X13or2,4,6,7,
78,95)Å+421(0)22091-5000www.eurovea.com
aMon-Sun10:00-21:00(shops);Mon-Sun10:00-
23:00(restaurants/bars)¯®éäeWC
Eurovea is a development of shops,
and leisure and entertainment
areas, on the north bank of the
Danube near the historical city
centre and next to the new building
of the Slovak National Theatre.
It has become a popular site for
Bratislavans since its opening
in 2010, thanks to a generously
designed public space that slopes
down to the river. The complex was
designed by the Slovak architects
Marek Varga, Miroslav Vrábel and
Branislav Kaliský and consists of the
five-star Sheraton Bratislava Hotel,
apartments, as well as airy retail
premises and an office complex.
A monumental bronze statue
of the Slovak statesman Milan
Rastislav Štefánik occupies a central
square with a lion standing atop a
27-metre-high plinth.
Modrýkostolík(Bluechurch)W
Bezručova 2 0.9 km / 0.56 mile (11 min)
3 km / 1.9 miles (6 min)
Å+421 (0)2 5273-3573a Mon-Sun 8:00-19:00
(entrance hall) U Mon-Sat 7:00, 18:00; Sun 8:00,
9:30, 11:00, 18:00 voluntary
St Elizabeth’s Church, commonly
known as the Blue Church, is one
of the few examples of art nouveau
architecture in Bratislava. It was
built between 1909-13 according
to plans by the Hungarian architect
Edmund Lechner and was
initially intended to be a chapel
for students from the nearby
high school. It is dedicated to St
Elizabeth of Hungary, daughter
of King Andrew II of the Árpád
family, who was probably born
in the Bratislava Castle in 1207.
Its familiar name is
drawn from the colour
that dominates both its
interior and façade: it is
decked in a pastel blue
mixed with white
elements, and
www.hotelbaronka.sk l +421/2/44872324 l recepcia@hotelbaronka.sk
Gastronomy
The restaurant of the Barónka**** Hotel
offers local and international cuisine
in a friendly environment with a nice
atmosphere. Guests have at their disposal
a restaurant (90 seats), a wine bar (70
seats), an exclusive winter garden (70
seats) and a summer patio (65 seats).
Thanks to the cosy ambience, as well as
the kind and highly-professional staff, the
Barónka**** Hotel is a popular place for
organising weddings.
Ideal venue for corporate events or trainings
The Barónka****
Hotel has two
modern congress
halls with a capacity
of 70 and 200 seats,
and three lounges
suitable for organising
any congresses,
conferences, trainings
or workshops.
Accomodation
The four-star Barónka Hotel offers
guests a wide range of services and
accommodation in 91 four- and
three-star category rooms. Guests
can choose from single-bed,
double- and twin-bed rooms, suites
in the “standard” and “business”
categories, and also a room for the
disabled. The stylishly furnished
rooms come with air conditioning,
a safe and a mini-bar. Breakfast and
access to the wellness centre are
included in the price. The hotel can
satisfy not just individual clients, but
also big groups of tourists
with its capacity.
Hotel Baronka.indd 1 6. 9. 2014 19:13:24
SP013302/001
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/44 bratislava
patterned with flowers and leaves.
The church remains in use today
and is a popular site for wedding
ceremonies.
Zlaté Piesky (lake)
Zlaté Piesky 10 km / 6 miles (19 min)
Zlaté piesky (No. 4, 53, 56, 57, 65) Å+421
(0)2 4425-7018 non-stop €2 (admission fee
only during summer season Jun 24-Sep 1: Mon-Sun
9:00-18:00) WC
It costs €2 to access this well-known
Bratislava lake, close to the airport.
It is open long hours (9:00-18:00)
during the summer season) and
is well served by restaurants and
refreshment counters. It is possible to
rent a paddle boat or water bikes or
to play tennis here. The lake is easily
accessible by public transport: take
tram 4 to the end of the line, turn
right, cross the street, and you are
there. The nearby Shopping Palace
mall provides further shopping and
dining opportunities. Zlaté Piesky
also offers water-skiing as well as
free access to an unofficial nudist’s
bathing beach on the eastern shore.
2 ČunovoW
Danubiana Meulensteen art Museum
pages 204-208
action Park page 270
White Water area pages 249-251
3 Hrad devín
(DevínCastle)W
Muránska 11 km / 7 miles (12 min)
Hrad Devín (No. 29) Å+421 (0)2 6573-0105 G
www.muzeum.bratislava.sk a Nov-Mar: Mon-Sun
10:00-15:30 (entry possible only in good weather);
Apr, Oct: Tue-Sun 10:00-16:30; May-Sep: Tue-Fri
10:00-17:30, Sat-Sun 10:00-18:30 €3 é e
(partial access; except castle tower) WC
The Devín Castle, perched on a
rocky cliff at the confluence of the
Danube and Morava Rivers, is one
of the oldest castles in Slovakia and
one of its best known. Its perfect
strategic location has attracted
settlers since prehistoric times, and
it has played an important role in
the country’s military and cultural
development. It remains a vivid
symbol of Slovakia’s history.
The first written record of Devín
dates from 864, when a place
named Dowina is mentioned in
documents belonging to Fulda
monastery. At that time it was
a border fortress and one of the
political and administrative centres
of the Great Moravian Empire.
However, the oldest artefacts found
on the site date from the Stone Age,
when the cliff was settled by various
tribes. The Celts arrived and settled
in the region in the 1st
century AD,
followed by the Romans. Some
ruins of Roman buildings have been
found here.
After the fall of the Great Moravian
Empire, the owners of the castle
changed frequently and each
gradually developed and extended
it. In the 15th
century the castle
became the property of the Garay
family, who built a palace inside the
fortifications and modernised the
walls around. Between 1527 and
1605, it was home to the Báthorys,
who built a new palace wing in the
area of the middle castle and who
transformed the whole complex
into the Renaissance style. The
castle then became the property of
the Pálffys, who were the last noble
family to occupy it. Devín was no
longer used as a residence from the
18th
century, and subsequently it
began to deteriorate. Its decline was
complete in 1809 when Napoleonic
armies besieged it, and blew up
large portions.
As the Slovak nation gradually came
into being in the first half of the
19th
century, however, the Devín
Castle became a symbol of the
national awakening, and some of its
fame was restored. Various sensitive
reconstruction projects throughout
the 20th
century have helped to offer
the contemporary visitor a sense of
the place’s former majesty.
When visiting the castle ruins
nowadays, visitors can see pieces of
preserved Roman architecture plus
remains of the Báthory and Garay
palaces. The gothic tower palace also
peaks above the whole castle area,
which is still circled by fortification
walls. Visitors can see the remains
of the Great Moravian church
from the 9th
century, and although
only its foundations marked by
stones can be seen nowadays,
there is a model depicting how the
rectangular church with a trefoil
apse may have looked. The whole
area offers an excellent view over the
Danube and into Austria.
Devín’s most iconic feature is the
so-called Virgin Tower, a small late
Renaissance tower at the castle’s
extremity, jutting out over the river
path. It is the setting for numerous
myths and legends, some of which
are detailed in the museum about
the castle’s history that can be
found in its best preserved parts.
There is also information about
how Devín conquered water
leaking into the place which is
common in buildings of its age.
A 55m-deep well, probably built by
the Garays, can still be seen in the
castle grounds.
4 devínska nováves
volkswagen, off-road pages 288-289
Photo:MiroŠvec
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/2
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3
4
5
67
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
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20
21
22
23
24
Bratislava Region
The Bratislava region, the most densely settled and urbanised area of Slovakia, is bordered by the Danube River to the
south and the Morava River to the west. The region consists of the Záhorie lowlands in the far west of the country and the
Podunajská nížina (Danube Lowlands) towards the Hungarian south, and is divided by the heavily forested Malé Karpaty
(Small Carpathian mountains) range. Its strategic location at the junction of the Czech Republic, Austria and Hungary has
been a key factor in making it the most prosperous region in Slovakia. Historically, its location at the border of the Kingdon
of Hungary made the region well suited for the construction of castles with the Červený Kameň, or the Red Rock Castle,
being one of the most imposing and best preserved castles in Slovakia.The southeastern flanks of the Small Carpathians have
been a wine-growing area for hundreds of years with the most important centres such as Svätý Jur, Pezinok and Modra
nurturing their own unique tradition and many wine cellars which are open for tourists.Thanks to its terrain Bratislava
Region boasts a number of comfortable cycling routes while the Slnečné jazerá summer resort (Sunny Lakes) offers a pleasant
getaway from the heat of the cities during the summer season.
1 Bratislava W (city, castle, culture)
pg 26-43, 244, 246, 265-266, 268, 274-275, 241,
242, 245, 270-271, 276, 282, 280-281, 285
2 Čunovo W (gallery, aqua) pg 206, 249
3 Devín W (castle - ruins) pg 44, 253
4 Devínska Nová Ves (car plant) pg 288-289, 245
5 Marianka (religion) pg 46
6 Pajštún (castle - ruins) pg 46
7 Stupava (town, farm) pg 46-47
8 Lozorno (farm, shooting range)
pg 47, 270-271, 238, 276
9 Malacky (town, golf) pg 47-48, 214, 276
10 Veľké Leváre (museum) pg 48-49
11 Malé Karpaty (hiking) pg 49, 253
12 Malokarpatská vinohradnícka oblasť W (wine)
pg 49, 231
13 Svätý Jur (town, wine) pg 50
14 Pezinok (town, wine) pg 50-51, 206, 228,
230, 242, 269
15 Slovenský Grob (goose-roasting) pg 52
16 Šenkvice (wine) pg 229
17 Modra (town, wine) pg 53, 229
18 Červený Kameň W (castle) pg 54-55
19 Senec (town, aqua) pg 56, 263
20 Kráľová pri Senci (museum, flights) pg
56, 268
21 Kostolná pri Dunaji (Siberian tiger) pg 57
22 Bernolákovo (golf) pg 57, 272, 276
23 Malý Dunaj (canoe) pg 249-251
24 Hamuliakovo (church) pg 57
pages 54-55
page 52
page 49
pages 245, 288-289
pages 46-47
pages 48-49
MaléKarpaty
introduction to bratislava region 45
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/5 Marianka
mapA517km/10miles(21min)NWof
Bratislava1,297www.marianka.sk
Mariánskeúdolie(Marianvalley)
Námestie4.aprílaandPartizánskaStreetÅ+421
(0)26593-5226(parishoffice)www.marianka.sk
anon-stop UMon-Sat8:00,18:00Sun8:00,
9:15,10:30(ChurchoftheNativityoftheVirginMary)
e WC
There are many legends
surrounding the birth of
Marianka’s pilgrimage site, which
is Slovakia’s oldest and one of the
oldest pilgrimage complexes in
central Europe. Perhaps the most
prominent tale is that of a local
bandit, whose deformed children
were healed from bathing in the
site’s sacred stream. After their cure,
they stumbled across the statue of
the Virgin Mary, whose statue and
shrine remain prominent features
of the pilgrimage site today. While
belief in this tale would certainly
require a fertile imagination, we
do know that the site’s founding
as a religious complex goes back
to the year 1377, when the gothic
church’s foundations were first
laid, although the exact date of the
oldest building’s construction is still
unknown. The site, which features
the former Pauline monastery, is
now a pilgrimage complex hosting
meetings, seminars and spiritual
retreats.
The valley’s buildings and statues
have remained true to their
centuries-old heritage, with little
stylistic changes to the complex’s
external design. Seated deep
in Marian Valley, many of the
site’s historic statues and chapels
are hidden amongst the foliage
inviting a leisurely stroll around
the grounds. Standing atop the
sacred stream in the woods, the
Chapel of the Holy Well remains
one of Marianka’s most charming
relics dating back to 1696. Its blue
dome and pastel colourings match
the atmosphere of the quiet valley,
greatly contrasting with the interior
of the church, more than 50 metres
across, which boasts more ornate
decoration.
The exterior of the Church of
the Nativity of the Virgin Mary
conceals the splendour of its inside.
The church’s gothic style is evident
upon entering the doors,
with baroque decorations
including marbled
columns, gilded cherub
wings and stained glass
windows being just some
of the many adornments of
the church. Busily decorated
from the floor upwards, eyes of
visitors naturally glance towards the
ceiling. And for good reason. Each
ceiling panel is devoted to a mural
of a saint, each of which decoratively
depicts a different scene, reminiscent
of Italian frescoes. However, the real
pièce de résistance is the shrine to
the Virgin Mary found at the front
of the church with its miniature
gothic spires.
6 Hrad PaJštún
(Pajštún Castle - ruins)
map A 5 24 km / 15 miles (34 min) NW of
Bratislava Borinka a non-stop free
The ruins of the Pajštún Castle sit
atop a hill less than six kilometres
from the neighbouring village of
Borinka. Built in the 13th
century,
the mediaeval castle was one of
many fortification strongholds
erected along Slovakia’s southern
foothills to warn of any potential
invaders to the region. Although the
castle was partially reconstructed
after a fire in the mid-18th
century,
the current remains are a result
of Napoleon and his army who
severely destroyed the castle in
1809. Only some of the castle’s
walls still remain. They impressively
circle a still discernible central
courtyard. Partly ensconced by the
greenery below, an entrance way
and arch are still evident amongst
the remains. The 45-minute hike
from the village of Borinka through
the Small Carpathian woods is
breathtaking, and the ruins at the
top and the view of the Záhorská
nížina lowlands and villages below
are a worthwhile reward.
7 stuPava
mapA519km/12miles(20min)NWof
Bratislava9,282Agátová16,Stupava
Å+421(0)26593-4312www.stupava.sk
0.5km/0.3mileNEofcentre
0.6km/0.4mileSofcentre
October:FestivalofCabbage
Kostolsv.Štefana(churchof
StStephen)
Námestiesv.Trojice1,Stupava
Å+421(0)26593-4448aentrancehall
UMon-Tue18:00,Wed7:30,Fri-Sat18:00,
Sun7:15,10:45voluntary é
The town of Stupava dates back to
the Bronze Age, and sits less than
20 kilometres from Bratislava.
Although the town cannot boast
of any unique cultural haunts,
there are some landmarks worth
visiting if passing through. The
first weekend of October is a good
time to stage a visit, as visitors can
catch the town’s annual Festival of
Cabbage, where numerous stalls
and the cabbage harvest exhibition
line the streets. From Stupava’s
mansion to its Roman Catholic
church, the vicinity of the main
street is home to the town’s most
interesting buildings. The town’s
impressive mansion dates back
to the 12th
century and sits in an
English park. It now serves as a
retirement home.
Synagóga (synagogue)
Hlavná 1614, Stupava Å+421 (0)904 106-456
¯ ® www.slovak-jewish-heritage.org
afor performances only depends on
performance WC
46 bratislava region
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/bratislava region 47
Stupava’s synagogue from 1803
is one of the oldest synagogues in
Slovakia and adds notable cultural
value to the country’s Jewish
heritage. It is a unique example of
the nine-bay type synagogue with
the only other one of this type in
Bardejov.
Biofarm Stupava
pass through Stupava and continue in the Lozorno
direction for approximately 3 km. Then turn right onto
a narrow two-way road through the forest Å+421
(0)918 280-546 www.biofram.sk 10:00-21:00
11:00-20:00 free ä
In Stupava, tourists can soon be
surrounded by sheep, pigs, horses
and other domestic animals in a
unique bio farm, where visitors can
also taste the national cuisine in a
local restaurant or buy some food
as a present. The Slovak cheeses
korbáčiky and bryndza are both
available in the shop, as well as
žinčica (a sheep’s milk product) or
home-made bread and cakes.
The farm is especially popular with
families, and features a children’s
playground, plus the opportunity
to ride horses and ponies or to pet
various other animals. You can
sample your food and drink on a
small terrace area and enjoy the
entertainment.
8 lozorno
mapA525km/16miles(23min)
NofBratislava
abeland
Abelandislocatedinthevillageof
Lozorno,about1kmpastVodnánádrždam
inthedirectionofSvätýJurÅ+421(0)904
237-777www.abeland.skaSep-Jun:Sat
10:00-18:00é
The village of Lozorno is
another welcome stop if
tourists are fleeing hectic
city life. The wooden
village of Abeland is
situated nearby, which
features a chalet, a tea
house and a church
all constructed from
timber. There is a,
relaxing atmosphere as
visitors gaze at still ponds stocked
with fish or the surrounding
untarnished environment.
Tourists can try shooting with
a traditional bow and arrow,
horse-riding, fencing or observing
the locals go about their daily
business which they carry out
dressed in period costumes. They
can also encounter more domestic
animals, such as ducks, pigs or
quails and sample homemade
goulash. For those who like
real guns, the shooting range in
Lozorno is an option ( pages
270-271).
9 Malacky
mapA437km/23miles(30min)NWof
Bratislava17,051www.malacky.sk
KaplnkaSvätýchschodov
(HolyStairsintheFranciscanchurch)
Kláštornénámestie3,Malacky Å+421(0)34772-
2189www.malacky.skaunderreconstruction U
Mon-Sat7:00,18:30,Sun7:00,9:00,10:30,18:30
(FranciscanChurch)
Synagóga(Synagogue)
Nabrehu2,MalackyÅ+421(0)34772-2286a
bookingnecessary
The Pálffy family, whose
architectural legacy
stretches from
Slovakia to
Austria, had a significant influence
on the town of Malacky. A dynasty
renowned for impressive castles
and gothic restoration, hallmarks of
the Pálffy flair can be found in the
Franciscan church and monastery
located on the town’s central square.
The current church is attached
to a monastery now serving as an
elementary school and library, and
being rebuilt from a fortified manor
house by Pál Pálffy IV in the 17th
century. Previously nicknamed
the Black Monastery, the church
conceals a marble-trimmed crypt
with coffins of two Pálffy members.
Legend has it that while the bodies
of Pál Pálffy IV and his son, János
III, are buried in Bratislava, their
hearts are kept in the church
complex, and bleed whenever the
country is under siege.
Above ground, the rich mahogany
furnishings and large frescoes
high on the church’s walls are
characteristic of Pálffy grandeur,
but the jewel of the building is
the great baroque altar piece,
which stretches from
floor to ceiling. The Holy
Stairs (or Scala Sancta),
now under reconstruction,
are located in the church’s
chapel. They are a genuine
replica of the original stairs
in Rome, while another
replica is in Jerusalem.
Not far from the town
square sits the synagogue
built in 1886-1887. It
is the work of architect
Wilhelm Stiassny.
Although the building,
which is a fine example
of Moorish-style
architecture, is now used
for cultural purposes,
the synagogue’s original
Photo:courtesyofAbeland
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/columns and ornate interior doors
are still recognisable.
Another piece of architecture in
Malacky recalling the history of
the Pálffy family is the extensive
Renaissance manor house located
in an English park dating back
to 1624. It has been undergoing
gradual reconstruction and part of it
is already opened to the public.
White eurovalley Golf Park
Továrenská ulica 5486, Malacky Å+421 (0)911
243-101 www.golf.sk a Mon 10:00-20:00 Tue-Sun
8:00-20:00 from €18 åe WC
Like many Slovak golf centres,
White Eurovalley Golf Park is much
more than just another 18-hole golf
course. Actually, there are 27 holes
divided into two courses – one
a nine-hole 2,800 metre, par 36
Public course, and the other, White,
an 18-hole 6,133 metre, Par 75
more challenging course. The front
nine (par 37) of the White Course
is largely on white sand (thus the
name) and the back nine (par 38)
mostly pine trees. The front nine is
more open, featuring a number of
both sand and water hazards while
the back has narrower fairways and
rewards golfers with more accurate
shots. It is possible to play a variety
of combinations of the three 9-hole
units.
The Golf Academy part of the
golf park features a large driving
range, two pitching greens and
two putting greens. There are
also facilities to work on a golfer’s
sand-game, including both short
and long stroke. The facility offers a
variety of instructional programmes
with several golf instructors.
White Eurovalley Golf Park is
conveniently located just 38
kilometres north of Bratislava,
between Plavecký Štvrtok and
Malacky. The pro shop is well
supplied and the café/restaurant
features indoor and outdoor
seating. The location of the pro
shop/restaurant complex, in the
middle of the golf park, creates
some parking issues. Still the tall
pine trees and the quiet make it a
relaxing as well as a challenging way
to wile away an afternoon.
10 veľké leváre
map A 4 47 km / 28.9 miles (36 min) NW of
Bratislava 3,550 www.levare.sk
Habánske múzeum / Habánsky dvor
(Haban Museum / Haban yard)
Habánsky Dvor 78, Veľké Leváre
Å+421 (0)34 779-4493 G
www.zahorskemuzeum.sk
a booking necessery
€0.66 e WC
Kostol Mena Panny Márie
(church of the Name of the
virgin Mary)
Štefánikova 753, Veľké Leváre
Å+421 (0)34 779-4108 afor services
U Mon-Fri 17:30, Sat 8:00, Sun 10:00,
18:30
The Habans were followers of an
ultra-nonconformist Christian
doctrine which, among other
things, held that believers should
be baptised as youths, not as
infants. Followers are also known
as Anabaptists. This may not sound
like a big deal now, but in the
religious turmoil of the 16th
and
17th
-century Europe it was regarded
as heresy and frequently resulted
in severe persecution. Several
groups left their original homes in
Germany, some heading west to
North America (where one group
became known as the Amish), and
others heading east, some ending
up in the village of Veľké Leváre in
Záhorie.
Local landowners were keen for
them to settle here: they were
well-behaved, reliable taxpayers
and prodigiously hard workers.
Their main occupation was pottery
making. Haban designs are very
similar to those still used in the
Modra pottery; indeed it is
very likely that this is where
the Modra potters got their
techniques. The main
difference is that Haban
designs never use red,
which is associated with
blood.
The Habans were not
allowed to settle in the centre
of Veľké Leváre, instead forming
a compound around a square on
the edge of the village with a mill,
workshops, a church, meeting hall
and houses (the word Haban refers
to their distinctive homes). Theirs
was a culture apart: children were
brought up communally; marriage
to non-Habans was prohibited and,
since the community was small,
a board approved marriages to
prevent in-breeding.
The Haban Museum, in a house
in the square, provides some
fascinating glimpses into their
48 bratislava regionPhoto:courtesyofWhiteEurovalleyGolfPark
HabanMuseum
HolyStairs
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/lifestyle. One description, dated
1660, describes how they worked
six days a week, with just 15
minutes for lunch, and rarely
spoke, especially when working.
Note that most exhibits are not yet
labelled in English. Tolerance of
their beliefs was to be short-lived.
Empress Maria Theresa decided
in 1761 that they must become
Catholics, while allowing them the
privilege of a separate church. From
then on the noose tightened. By
1763 Habans were fleeing to the
forests to avoid persecution. By the
1780s most had left or converted.
The community disappeared
during the 19th
century, though
some local people still claim to
descend from them.
Veľké Leváre is also home to a
huge baroque church, built by the
archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal
Sigismund Kollonich. It was
consecrated in September 1733 on
the anniversary of the Ottoman
defeat at the Battle of Vienna 50
years earlier.
11 Malé karPaty
map A 4, 5, B 4 5-105 km / 3-65 miles (5-70
min) NE of Bratislava; highest point: Záruby (767
metres / 2,516 ft)
One of the most distinctive
features of Slovakia’s landscape
is the Malé Karpaty, or Small
Carpathians. This range of
hills is not particularly high
(Záruby, its highest
peak, is 767 metres /
2,516 ft above sea level),
but it is visible across the
Danubian plain from
many kilometres away.
Aside from the fine
forest cycling or walks
in the hills close to the
capital, which can be
reached simply by
boarding a trolley-bus in the city
centre, the whole of the range,
and the towns and villages along
its eastern flanks, make for a great
day, or days, out. Before hitting
the trails, be sure to pick up the
Malé Karpaty-Bratislava hiking
map. The map outlines hiking and
biking trails throughout the region,
including trails in the Carpathians
to castle ruins such as Pajštún,
Plavecký hrad, Ostrý Kameň and
the Červený Kameň Castle.
The south-eastern flanks of these
hills have been a wine-growing area
for hundreds of years. Further out,
towns such as Svätý Jur, Pezinok
and Modra nestle at the bottom of
the wooded hills, each nurturing
their own unique food, drink and
folk culture. They are linked by a
local tourism initiative, the Little
Carpathians Wine Route (MVC).
12 MalokarPatská
vinoHrad.oBlasť
(Small CarpathianWine
Region) W
map A 5, B 4,5 5-55 km / 3-34 miles (55
min) NE of Bratislava more than 30 towns and
villages along the east side of the Small Carpathians
January: Day of Svätý Jur cellars; February:
Pezinok wine cellars; March: Vitis Aurera in
Modra; April: Exhibition of wines in Svätý
Jur and Rhine Riesling competition, Day
of Modra cellars, Festival of Slovak wines in
Bratislava, Wine Markets in Pezinok; May: Day of
Open Cellars; May/June: Festival of Frankovka in
Bratislava; September: Vintage in several towns
of the region; November: Day of Open Cellars
There are countless examples
of wine cellars in the Small
Carpathian Wine Region, a
string of more than 30 towns
and villages along the east side
of the Small Carpathians
of which Pezinok, Modra
and Svätý Jur are the best
known. There are more than 100
winegrowers in this region, each
following a tradition that dates
from Roman times. Many places
are open for wine lovers and
booking is not necessary ( page
228-231).
In order to satisfy the growing
interest in the wine of smaller
producers, winemakers organise
events. They open their doors to
offer wines for tasting at places
which are not opened for tourists
throughout the year.
These Open Cellars festivals date
only from the fall of the previous
regime, but there are also a
number of grape harvest festivals,
known as vinobranie, whose
traditions even the communists
could not interrupt.
A lot of wine producers are part of
the Little Carpathian Wine Route
which is the oldest wine route in
Slovakia developed in 1995. The
aim of these wine producers has
been to foster the development
of the Small Carpathian region,
especially in tourism connected to
its winemaking traditions. MVC’s
most popular event is its Day of
Open Wine Cellars in May and
November.
bratislava region 49ChurchoftheNameofVirginMary
DevínskaKobylaintheSmallCarpathians
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/13 svätý Jur
map A 5 17 km / 10 miles (24 min) NE of
Bratislava Prostredná 64, Svätý Jur Å+421 (0)2
4497-0449 5,141 www.svatyjur.sk
January: Day of cellars; April: Exhibition of wines and
Rhine Riesling competition; May: Day of Open Cellars;
September: Vintage; November: Day of Open Cellars
Nestled at the foot of the Small
Carpathian mountains, the town
of Svätý Jur is surrounded by vast
vineyards. The town’s winemaking
tradition is still practiced today and
is said to have persisted through
Svätý Jur’s struggle for independence
from domestic and foreign rule in
the 16th
and 17th
centuries. The
town experienced many changes
during the 20th
century, including
agricultural co-operatives taking
over neighbouring vineyards. This
led to experimentation with more
large-scale winemaking. In recent
years however, the town’s small and
local winemakers have resurrected
the winemaking tradition, as
evident from the numerous wineries
scattered around the town.
Kostol Najsvätejšej Trojice
(church of the Holy Trinity)
Dr. Kautza 17, Svätý Jur Å+421 (0)2 4497-
1454 a entrance hall U Mon, Wed-Fri 18:30,
Tue-Sat 7:30, Sun 7:30, 10:00 é
Although small, an enjoyable hour
or two can be spent wandering the
streets of Svätý Jur. On a quiet road
off the town’s main square are the
Church of the HolyTrinity and
the Piarist Monastery. Built in the
17th
century, the Order of Piarists
played an important part in the
educational development of the
town, founding schools which
saw such figures as celebrated
botanist Alexander
Zahlbruckner and writer
Juraj Fándly in attendance.
The current façade of
the complex, which
comprises the Piarist
church and monastery,
attained its acquired
appearance through
renovations in the 20th
century, and its meticulously-kept
amber exterior is a testament to its
present-day importance. Next to
the church is located the popular
Čokokafé patisserie.
Zichyho kúria (Zichy Manor House)
Prostredná 29, Svätý Jur Å+421 (0)2 4497-
0476 G www. muzeumpezinok.sk a Tue-Fri
8:00-16:00, Sat 10:00-16:00 (Apr-Sep only)
€1 å e WC
Not far from the main
square is the Zichy
Manor House. Once a
residence for the noble
Zichy family, it is now
the site of the Museum of
Local History, Culture and
Literature, exhibiting displays
depicting life of local inhabitants
and their winemaking traditions.
Past the Evangelical Church on
the corner of the main square sits
the early Renaissance Armbuster
Manor. While the building itself
is private property and cannot
be entered, the arch connecting
the timeworn manor to the
neighbouring residential buildings
provides a scenic opening to the
vineyards around the town. Walking
around Svätý Jur, the surrounding
vineyards never fail to impress,
and the archway by the town’s
outskirts – the remains of Svätý Jur’s
fortification wall dating back to the
17th
century – are worth a visit.
Kostol sv. Juraja (church of St George)
Horné predmestie 18, Svätý Jur Å+421 (0)2
4497-1454 a entrance hall U Tue-Sat 18:00,
Sun 9:00, 10:30
At the top of the hill, the gothic
Church of St George and the
wooden belfry look over the
town. The church is one
of the town’s oldest sites,
named after the town’s
founder - Svätý Juraj (St
George), and its interior
architecture has largely
remained the same
since its construction.
Dating in part from as
early as the 13th
century,
the church contains an
intricately carved sandstone altar
depicting St George slaying the
dragon, which was created in 1517
by the same master responsible for
St Anne’s in Vienna.
14 Pezinok
map B 5 22 km / 13.7 miles (29 min) NE of
Bratislava 21,179 Old Town Hall, M. R.
Štefánika 1, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 640-6989
www.pezinok.sk 0.2 km / 0.1 mile SW of centre
0.6 km / 0.3 mile SW of centre February:
Pezinok wine cellars; April: Wine Markets; May: Day of
Open Cellars; June: Ceramics market; July: Wine and
Lavender; August: Festival of Brass Bands; September:
Vintage; November: Day of Open Cellars
Many towns in Bratislava Region
tucked into the foothills of the
Small Carpathian mountains are
well known for their vineyards
and winemaking traditions.
Pezinok is no exception, and
although the town has a long
history dating back millennia,
its current state owes its roots
in the events and traditions
of more recent centuries. Like
many towns in Slovakia, Pezinok
eventually fell into the hands of
the Pálffy family in 1735. Those
familiar with the Pálffy’s numerous
abodes across the country will
recognise a thing or two in Pezinok.
Dolný Kostol Premenenia Pána
(lower church of the Transfiguration)
Holubyho, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 641-2270
a exterior views, UMon-Fri 7:00, 17:00, Sat 7:00
Sun 7:00, 9:00, 11:00, 17:00
In contrast to other squares in
Slovak towns and cities, Pezinok’s
main square is surprisingly
cuboid.Taking up one corner of
the square, the Lower Church of
theTransfiguration sits in stony
splendour towering over the
old town hall next door. It is a
Catholic church, built in the 17th
century, and although it appears
immense from the outside,
the interior feels much smaller.
Nevertheless, its faded frescoes,
traditional ornaments and body
of a Renaissance organ more than
make up for its more modest
measurements.
50 bratislava region
www.gob.skAltar in the Church of St George
Church of St George
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Just a thirty minute drive from Bratislava, in the
heart of the Small Carpathian winemaking region,
lies the town of Pezinok. The first written mention
of Pezinok dates back to the 13th century, and
since then its development was influenced by
German settlers. With their technology and knowl-
edge, they helped foster a tradition of winemak-
ing, resulting in wine that was favoured even by
the royal Habsburg family.
The Small Carpathian Museum in Pezinok, in the
centre of this winemaking town, outlines the rich
history of winemaking and viticulture in the whole
Small Carpathian area. The 17th century building
houses authentic rooms where wine was actually
produced and stored. Visitors can also see the big-
gest collection of unique wine presses in central
Europe.
Two of the museum’s exhibitions, The Story of
Wine and The History of Winemaking, will lead you
through two millenniums of growing the grape-
vine (Vitis vinifera) commonly found in the Small
Carpathians.
They detail the specifics of the region, reveal the
oldest findings showing the consumption of wine,
and tell the tumultuous history of the 20th cen-
tury, which had a crucial impact on winemaking in
the region.
The exhibitions contain interactive elements, like
an inebriation simulator, touch-screen monitors,
bottle corking and even activities for children.
Visitors’senses are saturated by the possibility to
touch a 400-year-old grape press, smell hidden
flavours in wine and, last but not least, taste a glass
of high-quality wine
Apart from tours of the exhibitions and organising
special art events, the museum also offers tastings
of the best local wines, combined with samples
of natural Slovak cheeses. Moreover, visitors can
partake in a unique practice in Slovakia: tasting
wine in absolute darkness.
Through a range of experiences connecting his-
tory with modern elements, we will let you taste
the Small Carpathian region.
Malokarpatské múzeum v Pezinku,
M.R. Štefánika 4, 902 01 Pezinok
Tel: +421 (0)33 641-3347
e-mail: muzeumpezinok@muzeumpezinok.sk
www.muzeumpezinok.sk
Small Carpathian Museum in Pezinok
- history with a wine soul
SP013321/001
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Mestské múzeum v Starej radnici
(city Museum in Old Town Hall)
M. R. Štefánika 1, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 641-
2306 G www.mestskemuzeumpk.sk Mon-Fri
10:00-18:00, Sat 10:00-16:00 €0.80 ä
e WC
The old town hall contrasts with
the rough exterior of the Lower
Church, with quaint turrets and
classical Latin script painted along
the walls’ crest. Dating back to the
18th
century, the building’s more
modern look can be attributed to
its reconstruction following a fire
in 1832, after which a classicist
style was adopted. Although it no
longer functions as a town hall, the
building appears to have remained
the social heart of the square, with
a ground floor almost exclusively
devoted to cafés and restaurants.
Marian Column, constructed
in 1749, is decorously haloed
and only returned as the square’s
centrepiece in 2001 after extensive
reconstruction.
Národný salón vín v Pezinskom zámku
(Slovak National collection of Wine in the
Pezinok castle)
Mladoboleslavská 5, Pezinok Å+421
(0)33 640-5174 www.nsvsr.sk a Tue-Sun
11:00-18:00 from €16.99 (open wine tasting)
åé(partly) WC
The north part of the town centre
is home to the Pezinok Castle and
an English park. The castle was
originally built at the turn of the
14th
century. Despite
surviving centuries of
reconstruction – and
even a lightning strike
in 1875 – the main body
of the castle is currently
unused. The cellar is
still operational, and
houses the National
Collection of Wine. This
is a collection of the best
100 Slovak wines of the
given year. Visitors, after
paying a fee, can taste any
of them. The large-scale
oak barrels located in a side
room are worth examining because
the front of each barrel contains
unique carvings of saints. The park
behind the castle, created in 1884
by Count Ferenc Pálffy, matches the
famed grandeur of the Pálffy castle.
Peacocks still wander the grounds.
Gotický Kostol Nanebovzatia Panny Márie
(Gothic church of the assumption of the
virgin Mary) Farská 1, Pezinok a under
reconstrucion
The gothic Church of the
Assumption of the Virgin Mary
offers a particularly impressive
tower, which was built only after
the construction of the church at
the start of the 14th
century. It is
widely accepted that the current
building sits on top of what was
once an old romanesque church.
Such findings as a rare Renaissance
baptismal basin from the 16th
century as well as a 15th
century
burial chamber are among the more
interesting things inside.
Malokarpatské múzeum
(Small-carpathian Museum)
M. R. Štefánika 4, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 641-
3347 G www.muzeumpezinok.sk
aTue-Fri 9:00-12:00, 13:00-16:00 Sat 10:00-16:00
Sun 14:00-16:00 (Sun closed Nov-May); wine
tasting: reservation in advance required from
€4 e WC
Nearby the town square is the
Small-Carpathian Museum,
with an abundance of antique
winemaking machinery located
in the cellar. Ranging from
clay pots encasing
the floral essences
of wines to time-
worn 19th
-century
pesticide dispensers,
the museum offers an
array of equipment
relating to the
region’s winemaking
traditions. The
most impressive
item, located just
outside the doors of the
museum, is the grape
press, rare both for its
elm body and its magnitude.
areál zdravia Rozálka (horses)
pagy 242
15 slovenský GroB
map B 5 21 km / 13 miles (27 min) NE of
Bratislava 2,129 www.slovensky-grob.sk
Slovenský Grob, located less than
30 km north-east of Bratislava, can
boast a goose-roasting history. The
village’s busy thoroughfare and the
neat houses lining the main road
may at first conjure feelings of a
suburban street, but the
faint smell of farmyards
will quickly remind
visitors of the village’s
earthy history. The
goose-roasting tradition
in Slovenský Grob is
a result of the natural
fertility of the land,
which has been the site
of lakes, marshes and arable
pastures for centuries. With its
ideal conditions for roasting poultry,
geese were traditionally kept for
private use or sale by local families,
and the custom of selling geese ready
roasted did not arise until the last
century, when an economic crisis
forced many families to sell roasted
meat in markets in Pezinok, Svätý
Jur and Bratislava. Only later, when
gourmets wanted to enjoy roasted
geese warm, housewives began to
serve this delicacy directly in their
homes. By walking down Slovenský
Grob’s main street, it is clear that
the town’s goose-roasting tradition
is still very much alive, and houses
and restaurants alike can be seen
with statues and plaques of geese
adorning gardens or perching atop
post boxes. Although many locals
insist the fertility of the land is not
what it used to be, the more than 20
restaurants in the town, which pride
themselves on serving goose feasts,
bear testament to the tradition’s
survival.
16 šenkvice (wine)
page 229
52 bratislava region
Grape press at the Small-
-carpathian Museum
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/17 Modra
map B 4 27 km / 16.8 miles (31
min) NE of Bratislava 8,751
www.visitmodra.sk
Štúrova 59, Modra Å+421
(0)33 690-8333 March: Vitis Aurea in
Modra; April: Day of Modra Cellars; May:
Day of Open Cellars; June: Conquering
Modra and Historical June Ball; July:
International Guitar Festival; September: Vintage;
Celebration of Clay - Ceramics; November: Day of
Open Cellars
Sitting less than 30 kilometres
outside Bratislava, the town of
Modra deftly melds old and new,
with remnants of its centuries-old
fortification scattered amongst
the town’s more modern homes.
The outskirts of the town promise
little in terms of interesting sites
to visit, but moving close to the
town centre is worth an afternoon.
Wine-production and ceramics,
pastimes still practiced in Modra,
hold important places in the town’s
cultural history, and the former
served as the town’s main economy
as far back as the 14th
century. Over
the centuries, the town has seen
numerous notables pass through,
with Ľudovít Štúr’s stay honoured
by his statue and museum which
are both still accessible on the main
square.
Just a few minutes walk from the
square stands the Upper Gate,
which is the last remaining town
gate belonging to Modra’s former
defence structures. Even those with
only the mildest interest in history
should see Modra’s mediaeval
fortification systems, parts of which
can be found throughout the town
centre. Remnants of the
fortification wall itself,
built over the years from
1610 and emulating a
Hungarian model, pop up
unexpectedly and often in
residential areas, giving the
town an old-world charm.
Múzeum slovenskej keramickej plastiky
a Galéria ignáca Bizmayera (Museum of
Slovak ceramics Sculpture and Gallery of
ignác Bizmayer)
Kukučínova 15, Modra Å+421 (0)905 719-
273 G www.sng.sk Apr-Oct: Tue-Fri
8:30-16:00 Sat 9:00-15:00 Nov-Mar: Tue-Fri
8:30-16:00 €3 (bulk ticket), €60 (ceramics
course, price for groups) In addition to exhibition the
museum also offers a course in ceramics production.
For the course, booking by e-mail (mls@snm.sk) is
necessary two weeks before the visit at the least. e
é(partly) WC
In the town’s northwest, the rotund
Bastion, nicknamed Red, still
stands in excellent condition and is
attached to a relatively unscathed
section of the fortification wall.
Once the town’s defence tower,
the Bastion is now the home of a
ceramics museum and holds the
permanent exhibition of Modra’s
celebrated ceramicist, Ignác
Bizmayer, whose work is exhibited
on all four floors of the building.
Bizmayer’s A Year of Winemaking
exhibit, which charts each stage of
the traditional winemaking process,
is particularly interesting as it aptly
captures the two traditions of
Modra; winemaking and
ceramics. Next door, a newly
refurbished gallery in the
outer building is the site of a
contemporary ceramics exhibit
and stands as a testament to
the significant role ceramics
still plays in Modra today.
Pamätná izba Ľudovíta Štúra
(Ľudovít Štúr Memorial Room)
Štúrova 84, Modra Å+421 (0)905 719-273
G www.snm.sk Apr-Oct: Tue-Fri 8:30-16:00 Sat
9:00-15:00 Nov-Mar: Tue-Fri 8:30-16:00 (booking
necessary) €1 eéWC
At the heart of Modra is the
town square and the Carrara
marble statue of Ľudovít Štúr
(1815–1856), the leader of the
Slovak national revival in the 19th
century and the author of the
Slovak language standards that
led to the contemporary Slovak
language. Built in 1938 by the
sculptor Miroslav Motoška, Štúr
is flanked by a statue representing
volunteers in the Slovak national
revival of 1848-1849, while on the
other, the figures of Štúr’s friends
– Jozef Miloslav Hurban, Michal
Miroslav Hodža and Ján Francisci
– stand proud. Also in the square
and just metres from the statues,
is the Museum of Ľudovít Štúr,
which houses the only remaining
photograph of the man himself.
The museum is modest but offers
detailed information on the life of
Štúr and guided tours in English
can be arranged. In the memorial
next door you can find Štúr’s
deathbed as well as some more
unconventional relics, such as a
tuft of Štúr’s hair. Such quirkiness
only adds to the appeal of the
museum.
Farský kostol sv. Štefana kráľa (Parish
church of St Stephen the King)
Štúrova 58, Modra Å+421 (0)33 647-2546
aentrance hall U Mon-Tue, Sat 18:00 Wed 7:00
Thu 16:00, 18:00 Sun 7:30, 10:30 voluntary
evanjelický chrám Boží apoštolov
Petra a Pavla (evangelical church of the
apostles Peter and Paul)
Dolná 3, Modra Å+421 (0)33 647-2733
aexterior views only U Sun 18:00
To the south and all located
on one street are three
churches. The church
closest to the town square is
the Roman Catholic Parish
Church of St Stephen
the King, built between
1873 and 1876 in a
neo-Renaissance style. While this
church has its own charm, it is the
two churches standing side by side
further down the street that are of
particular interest.
The Slovak church, which is the
Evangelical Church of the Apostles
Peter and Paul, is stylistically
different from its German
counterpart. The fading paint
of the Slovak church, which has
great detail on its front and sides,
contrasts with its neighbour whose
sharper edges and grey façade
render it less ceremonious though
equally striking.
bratislava region 53
Traditional ceramics
from Modra
UpperGateRedBastion
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/Mestské múzeum v Starej radnici
(city Museum in Old Town Hall)
M. R. Štefánika 1, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 641-
2306 G www.mestskemuzeumpk.sk Mon-Fri
10:00-18:00, Sat 10:00-16:00 €0.80 ä
e WC
The old town hall contrasts with
the rough exterior of the Lower
Church, with quaint turrets and
classical Latin script painted along
the walls’ crest. Dating back to the
18th
century, the building’s more
modern look can be attributed to
its reconstruction following a fire
in 1832, after which a classicist
style was adopted. Although it no
longer functions as a town hall, the
building appears to have remained
the social heart of the square, with
a ground floor almost exclusively
devoted to cafés and restaurants.
Marian Column, constructed
in 1749, is decorously haloed
and only returned as the square’s
centrepiece in 2001 after extensive
reconstruction.
Národný salón vín v Pezinskom zámku
(Slovak National collection of Wine in the
Pezinok castle)
Mladoboleslavská 5, Pezinok Å+421
(0)33 640-5174 www.nsvsr.sk a Tue-Sun
11:00-18:00 from €16.99 (open wine tasting)
åé(partly) WC
The north part of the town centre
is home to the Pezinok Castle and
an English park. The castle was
originally built at the turn of the
14th
century. Despite
surviving centuries of
reconstruction – and
even a lightning strike
in 1875 – the main body
of the castle is currently
unused. The cellar is
still operational, and
houses the National
Collection of Wine. This
is a collection of the best
100 Slovak wines of the
given year. Visitors, after
paying a fee, can taste any
of them. The large-scale
oak barrels located in a side
room are worth examining because
the front of each barrel contains
unique carvings of saints. The park
behind the castle, created in 1884
by Count Ferenc Pálffy, matches the
famed grandeur of the Pálffy castle.
Peacocks still wander the grounds.
Gotický Kostol Nanebovzatia Panny Márie
(Gothic church of the assumption of the
virgin Mary) Farská 1, Pezinok a under
reconstrucion
The gothic Church of the
Assumption of the Virgin Mary
offers a particularly impressive
tower, which was built only after
the construction of the church at
the start of the 14th
century. It is
widely accepted that the current
building sits on top of what was
once an old romanesque church.
Such findings as a rare Renaissance
baptismal basin from the 16th
century as well as a 15th
century
burial chamber are among the more
interesting things inside.
Malokarpatské múzeum
(Small-carpathian Museum)
M. R. Štefánika 4, Pezinok Å+421 (0)33 641-
3347 G www.muzeumpezinok.sk
aTue-Fri 9:00-12:00, 13:00-16:00 Sat 10:00-16:00
Sun 14:00-16:00 (Sun closed Nov-May); wine
tasting: reservation in advance required from
€4 e WC
Nearby the town square is the
Small-Carpathian Museum,
with an abundance of antique
winemaking machinery located
in the cellar. Ranging from
clay pots encasing
the floral essences
of wines to time-
worn 19th
-century
pesticide dispensers,
the museum offers an
array of equipment
relating to the
region’s winemaking
traditions. The
most impressive
item, located just
outside the doors of the
museum, is the grape
press, rare both for its
elm body and its magnitude.
areál zdravia Rozálka (horses)
pagy 242
15 slovenský GroB
map B 5 21 km / 13 miles (27 min) NE of
Bratislava 2,129 www.slovensky-grob.sk
Slovenský Grob, located less than
30 km north-east of Bratislava, can
boast a goose-roasting history. The
village’s busy thoroughfare and the
neat houses lining the main road
may at first conjure feelings of a
suburban street, but the
faint smell of farmyards
will quickly remind
visitors of the village’s
earthy history. The
goose-roasting tradition
in Slovenský Grob is
a result of the natural
fertility of the land,
which has been the site
of lakes, marshes and arable
pastures for centuries. With its
ideal conditions for roasting poultry,
geese were traditionally kept for
private use or sale by local families,
and the custom of selling geese ready
roasted did not arise until the last
century, when an economic crisis
forced many families to sell roasted
meat in markets in Pezinok, Svätý
Jur and Bratislava. Only later, when
gourmets wanted to enjoy roasted
geese warm, housewives began to
serve this delicacy directly in their
homes. By walking down Slovenský
Grob’s main street, it is clear that
the town’s goose-roasting tradition
is still very much alive, and houses
and restaurants alike can be seen
with statues and plaques of geese
adorning gardens or perching atop
post boxes. Although many locals
insist the fertility of the land is not
what it used to be, the more than 20
restaurants in the town, which pride
themselves on serving goose feasts,
bear testament to the tradition’s
survival.
16 šenkvice (wine)
page 229
52 bratislava region
Grape press at the Small-
-carpathian Museum
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/17 Modra
map B 4 27 km / 16.8 miles (31
min) NE of Bratislava 8,751
www.visitmodra.sk
Štúrova 59, Modra Å+421
(0)33 690-8333 March: Vitis Aurea in
Modra; April: Day of Modra Cellars; May:
Day of Open Cellars; June: Conquering
Modra and Historical June Ball; July:
International Guitar Festival; September: Vintage;
Celebration of Clay - Ceramics; November: Day of
Open Cellars
Sitting less than 30 kilometres
outside Bratislava, the town of
Modra deftly melds old and new,
with remnants of its centuries-old
fortification scattered amongst
the town’s more modern homes.
The outskirts of the town promise
little in terms of interesting sites
to visit, but moving close to the
town centre is worth an afternoon.
Wine-production and ceramics,
pastimes still practiced in Modra,
hold important places in the town’s
cultural history, and the former
served as the town’s main economy
as far back as the 14th
century. Over
the centuries, the town has seen
numerous notables pass through,
with Ľudovít Štúr’s stay honoured
by his statue and museum which
are both still accessible on the main
square.
Just a few minutes walk from the
square stands the Upper Gate,
which is the last remaining town
gate belonging to Modra’s former
defence structures. Even those with
only the mildest interest in history
should see Modra’s mediaeval
fortification systems, parts of which
can be found throughout the town
centre. Remnants of the
fortification wall itself,
built over the years from
1610 and emulating a
Hungarian model, pop up
unexpectedly and often in
residential areas, giving the
town an old-world charm.
Múzeum slovenskej keramickej plastiky
a Galéria ignáca Bizmayera (Museum of
Slovak ceramics Sculpture and Gallery of
ignác Bizmayer)
Kukučínova 15, Modra Å+421 (0)905 719-
273 G www.sng.sk Apr-Oct: Tue-Fri
8:30-16:00 Sat 9:00-15:00 Nov-Mar: Tue-Fri
8:30-16:00 €3 (bulk ticket), €60 (ceramics
course, price for groups) In addition to exhibition the
museum also offers a course in ceramics production.
For the course, booking by e-mail (mls@snm.sk) is
necessary two weeks before the visit at the least. e
é(partly) WC
In the town’s northwest, the rotund
Bastion, nicknamed Red, still
stands in excellent condition and is
attached to a relatively unscathed
section of the fortification wall.
Once the town’s defence tower,
the Bastion is now the home of a
ceramics museum and holds the
permanent exhibition of Modra’s
celebrated ceramicist, Ignác
Bizmayer, whose work is exhibited
on all four floors of the building.
Bizmayer’s A Year of Winemaking
exhibit, which charts each stage of
the traditional winemaking process,
is particularly interesting as it aptly
captures the two traditions of
Modra; winemaking and
ceramics. Next door, a newly
refurbished gallery in the
outer building is the site of a
contemporary ceramics exhibit
and stands as a testament to
the significant role ceramics
still plays in Modra today.
Pamätná izba Ľudovíta Štúra
(Ľudovít Štúr Memorial Room)
Štúrova 84, Modra Å+421 (0)905 719-273
G www.snm.sk Apr-Oct: Tue-Fri 8:30-16:00 Sat
9:00-15:00 Nov-Mar: Tue-Fri 8:30-16:00 (booking
necessary) €1 eéWC
At the heart of Modra is the
town square and the Carrara
marble statue of Ľudovít Štúr
(1815–1856), the leader of the
Slovak national revival in the 19th
century and the author of the
Slovak language standards that
led to the contemporary Slovak
language. Built in 1938 by the
sculptor Miroslav Motoška, Štúr
is flanked by a statue representing
volunteers in the Slovak national
revival of 1848-1849, while on the
other, the figures of Štúr’s friends
– Jozef Miloslav Hurban, Michal
Miroslav Hodža and Ján Francisci
– stand proud. Also in the square
and just metres from the statues,
is the Museum of Ľudovít Štúr,
which houses the only remaining
photograph of the man himself.
The museum is modest but offers
detailed information on the life of
Štúr and guided tours in English
can be arranged. In the memorial
next door you can find Štúr’s
deathbed as well as some more
unconventional relics, such as a
tuft of Štúr’s hair. Such quirkiness
only adds to the appeal of the
museum.
Farský kostol sv. Štefana kráľa (Parish
church of St Stephen the King)
Štúrova 58, Modra Å+421 (0)33 647-2546
aentrance hall U Mon-Tue, Sat 18:00 Wed 7:00
Thu 16:00, 18:00 Sun 7:30, 10:30 voluntary
evanjelický chrám Boží apoštolov
Petra a Pavla (evangelical church of the
apostles Peter and Paul)
Dolná 3, Modra Å+421 (0)33 647-2733
aexterior views only U Sun 18:00
To the south and all located
on one street are three
churches. The church
closest to the town square is
the Roman Catholic Parish
Church of St Stephen
the King, built between
1873 and 1876 in a
neo-Renaissance style. While this
church has its own charm, it is the
two churches standing side by side
further down the street that are of
particular interest.
The Slovak church, which is the
Evangelical Church of the Apostles
Peter and Paul, is stylistically
different from its German
counterpart. The fading paint
of the Slovak church, which has
great detail on its front and sides,
contrasts with its neighbour whose
sharper edges and grey façade
render it less ceremonious though
equally striking.
bratislava region 53
Traditional ceramics
from Modra
UpperGateRedBastion
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/56 bratislava region
19 senec
map B 5 28 km / 17.8 miles (38 min) NE of Bra-
tislava 17,050 Námestie 1. mája 4, Senec
Å+421 (0)2 4592- 8224 www.senec.sk 0.4 km /
0.2 mile NW of centre 1.9 km / 1.2 miles SE of
centre June: Senec Carnival; June: Senec Summer
(opening the summer season)
Slnečné jazérá (Sunny lakes)
Slnečné jazerá-sever, Slnečné jazerá-juh, Rybárska
streets (1.5 km / 1 mile S of the centre)
ww.slnecnejazera.eu €2 ä WC
It was events of the mid-19th
century which had the greatest hand
in distinguishing Senec from other
towns in Bratislava Region. Its lakes,
which were later connected into one
called Slnečné Jazerá (Sunny Lakes)
are near the town centre and have
attracted visitors for 150 years. Over
the decades, the lakes have attracted
patrons seeking the tranquillity
of its natural bathing facilities as
well as families seeking aquapark
adventures during school holidays.
The intense gravel mining which
occurred in Senec from 1845 came
as a result of the construction of the
railway from Bratislava to Galanta.
The lakes of the town developed at
this time, and enjoyed a people-free
existence until 1919, from when the
five lone-standing lakes began to be
used as a natural bathing place.
Covering an area of over 100
hectares and reaching 12 metres
deep, the current lake is visited by
approximately 900,000 tourists
every year, and can cater to both
swimmers as well as the water-shy.
With bicycle lanes stretching to
6.1 kilometres around the lake,
cyclists, roller-skaters and walkers
can all enjoy the views of the town
and lakes from the water’s edge.
Hotels and restaurants have taken
advantage of the lake’s attraction,
imaginatively converting old ships
and constructing quaint huts on
the banks of the water to satisfy a
variety of tourist inclinations.
aquapark Senec
Slnečné jazerá-sever, Senec Å+421 (0)2 4564-
8021 www.aquathermal.sk
a10:00-22:00 from €7 ä WC
The town also boasts Aquapark
Senec, a complex of swimming
pools, water attractions, beach
volleyball courts, a wellness centre
and saunas, providing everything
for the visitor seeking a spot to relax
all the year round just a few steps
from the Sunny Lakes.
Synagóga (Synagogue)
Mierové námestie, Senec a exterior views only
The town offers more than just
water attractions. The synagogue,
which stands derelict on Senec’s
main road, is a historical landmark
dating back to 1904 and its
crumbling exterior and hollow
window frames provides an
interesting contrast to the better-
renovated buildings beside it. The
Whipping Post, which now looks
like a harmless column opposite
the synagogue, points to the town’s
more sinister history, dating back to
the 16th
century.
Mestské múzeum v Tureckom dome
(city Museum in Turkish House)
Námestie 1. mája 4, Senec Å+421 (0)911
169-754 G www.msks-senec.sk
a Tue 10:00- 12:00, 13:00-16:00 Wed-Fri
10:00-12:00, 13:00-18:00 Sat 9:00-13:00 (Jun-Sep
only)€1 e WC
The Renaissance Curie, orTurkish
House, is hailed as the town’s most
precious monument. The house
dates back to 1560 and currently
contains a museum. Amongst
excavations from Senec and Svätý
Jur, the museum’s permanent
collection features numerous
taxidermied animals, including the
leg bone of a mammoth, with the
rest of the legs found in Pezinok.
20 kráľová Pri senci
map B 5 35 km / 22 miles (34 min) E of Bratisla-
va 1,610 www.kralovaprisenci.sk
včelárska paseka (Beekeeping museum)
Včelárska paseka, Kráľová pri Senci Å +421
(0)33 779-8049 www.vcelarskapaseka.ska Apr-Oct:
Mon-Fri 9:00-17:00 Sat-Sun 9:00-13:00 (booking
recommended)voluntary å e é WC
Tandemový zoskok (Tandem skydiving)
Letisko, Kráľová pri Senci Å +421 (0)2 6544-
0292 www.verticaljump.sk a Apr-Oct (booking
necessary) from €160
vyhliadkové lety (Sightseeing flights)
Letisko, Kráľová pri Senci Å +421 (0)2
4590-1858 www.pilotclub.sk a booking necessary
from €40
This small village located just five
kilometres from Senec is unique for
its connection to a typical Slovak
tradition. Slovak beekeepers were
the first in Europe to establish a
beekeeping museum, in the years
1930-32. The museum was opened
to the general public in 1975.
It offers a unique exhibition of
beehives from the 17th
and the 18th
centuries, including artistic wooden
beehives. In the main building
is an exhibition of beekeeping
equipment. The village also offers
adrenaline lovers an unforgettable
experience at the airport in Kráľová
pri Senci, where they can try
tandem skydiving with professionals
or see the country from a plane,
while they can choose where they
would like to fly.
Slnečnéjazerá(CourtesyofTICSenec)Slnečnéjazerá(CourtesyofTICSenec)
www.gob.sk
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-bratislava/bratislava region 57
21 kostolná
Pri dunaJi
map B 5 36 km / 22 miles (28 min) NE of
Bratislava 508 www.kostolnapd.sk
Oáza Sibírskeho tigra, farma
(Oasis of the endangered Siberian Tiger,
farm)
Kostolná pri Dunaji Å+421 (0)905 423-846
www.tigre.sk Jul-Aug 12:00-16:45 Sat-Sun
12:00-16:45 voluntary
To get to the main attraction in
Kostolná pri Dunaji, visitors have
to pass through the village and
then take a right turn onto a dirt
track. They will be rewarded by
a visit to a farm where around
30 tigers and three lions now
find their home. This oasis of the
endangered Siberian tiger is run by
about eight volunteers and financed
by voluntary contributions.
Much of the money goes to the
approximately 200kg of meat
consumed by the beasts each day.
It is better to come in the winter
when the tigers tend to be more
active. Although the animals are
dangerous, there is no need to be
afraid and no injuries have been
sustained in the park.
22 Bernolákovo
map B 5 22 km / 13.5 miles (26 min) NE of
Bratislava 5,385 www.bernolakovo.sk
Black River Golf Resort
Kaštieľ 5, Bernolákovo Å+421 (0)2 4599-4221
www.golf.sk a Mon 10:00–20:00 Tue-Sun
10:00–20:00 from €25 åe WC
Billing itself as the toughest golf
course in Europe, the Black River
Resort lives up to its reputation.
Recently teamed with the White
Eurovalley Golf Park in Malacky
under one owner, the Black River
Resort opened in 2006. Located
in Bernolákovo, the 18-hole,
6,483-metre course offers the
experience of two different style
courses for the price of one.
The first six holes are in a park
setting with lots of mature trees and
rather abbreviated holes – three par-
3s in a row coupled with two short
par 4s. Play is in what served as the
garden of an 18th
century castle.
Starting with the par-4,323 metres
7th
hole, the course ventures into
the agricultural area on the west side
of the manor house and continues
with a long, wildly difficult, and
strikingly beautiful back 12.
Even the best golfers are seriously
challenged by the blind-spot
and hazard-riddled fairways, the
treacherous approaches to the
generally large and unpredictable
roiling greens, and the overall
unforgiving nature of the course.
The pièce de résistance is the 18th
hole requiring a golfer to find a tiny
safe landing zone off to the left side
some 60 yards higher than the tee
box. Wow! The course is slightly less
demanding once some of its secrets
are exposed so, if you can, play it a
second time.
The golf shop and lounge/bar
with an attractive terrace is most
welcome to golfers needing to
drown their sorrows. Electric carts
are recommended for this long and
demanding course. Black River
has a well-supported golf academy
including two putting greens, two
pitching greens, and a practice
fairway.
23 Malý dunaJ
(canoe) page 249
24 HaMuliakovo
map B 5 24 km / 15 miles (29 min) SE of
Bratislava 1,438 www.obechamuliakovo.sk
Kostol Svätého kríža
(church of the Holy cross)
Dunajská 130, Hamuliakovo
Å+421 (0)2 4598-8128 a booking necessery or
for services U Sun: 9:30 (H), 11:00
Across the river from Čunovo
(about a kilometre as the crow
flies, but requiring a detour via
Bratislava unless you have a boat)
is Hamuliakovo. This prosperous
village is the site of one of the
earliest churches in the area, dating
from the second half of the 13th
century.
The church is distinctive both
from the outside and inside. The
exterior is notable for its massive
walls – necessary to support the
building since it has no buttresses
– and its leaning tower. Nothing
very dramatic (the locals say it has
stabilised, and since it has survived
for three quarters of a millennium
you would have to be pretty
unlucky for it to fall on you), just
a slight, but noticeable, list which
is the result of the church having
settled unevenly on a site where
sand and gravel beds meet.
Inside are a distinctive set of
mediaeval frescoes. These were
discovered at the end of the 19th
century under seven centimetres of
plaster. They depict 12 consecration
crosses, and Christ in a mandorla,
on the ceiling of the apse,
surrounded by animals, representing
the gospels.
Around the windows of the
polygonal apse are paintings of the
12 apostles.
A gallery at the back of the nave
would originally have been reserved
for the sponsor of the church
(presumably a local landowner),
who would have received mass
there.
Photo:courtesyofBlackRiverGolfResort
www.gob.sk
Photo:CourtesyofBlackRiverGolfResort
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