Spectacular Slovakia - Eastern Slovakia 1
Spectacular Slovakia - Eastern Slovakia 1
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/Includes
pull-out map
slovakiatravel guide
SPECTACULAR SLOVAKIA
content
advisor
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/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-eastern-slovakia-1/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
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since
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sPecTAcULAR sLOVAKiA
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/Eastern Slovakia
Eastern Slovakia, with its hilly terrain in the north and lowlands to the south, borders
on three countries: Poland, Ukraine and Hungary. The region is perhaps the richest in
man-made lakes, with the Zemplínska šírava summer resort near Michalovce, the
Veľká Domaša reservoir betweenVranov and Svidník, and the Starina reservoir in
the beautiful Bukovské vrchy (Bukovské hills) north of Stakčín. The Ulič valley is the
north-easternmost corner of Slovakia and the gateway to one of Slovakia’s best natural
attractions: the Poloniny National Park which contains a UNESCOWorld Heritage
site, the so-called primaeval beech forests that Slovakia shares with Ukraine. The
sunny hills, overlooking the confluence of Bodrog andTisa rivers in the south
are an ideal setting for vineyards,Tokaj, which hails from the Lower Zemplín
region in the southeastern corner of Slovakia, is the most famous wine from this
area. SlovakTokaj, spreading over 907 hectares of seven small
villages, is the home to four big winemaking companies and a
number of smaller producers. Additional wineries can be found
in the southern part of the region. The bulk of Slovakia’s wooden
churches are in the northeast of the country. Those located in
Bodružal, Hervartov, Ladomirová and Ruská Bystrá have
been listed as the UNESCOWorld Heritage sites. Hervatov
is the oldest Roman Catholic wooden church in Slovakia. Eastern
Slovakia also boasts a number of caves (Domica and the Ochtinská
Aragonite caves) inscribed on the UNESCOWorld Natural Heritage List
including. For the more adventurous the Krásnohorská Cave offers some
real speleological experiences. The capital of eastern Slovakia is Košice, the
country’s second largest city, which boasts arguably the finest man-made
Gothic construction in the whole country, St Elizabeth’s Cathedral. In
2013, Košice, which also is the home of one of the largest employers in the
country, steelmaking giant U.S. Steel, served as the European Capital of
Culture. Another notable city is Bardejov, once one of the richest towns in
the Hungarian Kingdom, and now listed as a world heritage site
by UNESCO.
1 Košice W (city, culture, zoo, railway) pg 168-175,
207, 208, 212, 261, 265-269, 271, 276-277, 206,
216, 239, 244, 247, 251, 275, 280-281
2 Ochtinská aragonitová jaskyňa
(cave - UNESCO site) pg 176, 256
3 Brdárka (agritourism) pg 272
4 Slavošovce (tunnel) pg 286-287
5 Štítnik (gothic church) pg 213
6 Rožňava (city) pg 176-177
7 Betliar W (manor house) pg 177
8 Krásna Hôrka (castle) pg 178-179
9 Slovenský kras / Slovak Karst (hiking, caves) pg
180-181, 253
10 Domica W (cave - UNESCO site) pg 180
11 Gombasecká jaskyňa (cave - UNESCO site) pg
180-181
12 Krásnohorská jaskyňa W (cave - UNESCO site)
pg 181, 257-258
13 Zádiel (hiking) pg 252-255
14 Štós (spa) pg 225
15 Jasov (monastery, cave - UNESCO site)
pg 181-182
15 Jasovská jaskyňa (cave) pg 182
16 Nováčany (bio farm) pg 238
17 Družstevná pri Hornáde (agritourism) pg 272
18 Tokaj W (wine) pg 182-183, 230, 231
19 Trebišov (city) pg 183, 231
20 Michalovce (city) pg 184, 239
21 Vinné (ruins, wine) pg 185, 244, 273
22 Zemplínska šírava (recreation area)
pg 185, 263
23 Sobrance (guitar museum) pg 187
24 Tibava (wine) pg 231
page 177 page 180
page 176
S l o v e n s k é r u d o h o r i e
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166 introduction to eastern slovakia
Photo:MichalRengevič
Photo:MichalRengevič
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/ page 189
pages 182-183
page 185
pages 191-194
25 Orechová (wine) pg 231
26 Inovce (wooden church) pg 187
27 Ruská Bystrá W (wooden church - UNESCO site)
pg 187, 21
28 Morské oko (lake) pg 187
29 Sninský kameň (hiking) pg 253
30 Poloniny (hiking, primaeval forests - UNESCO
site) pg 188
31 Jasenov (castle - ruins) pg 188, 273
32 Humenné (city) pg 188
33 Medzilaborce (gallery) pg 189
34 Svidník (open-air museum, WWII) pg 189, 283
35 Ladomirová W (wooden church - UNESCO site) pg
189, 216-218
36 Bodružal (wooden church - UNESCO site) pg
189-190, 247
37 Vyšný Komárnik (watchtower, WWII) pg 190
38 Bardejov W (city - UNESCO site) pg 191-194, 239
39 Bardejovské Kúpele (spa) pg 190, 224
40 Zborov (castle - ruins) pg 194, 244, 273
41 Frička (wooden church) pg 216-218
42 Krivé (wooden church) pg 216-218
43 Hervartov W (wooden church - UNESCO site)
pg 194
44 Čergov (hiking) pg 253
45 Zlá diera (cave) pg 257
46 Šarišský hrad (castle - ruins) pg 273
47 Prešov W (city) pg 195-167, 263, 265, 269,
280, 284
48 Dubník (mine) pg 285-286
pages 168-175
page 231
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introduction to eastern slovakia 167
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/1 Hlavná ulica (Main Street)
city map page 169 Hlavná, Košice
Hlavná ulica is the centre of
many of Košice’s leading tourist
attractions. Anchored by the
Eastern Slovak Museum to the
north and the St Elizabeth’s
Cathedral and the Lower Gate on
the south, this one-kilometre long,
lens-shaped, pedestrian mall (the
longest in Slovakia) follows the
central route through mediaeval
Košice. At one time the king lived
in the middle of this street and the
town’s administrative buildings
and rich burgher houses lined
either side. A stream ran down the
middle (and still does) and many
of Košice’s boutiques, finer eateries,
cafés, artisan shops and tourist sites
line each side of the city’s natural
focal point.
Visitors will discover three parks
along Main Street, all with
fountains. One focuses on the
Immaculata statue erected in
1720-23 to commemorate the
town’s victory over the great plague.
A second park, between the state
theatre and the cathedral, houses
the fabulous singing fountain of
Košice, a popular people-watching
area near the tourism bureau.
Košice’s compact town square
encapsulates the spirit of
this eastern Slovak city
and holds a rightful
place among the
great squares
of European
cities – busy
enough to invigorate yet
spacious enough to never seem
overwhelming.
2 Dom Umenia
(State Philharmonic Orchestra) W
city map page 169 Moyzesova 66, Košice
0.8 km / 0.5 mile (9 min) Å+421 (0)55 622-4509
www.sfk.sk Sep-Jun for performances
from €8 é WC
The Slovak State Philharmonic
Košice, a world-class symphony
orchestra, currently performs in
what was once Košice’s Neolog
Synagogue. It’s now called the
Dom Umenia (House of Art).
This building adjoins
the site where the
first synagogue
in Košice
stood
168 eastern slovakia - košice
1 Košice W
map H 3 400 km / 249 miles E of Bratislava (270 min) 240,433 i Hlavná 59, Košice Å+421 (0)55 625-8888 www.visitkosice.eu 0.7 km / 0.4 mile E of
centre u 0.7 km / 0.4 mile E of centre Q 7 km / 4.3 miles S of centre ¤ May: Košice City Day; June: Gourmet Fest; Cassovia Folkfest; July: Mazal tov!; August: Andy
Warhol in the streets of Košice; September: Wine festival; October: International Peace Marathon, Nuit Blanche / White night; December: Christmas markets
Often referred to as the capital of eastern Slovakia,
Košice offers a rich and unique experience to visitors
and residents alike. Melding its Hungarian heritage,
its friendly cultural spirit and hip, youthful, can-do
attitude, it exudes boldness, excitement and poten-
tial. Located on the Hornád River, 20 kilometres
(12 miles) from Hungary and 90 kilometres (55
miles) from the Ukrainian border, Košice
grew and prospered in part because
of its ideal location along the trade
route between Hungary’s verdant
agricultural plains and Poland’s
population centres. Its importance
is highlighted by the fact that Košice
was one of the first towns in Europe
to be granted its own coat of arms, in
1369 by King Louis the Great. During
the 20th
century the city bounced back and
forth between Hungary and Czechoslovakia.
Much of greater Košice’s 20th
century growth and
prosperity and, indeed, architectural style can be
traced to the communist era, which began in 1948
and ran through 1989. The city became home
to the Východoslovenské Železiarne steelworks,
which saw the population swell nearly four-fold to
235,000. Concrete housing blocks sprang up and
still dominate the skyline. In 2000, U.S. Steel took
over the steelworks and currently serves as the area’s
dominant employer, making a significant contribu-
tion to the economic stability of Košice.
Such stability has encouraged Košice’s entrepreneurs
to expand the economic base of the area. Tour-
ism flourishes thanks in part to the great
number of heritage sites, the thriving
wine region to the south, and the
varied cultural activities spurred on
by the European Capital of Culture
designation in 2013.
Various historical and cultural strands
that make present day Košice the gem of
the east are easily walkable from Hlavná
ulica (Main Street). From this street the oldest
marathon in Europe (and the second oldest in the
world), the International Peace Marathon, begins.
Every October it attracts thousands of visitors and
runners from around the world. There is much to
see and experience for the adventuresome and curi-
ous in greater Košice.
Photo:courtesyofMaratónskyklubKošice
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - košice 169
until the 1960s. Completed in
1927, the Neolog Synagogue
building (with a capacity of 1,100),
designed by architect Lajos Kozma
from Budapest, had a huge elliptical
dome with a 21 by 24 metre
diameter. The dome, patterned after
the Roman Pantheon, makes up
part of the central Košice skyline
with its red herringbone decoration
between the dome’s external ribs.
The synagogue ceased to serve its
original purpose after World War
II. It was then used as a
warehouse for corn and later,
in the 1950s, it was rebuilt into
the House of Art. An important
part of the interior is a pipe organ.
The top of the dome once was
home to a six-pointed star now part
of the Holocaust memorial. It has
been replaced by a gold-painted
lute.
3 Dominikánsky kostol
(Dominican Church)
city map page 169 Dominikánske námestie 8,
Košice 0.4 km / 0.2 mile (4 min)
Å+421 (0)55 622-1555 for religious services
only U Mon-Sat 6:30, 12:15, 17:30 Sun 7:00, 9:00,
11:00, 17:30 é
Located just
minutes from
the main street,
the Dominican
Church of the
Assumption of the Virgin
Mary is the main feature of
a square whose name it shares.
It is also the oldest church and
oldest preserved edifice in Košice,
dating back to the 13th
century.
The Dominicans arrived in the
city around 1250, leaving three
centuries later due to a devastating
fire in the church and, allegedly,
a crisis of Catholic confession.
Returning in 1698, they rebuilt the
damaged church, originally built in
the romanesque and gothic styles,
and a neighbouring monastery.
They are still active in the city
today, despite a period of disruption
during the communist era.
The interior of the church is
mainly in the baroque style, with
impressive frescoes on the walls
depicting biblical scenes. The
instinct upon entering the building
is to cast your eyes skyward, where
darkened frescoes generously cover
the ceiling, giving the illusion that
a stormy sky looms overhead. Its
68-metre belfry is higher than
that of the St Elzabeth’s Cathedral,
which is about 60 metres tall.
KOšiCe City Centre
1 Hlavná ulica (street)
2 StatePhilharmonicOrchestra W
3 Dominican Church
4 St Michael’s Church
5 St elizabeth’s Cathedral W
6 Synagogue Zvonárska
7 Synagogue Puškinova W
8 Urban’s tower
9 Košice State theatre W
10 Church of the Holy trinity
11 executioner‘s Bastion
12 Hrnčiarska ulica (street)
13 Kunsthalle W
14 Franciscan Church
15 Slovak technical Museum
16 Košice Gold treasure W
Hviezdoslavova
Bačíková
Zbrojničná
Poštová
Poštová
Mlynská
Mlynská
Vodná
Františkánska
Biela
Univerzitná
Alžbetina
Dominikánske
nám.
Uršulínska
Zámočnícka
Moyzesova
Orlia
Tajovského
Štefánikova
Mäsiarska
Hlavná
Hlavná
Hlavná
BaštováHradbová
Bočná
Mäsiarska
Puškinova
Hrnčiarska
Kováčska
Starábaštová
Vrátna
Vrátna
Zvonárska
Grešákova
Timonova
Pribinova
Štúrova
Štúrova
Palackého
Roosveltova
N
Train
station
5 min
25
25
25
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http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/170 eastern slovakia - košice
5 Dóm sv. Alžbety
(St elizabeth’s Cathedral) W
city map page 169 Hlavné námestie 3,
Košice Å+421 (0)55 622-1555 (the crypt+the
stairs) Mon 13:00-17:45 Tue-Sat 9:00-17:45 Sun
13:00-17:45; (the tower) Mon 13:00-19:00 Tue-Thu
9:00-19:00 Fri-Sat 9:00-20:00 Sun 13:00-19:00 U
Mon-Sat 6:00, 7:00, 18:00 Sun 6:00, 7:30, 9:00,
10:30, 12:00, 15:00, 18:00 €1 (the crypt);
€1.5 (the tower); €1 (the stairs) €5 (all parts + St
Michael’s Chapel) é(partly)
Dominating the south end of
Košice’s main square, St Elizabeth’s
Cathedral honours the city’s
adopted patron, St Elizabeth of
Hungary, patron saint of bakers,
homeless, nursing services, tertiaries,
widows and young brides. The new
cathedral, begun in 1378, was built
on the site of the romanesque parish
church dedicated to St Michael.
Rather than alienate St Michael,
a new gothic chapel was built in
his honour in the shadow of the
cathedral.
St Elizabeth’s is a large gothic
cathedral, 60 metres long and 36
metres wide, the largest in Slovakia
and the leading example of this
architectural style in eastern Europe.
Featuring the highest dome of any
Slovak church, the construction
of a Košice skyscraper in recent
years was abandoned because it
would have been taller than St
Elizabeth’s. With room for more
than 5,000 worshippers, it took
130 years to build. During this
time, construction was halted by
various attacks on the city, only to
be restarted as hostilities abated.
The construction of the ambitious
and expensive St Elizabeth’s
Cathedral clearly announced to all
in the region the bold confidence
and prosperity of mediaeval Košice,
touting its leadership position
among eastern European cities
and its favoured status among
Hungarian royalty. The investment
clearly paid off as Košice assumed
centrality in the region.
Rather than light and airy like later
examples of gothic architecture,
the building is imposing and
overwhelming. There are two
towers, one truncated and the other
reaching nearly 60 metres. The
public is allowed (and encouraged)
to climb the 161 steps and view
the entire region from the top. The
exterior is all 14th
century gothic,
complete with dozens of decorative
spires and even
gargoyles on the
roof directing
rainwater
Main altar with sculpture of
the Virgin Mary in the middle
the public is allowed to
climb the 161 stairs of
the northern tower
the most impressive
northern entrance to
the cathedral
the northern
entrance to the
cathedral
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - košice 171
away from the building. Legend
has it that one of the gargoyles
is a rather unflattering caricature
of the builder’s wife. Another
legend – there is a keystone hidden
someplace which, if removed,
would cause the building to
collapse, allegedly as an insurance
policy guaranteeing the
builder would be paid.
The northern entrance
to the cathedral is most
impressive with its
engravings of the Last
Trial, scenes from the
life of St Elizabeth, the
Virgin Mary, the Apostle
John, and the Calvary. In
the middle is a sculpture of
St Elizabeth.
The interior is even more impressive
thanks to the main altar dedicated
to St Elizabeth, which places
it among the world’s highest
quality gothic art. According to
art historian Peter Kresánek, it
was created by Nikolaus Gerhaert
von Leyden and his followers,
perhaps by the master himself. It
consists of 48 paintings. However
visitors cannot see all of them at
once as they rotate seasonally. This
gothic altar with a double rotating
mechanism is one of two in the
world (the second is in the French
city of Colmar).
In the centre of the cathedral
is a hanging sculpture of
the Immaculata.
Other chapels include
a late-gothic altar
with depictions of
the Visitation of the
Virgin Mary, a wooden
sculpture of the Virgin
Mary, fragments of the wall
painting the Last Judgement
the side altar of St Anthony
of Padua, a wall painting The
Resurrection, the bronze font, the
altar painting of St Anna Metercia,
and a gothic Calvary. There is also
an impressive carved neo-gothic
stone pulpit.
Two other highlights of the interior
are not to be missed. One is a rare
(there are only five) side-by-side
carved marble spiral stairway leading
up to the royal gallery (where
visiting nobles could attend mass
without mixing with the common
folk) offering a hawk eye’s view of
the cathedral’s central nave. One
arm of the stairs continues up to the
space where it is believed the relic of
Christ’s blood used to be preserved.
The stairway, often called a lovers
stair because it offers several
meeting points along the way, is
open to the public. Ask for a key
at the shop next to the church
entrance. The second highlight
is the crypt where the remains
of Francis II Rákóczi were
moved in 1906. Rákóczi, a
leader of the last anti-Habsburg
uprising, was a much revered
hero to the citizens of Košice.
4 Kostol Sv. Michala (St Michael’s Church)
city map page 169 Hlavné námestie 4, Košice
Å+421 (0)55 622-1555 Mon 13:00-18:00
Tue-Sat 9:00-18:00 Sun 13:00-18:00 U
Tue 15:00 Thu 15:00 Sun 9:30, 11:00 (in English)
€1.5 é
When construction on the massive
St Elizabeth’s Cathedral was started
in 1378, another building project,
a small chapel dedicated to St
Michael, was already complete. This
architectural gem is a much better
example of gothic architecture than
its neighbour, no doubt because it
was built so much more quickly,
between 1350 and 1370.
Serving originally as a cemetery
chapel, its lower part was an ossuary,
housing bones uncovered in the
old cemetery, and its upper part
a site for requiems. On its altar
is a sculpture of St Michael the
Archangel battling Satan depicted
as a dragon. In 2006, the award-
winning reconstruction received
reclassification as a full-on church.
This was acknowledging that St
Michael’s served as a church for
minorities from the 17th
century
to the early 20th
century while
the cathedral was reserved for the
Hungarian-speaking population,
which at that time was the majority
in the city.
Central part of the
cathedral with carved
neo-gothic stone pulpit
entrance to the
northern tower
the church is
accessable from the west
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/172 eastern slovakia - košice
6 Synagóga Zvonárska (synagogue)
city map page 169 Zvonárska 5, Košice 0.6
km / 0.4 mile (6 min) Å+421 (0)55 625-9059
for interior booking necessary
During the 1840s, after Jews
were allowed to live within the
city walls, a compound emerged
along Zvonárska (Bellmakers)
Street consisting of a Mikvah
(ritual bath), offices of the Jewish
community and rabbinate, and a
kosher cafeteria. The Orthodox
synagogue was extended
and rebuilt in the so-called
Rundbogenstil (round-arch style)
into its current form in 1899.
It has recently undergone an
excellent exterior reconstruction,
but the interior, after it was
no longer used for religious
ceremonies, was used as storage
for a scientific library and was
neglected for years. It is still
awaiting reconstruction. Still,
a glimmer of its original design
is apparent. Today’s visitors
can see walls covered with wall
paintings featuring geometric
and Moorish patterns and the
original ark and basin on the rear
wall. The altar is crumbling, as
are the cast-iron supports of the
women’s gallery encircling the
main floor. The place serves for
temporary exhibitions, but plans
to use the space as a memorial
museum of eastern Slovak Jewish
communities are in the works.
The compound still serves as the
centre of Jewish communal life
in Košice.
7 Synagóga Puškinova (synagogue) W
city map page 169 Puškinova 3, Košice 0.7
km / 0.4 mile (8 min) Å+421 (0)55 625-9059
booking necessary group admission Mon-Fri
€10, Sun €15
In the 1920s, Košice was
home to a large, vibrant
Jewish community. About half
the community consisted of
Orthodox Jews who, in 1927
with the aid of prominent
Christian Košice architect Lajos
Oelschläger, built a Jewish school
and an Orthodox synagogue on
Puškinova street in the heart of
historic Košice. The building is
rectangular, 25 by 35 metres, and
seats 800. The main entrance
is situated on the western side
away from the street and the
impressive public façade with
its grand staircase and triple
arched monumental protrusion.
The synagogue is topped by
a dome supported by four
pillars. Incorporating oriental
architecture with elements of
cubism, the synagogue displays
a bronze Holocaust memorial
plaque announcing that 12,000
Jews were transported to
concentration camps in 1944.
Nearly 2,000 Jews were
housed in the synagogue
for three months
awaiting transport to
Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Their pencil-written
comments can be
seen on the walls
of the recently
reconstructed
interior. The
synagogue is one
of the few still serving its original
purpose in Slovakia.
8 Urbanova veža (Urban’s tower)
city map page 169 Hlavné námestie 2, Košice
Å+421 (0)55 623-2534 www.vsmuzeum.sk
Tue-Sun 9:00-16:30 €3 WC
Built as a belfry for St Elizabeth’s
Cathedral during the 14th
century,
St Urban’sTower is a much-revered
feature in the Košice skyline.
Named after the patron saint of
winegrowers, the tower overcame
a devastating fire in 1556. The
bell ringer, a Quasimodo-esque
character, according to an urban
(pun intended) legend, discovered
the fire and heroically continued to
ring the bell to warn city residents,
perishing in his efforts. The
gothic-style tower has undergone
several facelifts, most often having
its roof rebuilt. In the 20th
century,
mediaeval and Renaissance
tombstones from St Elizabeth’s
Cathedral were set in the tower’s
walls and a neo-renaissance corridor
was attached. A second fire in
1966 damaged the Urban bell cast
in 1557 from material from the
older gothic bell destroyed by
the fire in 1556. The bell
now lies reconstructed
next to the tower. A new
seven-tonne bell was
donated by the workers
of the local steel plant.
The tower houses
Slovakia’s only
wax museum,
presenting well-
known personalities
linked with the history of Košice
and Slovakia.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - košice 173
9 štátne divadlo Košice
(Košice State theatre) W
city map page 169 Hlavné námestie 1, Košice
0.2 km / 0.1 mile (3 min) Å+421 (0)55 245-
2200 www.sdke.sk Sep-Jun for
performances from €3 éWC
Walking from the north end
of Košice’s Main Street, the
first large building set in the
centre of the pedestrian mall is
the State Theatre. The current
opera house replaced an earlier
theatre structure (there has
been an active theatre on this
site since 1755) and opened its
doors in 1899. The building is
an eclectic style with elements
of neo-baroque and secession.
It was designed by the architect
Adolf Láng, one of the most
talented European architects
of the 19th
century. While the
exterior is imposing, dominating
the centre of the square, the
recently renovated interior is a
classic European opera/ballet
house. The stunning recreated
chandelier (identical to the
original) hangs above the lyre-
shaped stage and four balcony
galleries with facings trimmed
in gilded plaster. It illuminates
a ceiling painted with scenes
from four of Shakespeare’s plays.
The front of the house features
two original marble staircases
flanking either side of the elegant
lobby.
The Košice State Theatre also
performs plays in the nearby
art deco Malá Scéna building,
reopened in 2013 (Hlavná 76).
Much smaller than the opera
theatre, the small stage and
auditorium offer an intimate
theatrical experience.
10 Kostol najsvätejšej trojice
(Church of the Holy trinity)
city map page 169 Hlavná 67/A, Košice
0.2 km / 0.14 mile (3 min) Å+421 (0)55 466-
8100for religious services only UMon-Wed, Sat
7:00 (HU), 18:30 Thu-Fri 17:00, 18:30 Sun 8:30,
10:00, 16:00, 20:00 voluntaryé
The University Church, or the
Church of the HolyTrinity, is
one of the most decoratively
styled churches in the city.
Inspired by the baroque
Church of the Gesù in
Rome and completed
in 1681, it was originally
built by the Jesuits before
being taken over by the
Premonstratensians in 1811.
They still use the church
today. The church owes its
name, the University Church,
to the first university in Košice
which was built next door in the
17th
century.
Simple from the outside, the
walls are built from solid block
stones, but this belies a vibrant
interior that makes an immediate
impression with frescoes by
Košice painter Erazmus Schrött.
Covering every centimetre
of the building’s interior,
these frescoes depict scenes
linked with the founder of the
Premonstratensians. Both sides of
the church include three chapels,
each with its own altar and
benches. Differing from the city’s
other churches, this site offers
church-goers a space for personal
worship and reflection, and each
alcove altar is embellished with its
own decorative markers.
11 Katova bašta, rodošto
(executioner’s Bastion and rodoshto)
city map page 169 Hrnčiarska 7, Košice 0.4
km / 0.2 mile (4 min) Å+421 (0)55 622-2856
www.vsmuzeum.sk Tue-Sat 9:00-17:00, Sun
13:00-17:00 (exterior open also on Mon 9:00-17:00)
free (exterior), €3 Rodoshto WC é- only
bastion
Named for its proximity to
the dreaded mediaeval torture
chamber, the largest of the
defensive bastions on the Košice
city wall (built in the late 15th
century) was rebuilt and enlarged
many times as modern weaponry
shifted from siege engines to
gunpowder. Once the site of
the city’s east gate, known as
the Painted Gate, the structure
provides the sole remaining
evidence of the extensive
fortification system that allowed
Košice to flourish in the Middle
Ages.
In 1906, the bastion was selected
as the site for a memorial to
Košice’s great hero Francis II
Rákóczi (1676-1735), buried
in St Elizabeth’s Cathedral.
In addition to an imposing
statue of the anti-Habsburg
champion beloved by
Hungarian-era Košicians,
a replica of his exile home
inTerikdag,Turkey,
known as Rodoshto
in Hungarian, furnished
with many Rákóczi
artifacts, perches
atop a corner
of the bastion.
The museum and
fortifications also house mediaeval
weaponry. An outdoor theatre
and a reception area complete
the site.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/174 eastern slovakia - košice
12 Hrnčiarska ulica (Hrnčiarska Street)
city map page 169 Hrnčiarska, Košice 0.4
km / 0.2 mile (4 min) Å+421 (0)55 622-2856
www.hrnciarska.sk free
é WC
On Hrnčiarska street, the individual
crafts shops sell eclectic goodies,
including antique oversized gallows
and handmade
jewelry. Although
the street market
occurs just a few
times a year –
mostly in the summer months – the
shops are open throughout the year
and periodically host events and
workshops for those wishing to
learn an artistic or historical trade.
Clearly cherishing the natural and
the imaginative, the street is also
home to organic and alternative
restaurants and cafés. With its
period paving and small houses, this
is one of the most romantic streets
in Košice.
The street, which was named after
a potter’s shop, underwent an
extensive reconstruction in 2012
and 2013 as part of the Košice
European Capital of Culture
project.
13 Hala umenia Košice (Kunsthalle) W
city map page 169 Rumanova 1, Košice 0.7
km / 0.4 mile (8 min) Å +421 (0)907 214-802
www.k13.sk Tue-Sun 11:00-18:00 from
€1 (depends on performance) éWC
This onetime dilapidated
building housing a swimming
pool is now a place for culture.
The building was built between
1957-1962, based on Ladislav
Greč’s design.
Decoration was provided by
Helena Ondrušová-Viktorínová.
The roofed part of the swimming
pool complex had to be closed
in 1992. In its time it was one of
the most beautiful architectural
buildings in Czechoslovakia and
its timeless architecture remains
unique even today. Its original
appearance is nearly entirely
preserved and only the most
damaged areas were demolished
and replaced. A typical swimming
mosaic has been maintained and
the area where the pool once was
is now used for art exhibitions,
workshops, public discussions with
artists and gala contemporary art
openings.
14 Františkánsky kostol (Franciscan Church)
city map page 169 Hlavná ulica 81, Košice
1 km / 0.6 mile (12min) 30 minutes prior to
religious services U Mon–Sat 12:00, 16:30 Sun
7:15, 9:30, 11:00, 16:30
The former Franciscan Church,
or the Church of St Anthony of
Padua, is located on Košice’s Main
Street and is the second oldest
church in the city. It dates back
to the 14th
century. The church’s
history singles it out as one of
the most multi-purpose religious
sites in Košice. Originally built as
a church, the site also served as a
weapons and food storage facility,
army barracks, and a makeshift
cathedral, before returning to its
original purpose.
The inside of this originally gothic
church features a mixture of baroque
and gothic architecture, the former
the handwork of architect Thomas
Tornyossy. Of particular interest is
the main baldachin-type baroque
altar and the tombstone of Field-
Marshal Jozef František Renaud of
1740, the work of baroque sculptor
Georg Rafael Donner.
15 Slovenské technické múzeum
(Slovak technical Museum)
city map page 169 Hlavná 88, Košice
0.5 km / 0.3 mile (5 min) Å+421
(0)55 622-4035
www.stm-ke.sk Tue-Fri 9:00-17:00, Sat-Sun
10:00-17:00 (planetarium booking necessary)
from €2 é(only planetarium) WC
As its name implies, the Slovak
Technical Museum’s main branch
in Košice encompasses all things
technical with an emphasis
on the history and significant
personalities of metallurgy,
mechanical engineering,
surveying and cartography.
The museum’s cavernous
rooms house more than
16,000 exhibition items, most
explained in Slovak with some
English translations available.
There is also a remarkable and
exhaustive collection of historical
communications apparatuses
(typewriters, telephones,
telegraph machines) on the
second floor. A planetarium
makes it possible for visitors and
local school children to view
the heavens. This museum is
particularly kid-friendly with
lots of simple and engaging
hands-on physics experiments
in a special section. Although
the experiments are written in
Slovak, non-Slovak children can
figure out how they work.
16 Košický zlatý poklad
(Košice Gold treasure) W
city map page 169 Námestie Maratónu mieru 2,
Košice 0.8 km / 0.5 mile (9 min) Å+421 (0)55
622-0309 www.vsmuzeum.sk Tue-Sat 9:00-
17:00, Sun 13:00-17:00 from €3 éWC
You never know what you
will find when you start
remodelling: at least that was
the experience of a group of
Czechoslovak workers
on August 24, 1935.
They were digging in the
cellar of the old financial
directorate’s building on
the historic Main Street in
Košice when they found 2,920
gold coins, three gold medals
and a Renaissance gold chain
in an engraved copper casket.
This discovery, weighing 11.5
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - košice 175
kilograms, was one of the largest
coin finds in European history
and the extensive scope of types
and geographic origin of the
coins ranks the Košice Gold
Treasure among the artistic gems
of Europe.
It is speculated that the treasure
was hidden between 1679 and
1682 during one of the anti-
Habsburg uprisings led by Imre
Thököly. Since it was such an
enormous sum for that time, it
is suspected that its owner was
probably a high-ranking official
of the Spiš Chamber.
The Košice Gold Treasure was
returned to Košice in 2013 after
the premises of the Eastern
Slovak Museum, adapted for
its exhibition, underwent
reconstruction.
17 Kasárne/Kulturpark
(Barracks/Kulturpark)
Kukučínova 2, Košice 0.9 km / 0.6 mile (11
min) Å+421 (0)908 965-287
www.k13.sk Mon-Sun free (depends on
performance) é WC
The Barracks/Kulturpark
is the magnum opus of the
Košice European Capital of
Culture project from 2013,
and is the result of a dramatic
transformation of former military
barracks from the 19th
century.
The biggest investment – €26
million – of the culture capital
project, the Kulturpark was
inaugurated in 2013 and is a
modern cultural institution,
offering a platform for the
performance or presentation of
a variety of different art forms.
Ranging from contemporary
music, art, literature, theatre and
dance, the complex itself is made
up of three main buildings
separated by vast spaces filled
with eccentric seating designs.
The premise of the project was
to make the arts as accessible as
possible for all ages and artistic
backgrounds. With more than 15
different art spaces in Košice, the
new culture park is set to foster a
new generation of home-grown
artists and innovators.
18 Botanická záhrada
(Botanical garden) W
Mánesova23,Košice2.4km/ 1.5 miles (30
min) 3 km / 2 miles (9 min) Botanická záhra-
da (No. 7, 12, 18, 55) Å+421 (0)55 234-1667
www.upjs.sk/pracoviska/botanicka-zahrada
9:00-15:00 €2 éWC 90 min
Košice’s botanical garden, which
opened in 1950, is located
just outside the city centre on
the grounds of a university.
Its grounds and greenhouses
host numerous plant species,
and while the outside is bare
during the winter months, the
greenhouses thrive throughout
the year. Home to over 4,000
species of plants, even those with
no horticultural background
can be happily occupied in the
complex. From rooms dedicated
to different cacti species, to rows
of sumptuous citrus fruits, the
greenhouses take no notice of the
seasons outside.
In the greenhouses, the humid
temperature and exotic foliage
will give visitors a taste of the
rain forest. There are plants
originating from Indonesia to
Argentina, allowing guests to
truly feel transported. The smaller
areas off the main greenhouse
are highly recommended, and
the plants vary room to room,
including countless bonsai trees
and carnivorous
plants.
19 Čermeľ
Čermeľ, Košice 4 km / 2.5 miles (9 min)
NW of Košice Čermeľ (No. 14)
Detská železnica (Children’s railway)
Å+421 (0)905 496-426 May-Jun: Sat-Sun 9:15-
18:00, Jul-Aug: Tue-Sun 9:15-16:30
Sat-Sun 9:15-16:30 from €3 (children
from €1)
The Čermeľ valley can be found
en route to Bankov, residential
area, and in addition to its
walking routes, is best known
for its children’s railway and
the Alpinka recreation grounds.
The three different colours
marked on trees and maps lead
to different destinations, and
the red walk, arguably the most
interesting of the trio, traces the
journey traipsed by the heroes
of the Slovak National Uprising
(SNP).
The Čermeľ valley is also a
starting point of the St James’
pilgrimage route. Slovakia’s
stretch of the popular route
was launched in 2013 and
leads from Čermeľ-Košice to
Levoča. In total, to reach the
city of Compostela pilgrims
need to walk more than 3,100
kilometres.
Apart from walking, the valley
also attracts visitors for its rock
climbing area and its narrow-
gauge railway with Katka, the
Steam Engine, partly operated
by children. Using historical
carriages and reportedly
the oldest operating steam
locomotive in the region, the
railway attracts families to the
region throughout the year.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/176 eastern slovakia
2 ochtinsKá
aragonitovájasKyňa
(OchtinskáAragoniteCave)
map G 4 93 km / 57.7 miles (90 min) SW of
Košice Gočaltovo, Hrádok (1.5 km / 0.9 mile SW
of the cave) The cave’s entrance is about 300
metres from the car park Å+421 (0)58 488-5152
www.ssj.sk Apr-May, Sep-Oct: Tue-Sun 9:30-14:00
(entrance every 90 min); Jun-Aug 9:30-16:00
(entrance every hour) €6 WC
Rich white formations make the
Ochtinská Aragonite Cave unique
not only in Slovakia but also in the
world. The formations are from
aragonite, a white/brown calcium
carbonate material formed only
under specific chemical and climatic
conditions in a closed underground
space. There are three types of
aragonite formations in the cave:
kidney-shaped, needle-shaped and
spiral and small fans.Together they
create amazing shapes resembling
flowers and hedgehogs, while
some needles and spirals defy
gravity. One of the most
beautiful parts of the
cave is the Milky
Way Dome, on the
ceiling of which
aragonite needles have
created small stars shining
in the light of the lamps.
Be careful when visiting the cave,
as your efforts to absorb as much
of the beauty as possible may give
you a crick in your neck. The cave
was discovered by chance in 1954
by a geological expedition. Its total
length is 585 metres.To get to the
cave, take the road from Štítnik to
the town of Jelšava. The cave is on
UNESCO’s World Culture and
Natural Heritage list.
3 BrdárKa(agritourism)
page 272
4 slavošovce (tunnel)
page 286
5 štítniK (church)
page 213
6 rožňava
map G 4 68 km / 42 miles (55 min) SW of Ko-
šice 19,706 i Námestie baníkov 32, Rožňava
Å+421 (0)58 732-8101 www.ticroznava.sk
0.4 km / 0.2 mile SE of centre
u 1.5 km / 0.9 mile SW of centre
¤ May: Kaltenecker Starfest (beer festival);
September: Tempus Art (international festival of
alternative theatres); October: Kaltenecker October
fest (beer festival)
Banícke múzeum (Mining Museum)
Šafárikova 43, Rožňava Å+421 (0)58 734-4098
www.banmuz.sk Mon-Fri 8:00-12:00,
13:00-16:00 Sat-Sun booking necessary
€3.50 WC 60 min
Katedrála nanebovzatia Panny Márie
(CathedraloftheAssumptionoftheVirginMary)
Betliarska 3, Rožňava Å+421 (0)58 732-8101
Mon-Sun booking necessary U Mon-Fri 18:00
Sat 8:00 Sun 7:00 (HU), 10:00, 18:00 €2
30 min
Strážna veža (Watchtower)
Námestie baníkov 32, Rožňava Å +421
(0)58 732-8101 (i) Mon-Sun booking
necessary €2 30 min
The 19th
century poet Sándor
Petőfi described Rožňava, the
administrative capital of the Gemer
region, as lying in the valley “like a
coin in a beggar’s hat”. While there’s
an obvious political statement
behind the simile, it is also possible
to take Petőfi’s observation on a
purely aesthetic level. This town
of 19,000 people with an affluent
mining history sits between two
national parks (Slovenský kras and
Slovenský raj) and is at the centre
of criss-crossing valleys with
hills capped by dense
forest. It is a rare speck
of gold surrounded
by acres of undulating
barrenness.
These days, Rožňava is a
small, quiet town centred
on quite a rarity in Slovak
town planning: a square that is
actually square. In the centre of this
regular polygon is the 36-metre-
high Renaissance watchtower,
originally erected in 1654 as
Ottoman invaders swept across
the region, they deposited one
of their cannonballs in the
walls of the tower which is
still visible today.
In more peaceful times,
the tower’s clock was also
known as one of the most
accurate in the Hungarian
Kingdom, drawing visitors
to the marketplace to check
their own time-pieces,
much to the obvious
delight of the traders,
who occupied an arcade
of shops at the tower’s
foot. Present-day visitors
can climb 27 metres and
140 steps to a viewing balcony and
survey the town, noting gothic,
Renaissance, baroque and classicist
architecture in the immediate
vicinity – although communist
predictably dominates the wider
landscape.
Originally, the town grew to
prominence because of its mines
and a quaint museum just outside
the centre recalls this side of
Rožňava’s history. Gold, silver and
iron was hauled out of the nearby
hills during the early middle ages
and the town had its own mint.
However, activities slowed during
the 16th
century and Rožňava
reinvented itself as a centre of
academia and crafts. It became a
bishopric in 1776 and the gold-
coloured palace, completed two
years later on the north side of the
square, is still home to the current
bishop of Gemer.
Other buildings of note around
the square include the Black Eagle
Hotel (Hotel Čierny Orol), the
last remaining gothic building
whose original cellar remains intact;
the town hall dating from 1711,
built on the site of another gothic
structure that burned down; as
well as a still-active convent and a
Franciscan church and monastery,
which have also suffered fires
throughout the years. The statue
in front of the watchtower
portrays the legendarily
beneficent local favourite
Františka Andrássy doing
what she is reputed to
have done best: spreading
joy and food among poor
children, watched by her
doting husband Dionýz.
The town’s cathedral is
Rožňava’s oldest building,
with the work that
started during the 12th
century finished in
1304. Inside, it is most
notable for its 16th
century altar, which
Photo:MichalRengevič
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia 177
has the usual religious imagery on
the front, but uniquely depicts
mining scenes behind, probably at
the request of the German miners
who occupied the area.
The church’s exterior is now
dominated by its bell tower, which
was added to the main building
only when funds could be raised in
1799. Its classical style was work of
local architect Johann Mayer.
7 Betliar W
map G 3 75 km / 46.7 miles (61 min) SW of
Košice 931 www.betliar.eu
Kaštieľ Betliar (Betliar Manor House)
Kaštieľna 6, Betliar Å+421 (0)58 798-3197
www.snm.sk Tue-Sun 9:30-16:30 (entrance every
hour) Tue-Sun 9:30-14:00 (entrance every hour)
€6 (manor house), free (garden) WC
A tragic March 2012 fire
destroyed Krásna Hôrka, one
of Slovakia’s best castles. It also
decreased the number of tourists
visiting the nearby elegant manor
house Betliar because the two
were most frequently visited
the same day. This is a shame.
The Andrássy family travelled
the world, hunted with native
tribes, collected rare objects,
and their 50-room home reflects
the expensive hobbies of its
aristocratic owners. It would be a
mistake to miss the manor house,
a worthy destination on its own
and part of the Slovak National
Museum.
The manor house’s foundation
was laid in the mid-15th
century,
but what visitors see today is the
result of centuries of renovations.
The most extensive renovation
occurred between 1880 and 1886.
The Andrássy family, fleeing the
advancing Russian troops, left
Betliar in 1944 and the estate was
nationalised in 1945. It became a
museum in 1953 with the stated
goal of showing the public how
aristocratic home decor developed
in the 18th
and 19th
centuries.
The property more than meets
this goal. It is a veritable
Downton Abbey in Slovakia that
is frozen in time. Remarkably,
none of the furnishings were
stolen and the manor house was
not damaged or even vandalised
during World War II. Tours
(about 90 minutes) are offered
in various languages, and the
atmosphere is intimate with
small groups able to get up close
and personal with the contents
(most of which are described in
English).
The manor house’s uniqueness
lies in the authenticity of the
furnishings, all are original
including several 18th
century wall hangings.
The 18th
and 19th
century-furnished
rooms appear well used
and comfortable rather than
stuffy and untouchable.
When the family bought new
furniture, the old furniture
was placed in the servant’s
quarters, so there are no stark
differences in the look of those
who lived upstairs and those who
lived downstairs. Although it is
grand, the manor house maintains
a homey feel.
Family portraits grace the walls
with the most impressive hanging
in the Family Salon, located near
the entrance and reached via the
neo-gothic wooden staircase.
The impressive library started by
Leopold Andrássy and maintained
by successive generations of the
family contains 15,000 volumes
in tall oak bookcases in neo-
baroque style. A glance up reveals
the Murano glass chandelier.
In keeping with the family’s
exotic hunting tastes, various
rooms depict the thrill
of the kill. One can
find the preserved
head of an African
elephant as well
as a water buffalo, a
rhinoceros, tortoise
and two crocodiles.
Two real Egyptian
mummies, the sealskin
clothes of an Eskimo,
and the incomplete outfit
and weapons of a Japanese
Samurai warrior can be viewed
in the Gallery of Exotic Rarities.
Collections of porcelain, silver
and art, among other things,
abound.
While there is much to see
inside the manor house, look
outside to complete the
experience. A 57-hectare
nature park where
landscaping was made a
priority from the 16th
to
19th
centuries reflects
the same thoughtful
attention to symmetry
and beauty with
specimen plantings
from around the world.
The park was entered
on the list of Historical
Landscape Gardens of
the World in 1977,
though a windstorm
heavily damaged the park
in March 2013.
the impressive library holds 15,000 volumes in
neo-baroque bookcases
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8 KrásnohorsKé
Podhradie
map G 3 63 km / 39 miles (50 min) SW of
Košice 2,575
www.obeckrasnohorskepodhradie.sk
Hrad Krásna Hôrka (Krásna Hôrka Castle)
www.snm.sk Currently undergoing reconstruction after
fire and will reopen in 2016 at earliest.
Mauzóleum grófa Dionýza a Františky
Andrássyovcov (Mausoleum of Count Dionýz
and Františka Andrássy)
2 km / 1.4 miles SE of the castle just outside
Krásnohorské Podhradie located on the main road
(E58, E571) following a traffic route from Rožňava to
Košice Å+421 (0)58 732-2034 www.snm.sk
May-Sep: Tue-Sun 8:30-17:30 (entrance every
hour); Nov-Mar: Tue-Sun 9:30-14:00 (entrance every
90 min); Apr, Oct: Tue-Sun 9:30-16:30 (entrance every
hour) €1.5 10 min
Krásna Hôrka Castle was built
to protect the mediaeval route
through mining towns. The exact
date of the construction of castle
is unknown. In the
13th
century the
surrounding land
was owned by the
aristocracy and in 1243 king Béla
IV donated the site of today’s
castle to Filip and Dietrich of the
Ákos family in appreciation for
their help fighting the Tartars. The
Ákos family, later known as the
Bebek family, sold the area to the
Mariássy family. They are most
likely the first builders of the castle
around 1290.
At the time it was just a fortified
gothic tower on top of a
limestone pile. The first recorded
mention of the castle was in
1333. The Bebek family realising
that the castle sat on rich mineral
deposits regained control in 1352,
holding it until the second half of
the 16th
century.
After that it changed hands
multiple times, until Péter
Andrássy took control. His
family held it until 1945, when
it became property of the state.
Krásna Hôrka is an exceptional
example of castle architecture as it
escaped the widespred liquidation
of castles in the 18th
century.
Starting in 1857 it was the
Andrássy family museum.
The original tower also housed
the first living space and the
defensive wall formed
a small courtyard. A
major reconstruction was
carried out in the
middle
of the 16th
century by Francis
Bebek to protect the castle from
Ottoman attacks, giving the castle
its triangular floor plan with
cannon bastions in the corners.
The largest bastion is now the
chapel and the old core of the
castle is in the middle of the
complex. The gate to the castle
had a drawbridge.
Reconstruction was inspired
by the work of Italian architect
Alessandro da Vedano. The
Andrássy family first changed the
upper castle, expanding
it by one storey, before
adding the lower castle.
interior of the chapel in the castle
the coffin with the mummified
remains of Žofia Serédy
Photo:EmanueleTerenzani
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - krásna hôrka castle 179
The extended fortifications
formed a new courtyard with a
residential area for staff. A new
intimate courtyard with a shielded
porch resulted. At the turn of the
19th
and 20th
century a crypt was
built on the ground floor of the
central castle.
In March 2012, a fire broke out
at Krásna Hôrka Castle, its flames
engulfing the entire roof within
10 minutes. The roof caught fire
from the burning grass and bushes
on the slopes of the castle hill. It
took several hours to extinguish
the fire and the damage was
extensive. The wooden shingle
roof burned completely,
including the roof’s frame.
The fire also partially destroyed
the upper part of the castle,
specifically the gothic palace. The
majority of exhibits were saved,
but many needed cleaning or
a complete restoration. Krásna
Hôrka Castle is scheduled to
reopen in 2016. Even though the
exhibits will remain the same,
their display will be updated.
The tour before the fire started
in the lower castle, where one
could take a look at the historical
kitchen, dining room, tea room
and gambling room. In the gothic
tower and the gothic palace,
visitors could inspect an array of
weapons dating from the 16th
and
17th
centuries, various cannon
models and firearms of
Balkan origin. The castle
exhibition also included
a funeral carriage which
was made to transport
the remains of both
Countess Františka and
Count Dionýz Andrássy.
The Andrássy Mausoleum is
a rare example
of art nouveau
architecture in
Slovakia. It was
built on the
command
of Count
Dionýz
Andrássy, the last heir of Krásna
Hôrka Castle, between 1903-
1904. Following the death of his
wife, Františka Andrássy, he
asked a young, talented
architect from Munich,
Richard Berndl, to design
the mausoleum.
The exquisite interior
is proof of the count’s
devotion to his wife. The
eight support columns are
decorated with green, red and
pink marble and the inner surface
of the dome is covered in golden
mosaic pieces. The couple lived in
a childless marriage for 36 years,
but visitors can find the statue of
their beloved dog, the dachshund
Tascherl, in the backyard of the
mausoleum.
entrance to the castle
One of the castle’s bastions
was turned into a chapel.
Fire at the Krásna Hôrka Castle
the Andrássy Mausoleum
Photo:SITA
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/180 eastern slovakia - slovenský kras (slovak karst)
TORNAĽA
Kunova
Teplica
Čierna
Lehota
Vlachovo
Gočovo
Nižná
Slaná
Rožňavské
Bystré
Henckovce
Roštár
Honce
Ochtiná
Rimavská Seč
Čoltovo
Včelince
Kaloša
Chanava
Abovce
Muráň
Slaná
Gemerská
Hôrka Dlhá
Ves
Gemer
Rakovinca
Kružná R
Slavec
Lenartovce
Blh
Slaná
Betliar
Brzotín
Gemerská
Poloma
Slavošovce
Štítnik
Plešivec
Hanková
Brdárka
Kobeliarovo
Rozložná
Rašice
Štrkovec
Hubovo
Figa
Dulovo
ROŽŇA
Ochtinská
aragonitová
jaskyňa
Gombasecká
jaskyňa (cave)
Jaskyňa
Domica
(cave)
4
5
11
10
2
3
Koceľovce
SPECTACULAR SLOVA
10 jasKyňa domica
(Domica Cave) W
mapG493km/58miles(73min)SWofKošice
Kečovo, Domica Å+421 (0)58 788-2010
www.ssj.sk Feb-May, Sep-Dec: Tue-Sun
9:30-14:00 (entry every 90 min) Jun-Aug: Tue-Sun
9:00-16:00 (entry every hour) €6
WC 45 min
The Domica Cave is the most
famous and spectacular cave
in the Slovak Karst (Slovenský
kras) limestone area west of
Košice. The vast underground
system snakes its way south
under the border with Hungary.
The Slovak share of the Domica
system is five kilometres long, of
which more than one kilometre
is accessible. During the tour
guides lead you through the cave
and its history, and explain the
various formations. At the end
they test whether you remember
what stalagmites, stalagnates
and stalactites are. By torch they
point out individual formations
named after their shapes.
Sometimes a bat flies over the
heads of visitors, reaffirming
that the cave is home to more
than just mineral deposits. One
section of the cave, a stream
known as the Styx River, is
navigable only by boat. Perhaps
the most exciting part of the
tour consists of a 150-metre ride
down the Styx on a small raft
navigated by the guide. The craft
glides along the calm surface of
the crystal-clear water under a
huge stone jammed between the
walls above your head. Recently
the cave underwent some
modernisation and its entry hall
offers a small exhibition with
short films on the origin of caves,
their habitats and protection.
During the cave tour you can see
an archaeological presentation on
the life of primaeval man in the
cave. The cave is easily accessible
by car on the road from Plešivec,
close to Rožňava, near the
Slovak-Hungarian border. The
cave is on UNESCO’s World
Culture and Natural Heritage
list.
11 gomBasecKá
jasKyňa (Gombasek
Cave)
map G 4 76 km / 47.3 miles (41 min) SW of
Košice Slavec, Gombasecká jaskyňa
Å+421 (0)58 788-2020 www.ssj.sk
Apr-May, Sep-Oct: Tue-Sun 10:00-14:30 (entran-
ce every 90 min); Jun: Tue-Sun 9:00-16:00 (entrance
every hour); Jul-Aug: Tue-Sun 10:00-17:00 (entrance
every hour) €5 WC 30 min
9 slovensKý Kras (Slovak Karst)
map F 4, G 3, 4 59 km / 37 miles (58 min) SW of Košice u
Area: 346 km2
i Námestie baníkov 32, Rožňava Å+421 (0)58 732-8101
www.ticroznava.sk; www.sopsr.sk/slovkras; www.slovensky-kras.eu
The nation’s most famous caves lie in the National Park Slovak Karst
(Slovenský kras). A karst is an area girded by a soluble layer of bedrock,
in this case limestone. The porous nature of the bedrock gives rise to vast
networks of underground waterways, as well as huge occasional voids.Voids
with surface openings are called caves; those without are called abysses. As
is often the case, geology trumps geopolitics, and the Slovak Karst region
extends across the border into Hungary. The greater karst area is 500 square
kilometres, with about two thirds of it in Slovakia. On the Hungarian side
of the border, the area is known as the Aggtelek Karst. As a whole, the karst
in Slovakia houses around 1,300 known caves and abysses. The karst was
formed during terrestrial plate-tectonic activity during the MiddleTriassic
Age, around 250 million years ago.
Both the Slovak and Hungarian governments have declared their parts of
the karst protected nature reserves, severely limiting development. This is
important, because karsts are extremely environmentally sensitive, since their
porous nature allows anything – including toxic waste – to seep through and
contaminate the entire system.
UNESCO in 1995 declared the caves of the Slovak and Aggtelek
KarstWorld Heritage Sites, in recognition of their beauty and superior
preservation. This will help ensure that these delicate underground
ecosystems flourish without pressure from ambitious development schemes.
At first glance, the karst makes an unlikely tourist attraction. On the
surface, it’s essentially a huge and barren plain, occasionally punctured by
low-slung, jagged canyons dotted with scrub trees. The most famous and
spectacular cave is called Domica, a vast system that snakes its way south
under the border to Hungary. ©CBS www.painted-maps.com
Photo:MichalRengevič
Photo:MichalRengevič
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia - slovenský kras (slovak karst) 181
30
14
15
S L O V E N S K Ý
K R
A
S
KKrásnohorská
jaskyňa (cave)
Betliar
Krásna
Hôrka
Štós
Krásnohorská
Dlhá Lúka
Jablonov
n. Turňou
Silica
Rudná
Smolnícka
Huta
Zlatý stôl
1322
Drnava
Čuma
Lipovník Háj
Hačava
Bodva
Janík
Nováčany
v.
Bu
Rudník
Poproč
MEDZEV
Buz
Mokrance
Drienovec
Hrhov
Jasov
Vyšný
Medzev
Krásnohorské
Podhradie
MODAVA
N. BODVOU
Turňa
n. Bodvou
V
Opátka
Zlatá
Idka
Rešica
Hosťovce
Chorváty
Zádiel
Dvorníky-
-Včeláre
Bôrka
Hrušov
Silická
Jablonica
Žarnov
AVA
SLOVENSKÝ KRAS
SLOVENSKÝ KRAS
Jasovská
jaskyňa
(cave)
8
12
6
9
13
7
AKIA SPECTACULAR SLOVAKIA
Gombasecká Cave is
distinguished by a curious
formation of sinter (mineral
deposit) straws 2-3 milimetres in
diameter and up to three metres
long. Because of its delicate
and colourful formations, it has
earned the name of the fairy-
tale cave. The vast marble hall
features variety of stalagmites
and stalactites, including cone-
shaped formations like tropical
anthills. The cave is on the road
from Rožňava to Plešivec, and is
on UNESCO’s World Culture
and Natural Heritage list.
12 KrásnohorsKá
jasKyňa (Krásnohorská
Cave) W
map G 4 67 km / 41.6 miles (53 min) SW of
Košice Krásnohorská Dlhá Lúka 2 km / 1.2 miles
NW of cave Å+421 (0)905 412-048
www.krasnohorskajaskyna.sk Apr-Nov three
entrances (9:00, 11:30, 14:00) up to 10 persons;
booking recommended booking necessary€10
If tourists prefer a rush of
adrenaline to passively admiring
the beauties of nature, they
should visit the Krásnohorská
Cave. It will turn you into a
spelunker, at least for a while.
Visitors, when dressed in
protective gear and helmets,
can peer into the mysterious
underground. This cave is
located close to the village of
Krásnohorská Dlhá Lúka.
Guides can be found in
the Jozefína Pension.
Before visiting the cave
contact a guide because
access to the cave,
in the National Park
Slovak Karst, is possible only
with a guide. Children under six
are not admitted, and booking
is recommended. Krásnohorská
Cave is on UNESCO’s World
Culture and Natural Heritage
list.
13 Zádiel(hiking)
page 252
14 štós (spa)
page 225
15 jasov
map H 3 27 km / 16.5 miles (27 min) NW of
Košice 3,351 www.jasov.sk
Premonstratensian monastery
Jasov 166 Å+421 (0)55 466-8100
booking necessary U Mon-Sat 7:00 Sun 9:00
€2 é(small stair in front of the door) WC
Located south-west of the Košice
Basin, the town of Jasov is one of
Upper Hungary’s former mining
centres. Despite its long mining
history, the town is currently most
noted for its monastery and caves.
TheTartar invasion between 1240
and 1242 destroyed all previous
written documentation of the
complex, however it is thought
that the Premonstratensians arrived
in Jasov around 1170. They have
remained to this day. The first
Premonstratensian monastery
dates back to the year
1228. After its several
conversions in the 18th
century Abbot Andreas
Sauberer initiated
the demolition of
the former monastery to
make space for the late-baroque
monastery complex. This was
built based on a design ascribed to
Vienna-based architect Franz Anton
Pilgram. It survives as an excellent
piece of architecture because of
the notable cooperation between
the architect, the sculptor, and the
painter during its development.
Photo:MichalRengevič
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/182 eastern slovakiaPhoto:MichalRengevičPhoto:courtesyofJ&JOstrožovič
The monastery is rectangular in
shape with a two-tower church
dedicated to St John the Baptist.
The historic library with grandiose
ceiling frescoes houses floor-to-
ceiling bookshelves with more than
100,000 volumes – some dating
back to the 15th
century – making it
the third biggest library in Slovakia.
Jasovská jaskyňa (Jasov Cave)
located on the western edge of Jasov village
about 1 km / 0.6 mile from the village centre
Å+421 (0)55 466-4165 www.ssj.sk
Apr-May, Sep-Oct: Tue-Sun 10:00-14:30 (entrance
every 90 min); Jun-Aug: 9:00-16:00 (entrance every
hour) €5 WC 45 min
This cave was discovered
by the monks of the Jasov
Premonstratensian order and was
opened to the public as the first
show cave in Slovakia in 1846.
Inscriptions and records from
the past have been preserved
on some of the walls. Look
for pagoda-like stalagmites,
stalagnates, shields, drums, straw
stalactites and other formations.
The biggest part of the cave
is the Old Dome with a huge
stalagmite six metres tall. Don’t
miss the historical inscription
on the wall of the Dome of the
Hussites reporting the victory of
Jan Jiskra over the army of János
Hunyadi near Lučenec in 1451.
The tour covers 720 of the cave’s
2,811 metres. At present, speleo-
climatic treatments are offered to
allergic and asthmatic children.
To get there, take the road
from Moldava to Jasov.
Jasovská is on UNESCO’s
World Culture and Natural
Heritage list.
16 nováčany
(agritourism) page 238
17 družstevná
Prihornáde
(agritourism) page 272
18 toKaj W
map I 4 63-72 km / 40 - 45 miles
(60-70 min) SE of Košice Slovenské
Nové Mesto (SW of the Tokaj region)
u Area: 907 ha The micro
region embraces: Bara, Čerhov, Černochov, Malá Tŕňa,
Slovenské Nové Mesto, Veľká Tŕňa and Viničky i
Dlhá 230, Čerhov
Å+421 (0)905 212-421 www.tvc.sk
¤ May: Urban (presentation of young wines), Tokaj
in Europe; September: Open Tokaj cellars day
VeľKá tŕňA
J&J Ostrožovič WC
Nižná 233, Veľká Tŕňa Å+421 (0)56 679-3322
www.ostrozovic.sk booking necessary
MAlá tŕňA
tokaj & CO WC
Medzipivničná 202, Malá Tŕňa
Å+421 (0)56 679-2688
www.tokaj.sk booking necessary
tokaj Macik Winery WC
Medzipivničná 174, Malá Tŕňa
Å+421 (0)56 679-3466
www.tokajmacik.sk booking necessary
ViniČKy
Zlatý Strapec Viničky WC
Viničky 118 Å+421 (0)905 271-275
www.tokaj-zlatystrapec.sk booking necessary
tokajská spoločnosť Viničky WC
Hlavná 399/71, Viničky Å+421 (0)56 687-1401
www.tokajvinicky.sk booking necessary
Chances are that even if you
are not a big fan of wine, you
will still fall in love with Tokaj
– a picturesque region in the
southeast of Slovakia hemmed
by the Zemplín mountains from
the north, the confluence of
the Tisa and Bodrog rivers
from the south, and one of
the sunniest climates in the
country from above. The rare
combination of conditions
in the region produces
a unique sweet wine
adored by enthusiasts
today and popes and
kings in the past.
Tokaj wines are produced
from three cultivars: Furmint,
Lipovina and Yellow Muscat.
The local conditions enable
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia 183
grapes to become “nobly
rotten” (by the Botrytis cinerea
noble rot), producing small,
not annually guaranteed,
raisins called cibebas, giving
the wine its specific character.
The Tokaj region is specifically
delineated from the rest of
the country for its unique
microclimate and network of
cellars that allows its vintners
to produce a distinctive, sweet
dessert wine. The micro-region
encompasses several villages:
Bara, Čerhov, Černochov, Malá
Tŕňa, Slovenské Nové Mesto,
Veľká Tŕňa and Viničky. With
only 907 hectares, the Slovak
Tokaj region is one of the
smallest wine-making areas in
the world. Despite its size the
wines from the area are praised
and appreciated all around
the world. Tokaj wine has also
been mentioned by the likes
of Beethoven, Schubert, Franz
Liszt, Tsar Peter I and several
popes. It is said that king Louis
XIV was so keen on the sweet
wine from the Tokaj region that
he had it brought to Versailles
regularly. The French king is
also the author of the famous
saying “Vinum regnum, rex
vinorum,” which means: “Wine
of kings, king of wines”.
Tokaj wines are also said to
have medicinal effects. Regular
consumption of Tokaj wine
in low amounts is said to
prevent heart attack, metabolic
disorders and anaemia. The
Tokaj region is not only known
for its extraordinary wine,
but also for the one-of-a-kind
tuffa wine cellars. Original
Tokaj cellars were built in the
16th
-17th
centuries and they
are declared a national heritage
attraction. The cellars create
the perfect conditions for
Tokaj wine, which is mostly
helped by a special grey mould
that grows on the cellars’ walls
and oak barrels. The mould
has the function of a biological
filter and affects the humidity
in the cellar.
The best time to visit the
region might be in May
or September, when the
celebrations are held in the
Tokaj villages and the Tokaj
Wine Tour offers wine tastings.
19 treBišov
map I 3 49 km / 30.4 miles (47 min) SE of Ko-
šice 24,401 i M. R. Štefánika 1632, Trebišov
Å+421 (0)56 672-3277 www.trebisov.sk 1.4 km
/ 0.9 mile SE of centre u 1.4 km / 0.9 mile SE of
centre ¤ May: Night of museums; August: Bread
and wine (Harvest fest); November: Festival of lights;
December: Traditional hog-killing
Hrad Parič (Parič Castle)
Mestský park, Trebišov; www.muzeumtv.sk
exterior views only free é
Múzeum a Kultúrne centrum južného Zemplína
(Museum and Cultural Centre of Southern Zemplín)
M. R. Štefánika 257/61, Trebišov Å+421
(0)56 672-2234 www.muzeumtv.sk Mon-Fri,
Sun €1.5 WC
Mauzóleum grófa Júliusa Andrássyho
(Mausoleum of Count Július Andrássy)
Mestský park, Trebišov +421 (0)56 672-2234
www.muzeumtv.sk exterior views only (booking
necessary for interior views) free é
Kostol navštívenia Panny Márie
(Church of Virgin Mary’s Visitation)
Mariánske námestie 253/3, Trebišov Å+421
(0)56 672-2773 4:30-19:30 (entrance hall) U
Mon-Fri 6:30, 11:30, 18:00 Sat 7:00, 18:00 Sun
7:30, 9:00, 10:30, 18:00 voluntary é
Trebišov, the centre of Lower
Zemplín (Dolný Zemplín),
lies in the south-western
part of the East
Slovak Lowlands.
The first written
mention of Trebišov
is from 1254 and
is linked with
the Parič Castle,
which is one of
the oldest parts
of the town. The
castle belonged
to many noble
families, until it
was destroyed in
the 17th
century.
Now only ruins recall its former
presence in the English park
near the manor house. While
constructing the nearby chateau,
the Csáky family also used stones
left over from the castle. The
Andrássy family inherited the
manor in 1838 and later built
the park and the neo-gothic
mausoleum, Trebišov’s most
notable landmarks to this day. In
the manor house is the Museum
and Cultural Centre of Southern
Zemplín, which collects and
documents the development of
the Trebišov region with a special
emphasis on the history of
production of the Tokaj wine in
eastern Slovakia.
The Church of Virgin Mary’s
Visitation dating back to the
14th
century is an outstanding
example of gothic architecture,
even though it was later
extended to include additional
architectural styles. Its gothic
net vault was decorated with
exceptional rococo paintings
depicting the life
of the Virgin Mary
and the legend of St
Paul Eremite. In the
20th
century, the
town’s industry
concentrated around
the chocolate factory
Deva and dairying.
Only the Deva
factory is still in
operation, though
on a significantly
smaller scale than in
the past.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/184 eastern slovakia
20 michalovce
map I 3 59 km / 36.7 miles (59 min) E of Košice
40,027 i Nám. osloboditeľov 30, Michalovce
Å+421 (0)56 686-4105 www.michalovce.sk u
¤ April/May: Spring market, June: Michalovce day;
September: Zemplín ghosts’ festival
Zemplínske múzeum (Zemplín Museum)
Kostolné námestie 1, Michalovce Å+421 (0)56
644-1093 www.zemplinskemuzeum.sk
Tue-Fri 9:00-16:00 Thu 9:00-17:00 Sat booking
necessary Sun 14:00-17:00 Tue-Fri 8:00-14:30
Thu 8:00-17:00 Sat booking necessary €2
é(partly) WC 60 min
Kostol narodenia Panny Márie
(Church of the nativity of the Virgin Mary)
Kostolné námestie, Michalovce Å+421 (0)56
642-0898 for services only U Mon, Fri 6:00,
12:00, 18:00 Tue, Thu 6:00, 18:00 Wed 6:00, 12:00
Sat 7:30, 18:00 Sun 7:30, 9:00, 10:30, 18:00
Kaplnka sv. Antona Paduánskeho
(Chapel of St Anthony of Padua)
Hrádok, Michalovce Å+421 (0)56 642-0898
for services only U Mar 25-Oct 28 every other
Sunday 9:00
Once a feudal town rulled by
the Sztáray family, Michalovce
is currently the economic,
administrative and cultural
centre of the Zemplín region.
Given its strategic position
and rich resources, the area of
today’s city has been settled since
the Paleolithic era. During the
Late Bronze Age it gradually
grew into an important trading
centre within the Carpathians.
Archaeological findings support
the theory of Slavic colonisation
in the 6th
century. The name
Michalovce appears for the first
time as “Mihal” in a document
from 1244. It is named after St
Michael.
Michalovce, “the heart of
Zemplín”, is a reasonable
starting point when discovering
eastern parts of Košice Region.
As the second largest city it
offers the comfort of a restaurant
and hotel accommodations, but
still feels homey and relaxed. All
sightseeing is within walking
distance from the city
centre. The character
of the central square
is formed by by
colourful mix of
historical architecture.
The eye-catching
bright blue former
bank building built
in the classicist style
is decorated by pseudo-
rococo images. The palace
is influenced by Hungarian
secession and there is a majestic
old butchers house with a golden
bull head on the front.
Near the bus station is the
baroque-classicistic mansion of
the Sztáray family, considered
to be one of the most significant
historical buildings in the area.
The origin of the manor house
is estimated to the 17th
century,
after it was rebuilt on the site
of an old castle. Today it serves
as the Museum of the Southern
Zemplín Region. Exhibitions
are focused on archaeological,
natural, ethnographic and
historical artefacts. Among the
most unique pieces dating from
the Bronze Age is the earliest
representation of a two-wheeled
chariot in central Europe.
On its grounds visitors can also
view the remains of a rotunda
believed to be the oldest sacred
building in the city, and which
archaeologists date back to
between the 9th
and the 12th
centuries. Just a few metres
from the mansion is the gothic
Church of the Nativity of the
Virgin Mary, dating from the
14th
century. The church
was built by noblemen and
dedicated to the Virgin
Mary, protector of the
Hungarian kings. At
the end of the 17th
century the original
gothic church burned
down and after its
renovation it gained
a somewhat baroque
appearance. Not far from
the Church of the Nativity
of the Virgin Mary is another
church with an interesting
back story. It is believed that
the Greek Catholic Church
of the Nativity of the Blessed
Mother of God was rebuilt
after a devastating fire thanks
to Empress Maria Theresa.
While she was passing through
Michalovce she saw people
praying in a half-built church
and she sent 28 workers to finish
the job. As a gesture of gratitude
there is a Habsburg coat of arms
above the portal.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia 185
22 ZemPlínsKa šírava
(Water Dam)
map I 3 70 km / 43.2 miles (68 min) NE of
Košice Zemplínska šírava, rázcestie Kaluža
(resorts: Biela hora, Hôrka, Medvedia hora,
Kaluža, Kamenec, Klokočov, Paľkov)
i Kaluža 4 Å+421 (0)56 687-1570
www.sirava.sk non-stop WC
¤ June: Summer season opening; July: International
meeting of powered paragliding; August: International
motorcycle riders meeting, Zemplín folklore festival
thermal Park šírava
Zemplínska šírava, Kaluža
www.thermalparksirava.sk Mon-Sun 9:00-21:00
from €9 é WC
Circular observation boating
from the port in the resort Hôrka by boat Zemplín
3 km / 1.9 miles SW of Kaluža Zemplínska
šírava, Hôrka Å+421 (0)948 187-001
Jul-Aug: Mon-Sun 10:00-16:00 (start every
2 hours); May, Sep: booking necessary €4
45 min
Zemplínska šírava is a 33 km2
man-made lake built as an
anti-flood reservoir just a few
kilometres from Michalovce. It is
also known as the “Slovak Sea”.
It is a popular place for holidays,
camping, partying or just plain
relaxing during the summer season
and a new thermal park in Kaluža
increases the tourism possibilities.
Around the dam are several
restaurants serving traditional
Slovak cuisine, beaches and
a variety of water sports
on offer. More
adventurous
excursions include
horse-back riding
by the lake or in the
the nearby hills. Tourists can visit
the smaller, but no less beautiful,
Vinianske Lake and nearby
ruins of Viniansky Castle with a
spectacular view over Zemplínska
šírava. The volcanic lake Morské
oko (Eye of the Sea in English) in
the Vihorlatské vrchy mountains
offers another interesting trip just a
30-minute drive from Zemplínska
šírava.
Around Zemplínska šírava are
a number of tourist resorts. The
Biela Hora resort is located on the
west side of Zemplínska šírava.
It is just three kilometres from
Michalovce, while several of the
privately owned cottages can be
rented. The landscape gently slopes
with a grassy entry into the water.
Eight kilometres away from
Michalovce is Hôrka - one of
the most important centres of
Zemplínska šírava. Visitors can
enjoy tennis courts, a swimming
pool for children, paddle boats,
volleyball, or mini-golf. Sandy
and gravel beaches, night life and
musical performances are among
the highlights. There is also an
information centre and a harbour
for passenger boats. Visitors can
use the local horse riding centre,
which also offers lessons. There is
also a yacht club that offers sailing
lessons.
The most beautiful scenery is at
Medvedia Hora and the northern
side of the resort includes a new
thermal park. The village of aluža
has a swimming pool located at the
edge of the dam. A camp closer
to the village offers space
for 150 caravans.
Kamenec, with
its gravel
beach, is
suitable for
all kinds
of water
sports. There is a water slide on
the picturesque bay, Disco Motel
Kamenec (www.motelkamenec.
sk) with a capacity of around
1,000 people, racing ring (www.
kriscar.sk), and the campground
has space for 50 tents. The village
of Klokočov offers another
campground with a capacity of
200 tents and caravans as well
as a swimming pool. The village
is a pilgrimage site for Greek
Catholics. In the local church there
is a painting of the Virgin Mary
which is said to have shed tears in
1670. For fishing, Paľkov is the
best choice.
21 vinné
map I 3 67 km / 41.6 miles (67 min) NE of
Košice 1,692 www.vinne.sk
Viniansky hrad (castle)
on the west side about 2 km from the village
Vinné non-stop free
Vinianske jazero (lake)
on the east side of the village Vinné in the middle
of the forest about 2.5 km / 1.6 miles from the
village centre non-stop free WC
Kostol sv. Anny (St Anne’s Church)
Vinné Å+421 (0)56 649-2295
for services only U Sun 7:00, 10:00
Just a few minutes drive from
Zemplínska šírava, the village of
Vinné is a quieter alternative to
the crowded holiday resort. On
the left side of the village the
ruins of the mediaeval Viniansky
Castle overlook Zemplínska
šírava’s waters, as well as the
village streets. The castle was built
in the 13th
century to guard the
route to Poland together with
Brekov and Jasenov castles. It
has recently been undergoing
reconstruction and several
archaeological objects were found
on the site.
In the middle of the village there
is St Anne’s Church with gothic
vaults and epitaphs from the 16th
,
17th
and 19th
centuries.
Going further into the woods, in
the middle of a rich forest, visitors
will find a smaller Vinianske
Lake. The lake is a perfect place
for barbecues, picnics, water
sports, fishing and relaxing. The
green grass beaches are a popular
place for camping in summer. In
the winter the lake changes into
an ice skating rink.
L A B O R E C K Á N I V A
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Sadenec
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.570,0
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.821,1
Lopušťan
.645,3
Stok
.708,9
Zaňovec
.507,4
Skalka
.314,4
Dielik
.318,3
Veľký vrch
.272,2
Lomok
.590,7
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©CBS www.painted-maps.com
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/The Košice Region is a small area in Slova-
kia with a particularly strong concentration
of remarkable beauties of nature, as well as
monuments, magical stories, nice people
and unique traditions and habits.
The wealth of national parks, unique caves,
beautiful rock formations, canyons and wa-
terfalls astound every visitor who decides
to see the region through its natural heri-
tage. Lovers of history will also enjoy the
many architectural monuments, the pre-
served castles, manor houses and the rare
and unique churches, as well as the muse-
ums and technical monuments scattered
throughout the entire region, documenting
the rich history of this land. It is an ideal
place for spending your holiday.
The Košice Region is picturesque and di-
verse, and it holds within it a great many
enchanting places which will inspire you to
visit again and again.
get inspired
get inspired
www.kosiceregion.com
SP013143/001
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/eastern slovakia 187
23 soBrance
map J 3 79 km / 48.7 miles (77 min) E of Košice
5,981 www.zemplin.eu
Gitarové múzeum (Guitar Museum)
Gorkého 338/9, Sobrance +421 (0)902
370-909 Mon-Fri 10:00-17:00, Sat-Sun
10:00-19:00 (call in advance) voluntary
é WC
The unique Guitar Museum in
Sobrance is the only museum
of its kind in Europe. Currently
under reconstruction, the red
building with a façade in the
shape of guitar, houses hundreds
of original musical instruments
from different eras, each with its
own peculiar story. The museum
also recounts the evolution and
production of electric guitars
in Czechoslovakia after World
War II.
Musician Ján Ferko
started the collection as
a hobby about 25 years
ago. The idea of the guitar
museum started when
Ferko found a photograph
of his first guitar, which
he got at the age of
15. This rekindled
memories from his
youth and evoked the
hunt to find that first
ever guitar. He never did, but
did find hundreds of others on
the way. Now, the collection has
grown to more than 1,100 pieces
including originals that cannot
be found anywhere else, as well
as other musical instruments and
period artifacts. Ferko founded
the museum in 1996.
24 tiBava(wine) page 231
25 orechová(wine)
page 231
26 inovce
map J 3 99 km / 61.5 miles (96 min) NE of
Košice 213
Chrám sv. Michala Archanjela
(Church of St Michael the Archangel)
+421 (0)56 658-2514
booking necessary €1.4 WC
The wooden church in the village
of Inovce is one of three wooden
Greek-Catholic churches in
the Košice region. It was built
in 1836 and is dedicated to St
Michael the Archangel. The
church is small but met the
needs of the village. The bell is
not in the church tower, which
is too small to hold a bell, but is
in a nearby columned structure.
Behind the church is a graveyard.
The church itself has three parts:
an entrance which is sheltered
by the west tower, the square
nave, and the sanctuary which
is separated from the nave by
an iconostasis. The iconostasis
remains incomplete because of
the lack of space and is presently
being renovated. The whole
church is an example of
construction suited to
the Byzantine rite and is
accompanied by baroque
and classicist architecture,
as well as paintings from
the beginning of the 19th
century. The church no
longer hosts masses (not
since 1950), but the
mayor of Inovce has
the key to the church and is
happy to open it for tourists.
27 rusKá Bystrá W
map J 3104 km / 64.6 miles (103
min) NE of Košice 118 www.
ruskabystra.lekosonline.sk
Cerkva sv. Mikuláša
(Church of St nicholaus)
Å+421 (0)918 476-274
booking necessary USun 10:30
voluntary
This Greek-Catholic wooden
church standing on a hill was
built in the first half of the 18th
century and was added to the
UNESCO World Heritage List,
along with seven other wooden
churches, in 2008. The church, a
result of the blending of Latin and
Byzantine cultures, resembles a log
farmhouse with a belfry. It consists
of the sanctuary, the nave and
the entrance space (usually called
babinec in such churches) and is
covered with a shingle roof.
28 morsKé oKo
(Eye of the Sea)
map J 3 95 km / 58.1 miles (98 min) NE of
Košice Remetské Hámre 9 km / 5.4 miles S of
Morské oko www.morske-oko.sk WC
Morské Oko, a volcanic lake 13
hectares in size, is hidden in the
shadows of a primeval beech forest
in the Vihorlatské vrchy mountains.
Near the village of Remetské
Hámre, visitors can either walk or
drive to the lake. The walk from the
car park to the lake takes about
15 minutes. The volcanic lake
is a perfect place to relax and
enjoy the natural setting. The
area offers opportunities for
hiking in the mountains
or enjoying the coffee in
a cottage by the lake
in the summer
months. Morské
oko has long been
known for its fresh
air and clear nature
in the past, with
wealthy families
coming to rest in
a mansion by
the lake.
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-eastern-slovakia-1/