Spectacular Slovakia - Western Slovakia 2
Spectacular Slovakia - Western Slovakia 2
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/Includes
pull-out map
slovakiatravel guide
SPECTACULAR SLOVAKIA
content
advisor
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/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-western-slovakia-2/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-western-slovakia-2/Western Slovakia
Western Slovakia boasts both hilly regions and lowlands including Slovakia’s agricultural heartland in the south-central
region. This area is the least forested part of the country with the largest proportion of ethnic Hungarian residents.
The area around cities such asTrenčín andTrnava is relatively wealthy making it one of the most heavily
industrialised parts of the country after Bratislava. The presence of the car maker PSA Citroën-Peugeot
or electronics giant Samsung is a good illustration of this industrial character.The area offers a number
of curative mineral springs, and a couple of notable spas built around these springs, such as Piešťany
andTrenčianskeTeplice. The Žitný ostrov river-island area has been surrounded by the Danube,
Malý Dunaj andVáh rivers while extending from Bratislava to Štúrovo, is rich in thermal water springs
and offers a number of thermal parks including Thermal Corvinus inVeľký Meder, Thermalpark
in Dunajská Streda orVadaš in Štúrovo. The Žitný ostrov area is also home of the largest drinking
water reservoirs in the country.Thanks to its geography, the region features castles and fortresses built
as part of the network of anti-Ottoman fortresses to protect the northern territories of the Kingdom
of Hungary. Europe’s largest fortresses is in Komárno.Trenčín Castle and the country’s popular
fairy-tale castle in Bojnice are among western Slovakia’s architectural landmarks.
Besides being the home of the oldest city, Nitra, western Slovakia also features
Skalica, another old Slovak town, which is notable not only for its historical
beauties but also for its delicacies like trdelník, and the dark red and thick wine
Skalický Rubín.Wineries are also prospering well in a number of other towns
in western Slovakia. There is also a captive breeding population of the
European bison.
pages 62-63
pages 84-85
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Podhájs
60 introduction to western slovakia
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/1 Skalica W (town, food, wine, golf) pg
62-63, 263-264, 276
2 Holíč (castle) pg 64, 271
3 Kopčany (church, horses) pg 64, 242
4 Šaštín-Stráže (religion) pg 64-65
5 Šajdíkove Humence (golf) pg 65, 276
6 Smrdáky (spa) pg 223
7 Senica (car racing) pg 270, 276, 238, 271
8 Branč (castle - ruins) pg 66
9 Myjava (distilleries) pg 233
10 Mohyla M. R. Štefánika (monument)
pg 66
11 Kláštor Katarínka (Dechtice)
(monastery - ruins) pg 66, 273
12 Smolenice (castle, cave) pg 66-67
13 Dolná Krupá (manor house) pg 67
14 Trnava W (city, churches) pg 67-69, 214,
206, 230, 232, 242, 265, 271
15 Jaslovské Bohunice (nuclear power plant)
pg 288-289
16 Piešťany W (town, spa, golf) pg 69-70,
274-275, 224, 263, 277
17 Krakovany (wine) pg 230
18 Podolie (castle models) pg 70
19 Tematín (castle - ruins) pg 70, 273
20 Čachtice (castle - ruins) pg 70-71, 202
21 Lubina (farm) pg 71
22 Beckov (castle - ruins) pg 71
23 Trenčín W (city, castle, flights) pg 72-74,
206, 265, 268-269, 271, 288
24 Skalka nad Váhom (monastery) pg
71, 214
25 Trenčianske Teplice (spa) pg 74-75, 225
26 Lednické Rovne (museum) pg 75, 273
27 Považská Bystrica (city) pg 75, 273
28 Manínska tiesňava (hiking) pg 75
29 Bojnice W (castle, spa, zoo) pg 76-78,
201, 226
30 Prievidza (city, flights) pg 78, 268
31 Cigeľ (mine) pg 285
32 Oslany (car racing) pg 270
33 Bojná (museum) pg 80, 238, 242
34 Oponice (manor house) pg 80
35 Dražovce (church) pg 80-81
36 Nitra W (city, castle, flights) pg 84-85,
270-271, 211, 238, 242, 265-266, 268
37 Hrušov (castle - ruins) pg 81
38 Topoľčianky W (castle, horses, bisons)
pg 81-82, 243, 230
39 Tesárske Mlyňany (arboretum) pg 82-83
40 Mochovce (nuclear power plant) pg 288
41 Levice (town, castle) pg 83, 262, 271
42 Brhlovce (cave dwellings) pg 83
43 Podhájska (aqua) pg 262
44 Nové Zámky (town, aqua) pg 87-89, 220,
262, 266, 271
45 Kolárovo (water mill) pg 89
46 Komárno W (town, fortress) pg 90-92,
284, 201, 207, 220, 262
47 Iža (military camp) pg 92
48 Patince (aqua) pg 262-263
49 Belá (manor house) pg 274-275, 251,
230, 231
50 Štúrovo (aqua) pg 262
51 Veľký Meder (aqua) pg 262, 265
52 Gabčíkovo (dam) pg 288, 263
53 Dunajská Streda (town, aqua) pg
93-94, 265
54 Orechová Potôň (car racing) pg 270
55 Báč (golf) pg 277
56 Šamorín (horses, church) pg 242-244,
212, 221, 281
57 Jelka (water mill, golf) pg 92, 277
58 Galanta (town, aqua) pg 93, 238, 242,
262, 272
59 Tomášikovo (water mill) pg 93
page 262
pages 69-70
pages 76-78
pages 81-82
pages 72-74
pages 90-92
page 75
28
29 30
31
32
37
38
40
41 42
49
50
Cígeľ
ska
introduction to western slovakia 61
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/80 western slovakia
31 ciGeľ (mine)
page 285
32 oSlany (car racing)
page 270
33 Bojná
map C 4 100 km / 62 miles (78 min) NE of
Bratislava 2,013 www.bojna.sk
Archeologické múzeum Veľkej Moravy
(Archaeological Museum of Great Moravia)
Bojná 201 - in the building of the municipal office
+421 (0)903 211-785 Mon-Sun 10:00-
12:00, 12:30-16:00 €1 WC
Bojná is a small village close to
Topoľčany and home to priceless
findings of the oldest Christian
relics in Slovakia. Those relics prove
the existence of a Slavic fortified
settlement on the site and have
re-written the earliest history of
what is now Slovakia. Systematic
archaeological excavations of Valy,
as the settlement is known because
of still visible fortification walls,
started in 2007 and continue to this
day, uncovering precious findings
each year. The most valuable are
six bronze gold-plated hammered
plaques dating from between 780-
820 AD. It is believed that they
were part of a movable altar and
along with the still ringing bronze
bell found with an iron hearth,
prove that Christianity existed on
this territory even before the arrival
of Ss Cyril and Methodius. The
settlement existed here from the 8th
century until around 920, when
it was destroyed and never rebuilt.
Archaeologists have uncovered
objects for daily usage as well as
jewels and decorations proving
that Valy was the home of the local
Slavic elite. The site, about 7 km
from the village, with some of the
former simple housings as well as a
reconstructed bread oven, is open
to the public while the museum
in Bojná presents more precious
findings including copies of the
plaques and the recorded sounds
of the bell.
34 oponice
map C 4 112 km / 70 miles (73 min) NE of
Bratislava 879 www.oponice.sk
Kaštieľ Oponice (Château Appony)
Oponice 271, Oponice +421 (0)38 323-8111
www.chateauappony.sk historical library: Tue-Fri
9:00–6:00 (entry every hour) Sat-Sun 10:00-16:00
(entry every hour) €6 WC
Situated betweenTopoľčany and
Nitra, the small village of Oponice
was run by the Appony family from
1392 until 1940. The first Appony
residence became the Appony
Castle, undoubtedly the most
famous landmark in the region.
Appony Castle, standing atop
Tribeč hill, was built in the 13th
century. It was inhabited until
1645, after which it was abandoned
because of a property dispute
between brothers in the Appony
family.Today, a fortification tower
and the remains of castle palaces
and outbuilding constructions
are still recognisable. The best-
preserved part of the ruins
is the western fortification,
with a massive bastion.
Nearby is another significant
building belonging to the
Appony family, a 16th
-
century Renaissance
chateau, later
rebuilt in the
neo-gothic style, in
an English park.
The building houses
a unique baroque
library containing
about 20,000
volumes. After a
recent extensive
reconstruction, it
now serves as a luxurious hotel
with a wellness centre and saunas,
a swimming pool and hot tub.
Apart from the chateau, the area
offers visitors numerous other places
of interest, such as the hunting
and ethnography museum, with
artefacts from American bomber
planes. It is also possible to visit
the wine cellars near the castle and
taste the finest wine from the local
vineyards.
35 dražovce
mapC496km/60miles(60min)EofBratisla-
va147 www.drazovce.ocu.sk
Románskykostolíksv.MichalaArchanjela
(RomanesqueChurchofStMichaelthe
Archangel)
onarockyhillaboveDražovce Pekná(-
publictransportNo.4,2)+421(0)903249-879
bookingnecessarySep29voluntary
(partly;callinadvancenecessary)
Dražovce, a small village at the foot
of the Zobor hill, has been part
of the city of Nitra since 1975.
It is a significant archaeological
site, where a Great-Moravian
fortress and graves from the 11th
century were found. But the
village is known especially for the
romanesque Church of St Michael
the Archangel, which dates back
to the 11th
century. It sits atop the
hill above the village, providing
a view over the surrounding
area. The church’s importance
is proven by the fact that it was
Photo:VieraŠramková
Photo:VieraŠramková
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/western slovakia 81
destroyed several times but always
reconstructed. The present church
is a result of several reconstructions,
but it has retained its romanesque
appearance.
According to a legend connected to
the church, the Virgin Mary once
revealed herself to a shepherd at this
site and pointed to the dilapidated
condition of the church. The locals
suddenly became aware of the
church’s poor state, and from then
on began reconstructing it, and
they have put considerable care
into preserving it to this day. The
church stopped offering regular
services after a new church was
built down in the village in 1803.
Its existence was threatened during
the communist regime when the
rocky area nearby was used for
quarrying. This explains why the
building stands near the edge of a
steep cliff today. The church is open
during the festival of its patron, St
Michael, on September 29, but
masses are held irregularly, as well
as weddings. It is possible to make
arrangements with the local vicar to
see the interior.
36 nitra (city,castle)
page 84
37 Hrad HruŠov
(Hrušov Castle - ruins)
map C 4 137 km / 85 miles (90 min) SE
of Bratislava Skýcov, Hrušov hrad www.
regionnitra.sk 4 km / 2.7 miles NW of the bus
stop (from the bus stop follow the red tourist sign)
non-stop
South of the village Skýcov are
ruins of the Hrušov Castle. From
the main road, near the sign, go
on foot for 15 to 20 minutes along
the forest road to find ruins of the
gothic castle dating back to the
13th
century. It is situated on the
top of the hill providing a beautiful
view over the surrounding country.
During its history the castle had
many owners until it was destroyed
in 1708. Nowadays a group of
volunteers that call themselves
Leustachs are fixing the ruins, and
have been doing so for more than
nine years. Leustach, one of the
early owners of the castle, was one
of the best known, powerful and
wealthy men of the Hungarian
Kingdom during the second half
of the 14th
century. Near the ruins
is a shelter for tourists, where they
can stay the night in sleeping bags
under the stars.
38 topoľčianky X
map C 4 127 km / 79 miles NE of
Bratislava (82 min) 2,747 www.
topolcianky.sk
Zámok Topoľčianky
(Chateau Topoľčianky)
Parková 1, Topoľčianky +421 (0)37 777-
7555 www.zamok-topolcianky.sk Oct-Apr:
Tue-Fri 9:00, 10:30, 12:30, 14:00 Sat-Sun 12:00,
13:30, 15:00; May-Sep: Tue-Fri 9:00-15:00 (entran-
ce every hour except 12:00) Sat-Sun 13:00-17:00
(entrance every hour) €3.8 WC
Nearly 3,000 people live in the
village of Topoľčianky, but none
have had quite the same impact as
one of its temporary guests. The
town is best-known for its majestic
manor house which, in the 1920s,
became the summer retreat of
Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, the
first president of the Czechoslovak
Republic. The village retains the
charms that led the leader here
in the first place, including 400
years of history before Masaryk
arrived. The manor, which was
also once a summer residence of
the Habsburgs, stands proudly at
the centre of a vast and sumptuous
estate, comprising two vast game
reserves, hectares of landscaped,
woody gardens and a number of
outbuildings that are mansions in
themselves.
The main manor house was first
constructed in the 15th
century,
although most of what visitors see
now was rebuilt in Renaissance,
baroque and classicist designs,
including a splendid galleried
courtyard and a towering
cupola. Inside, a stern statue
of Masaryk welcomes visitors
to what, in addition to a hotel,
doubles as a venue for weddings
and conferences and a
museum of historical
furniture. The
museum is where
restoration work
is most required:
the furniture dates
through about
300 years and was
collected from across
the world, but some
of the upholstery is
dull and dirty and paint
is peeling from doors and
walls. Nevertheless, it is a sizeable
collection with some amusing
curiosities among the more
standard pieces: a tea cup with a
moustache protector, for example,
and a table inlaid with a portrait of
Louis XVI surrounded by pictures
of his and his predecessors’ 17
mistresses. Most tours will finish
in Masaryk’s former office, which
is arranged as though he had just
popped out for a quick stroll. His
tiny desk sits beneath the window,
with a pen and a telephone poised.
Photo:JanaVašašová
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/82 western slovakia
Národný žrebčín (National Stud Farm)
Parková 13, Topoľčianky +421 (0)37 630-
1613 www.nztopolcianky.sk Tue–Fri 9:00-14:00,
Sat 14:00-16:00 (entrance every hour except 12:00)
from €1.50 WC
No estate worth its salt should
be without a stud farm, and
Topoľčianky has one of the best.
It is run by a state-owned
company with one branch of
its huge operation based in a
complex of stables and paddocks
that neighbour the main manor
house. The entire organisation has
around 500 thoroughbred horses
and is the only centre in the whole
of Europe that focuses on four
breeds: the Arabian, Lipizzaner,
Hucul, and sport horses.
The stud farm is open to visitors
year round, and a tour offers
plenty of chances to examine these
proud beasts being put through
their paces by lone riders in the
outdoor show arena, or being
drilled in the fine art of dressage in
a dusty exhibition hall. The centre
also offers the chance for visitors
to climb aboard – either the horse
itself or in a horse-drawn carriage
– for some fun in the fields. For
all the frivolity, this is, of course,
a place of business and is likely to
be of most interest to serious horse
breeders.
Zubria zvernica Topoľčianky
(Bison Park Topoľčianky)
To reach the park turn left in Topoľčianky’s main
square and head through two villages which both con-
tain signs to the Bison Park. It is situated in the woods
near the village Lovce. +421 (0)915 899-911
www.zubor.topolcianky.sk Mon-Sun 9:00-
17:00 (feeding time: 9:00, 14:00)
€2 WC
The European bison,
or wisent, is Europe’s
largest mammal but, it
has been hunted almost
to extinction. That it has
survived at all is something of
an achievement for which the
Topoľčianky Bison Reserve
is due some of the credit.
By the 1930s only a handful
of wisents remained, mostly
in Poland. A captive breeding
population was established and at
the time the Topoľčianky reserve
was established in 1958, there
were 150. The reserve opened with
the donation of a pair of wisents
from Belarus, but most fondly
remembered by staff at the
reserve are a Polish pair,
Putifár and Pumarka,
who arrived in 1963.
The 1,230-kilogram
Putifár, described as
having been among
the mightiest
specimens
of his
kind, wasted no time and he and
his fellow wisents contributed to
the Topoľčianky reserve’s total
output of almost 150 calves, of
which some were sent to zoos
and other reserves. The global
population is now more than
3,000, and in 2004 the reserve
started releasing small groups
into the Poloniny National Park
in eastern Slovakia, where they
appear to be thriving. Putifár is no
longer with us, though visitors can
visit his final resting place, which
is part of a 2.5-kilometre
trail encircling the
bison enclosure. The
dozen or so resident
adults and adolescent
wisents line up
along a fence near
the visitor centre
twice a day to be
fed.
39 teSárSke mlyňany
map C 4 119 km / 74 miles NE of Bratislava (69
min) 1,683 www.tesarskemlynany.sk
Arborétum Mlyňany (Arboretum Mlyňany)
Vieska nad Žitavou 178, Vieska nad Žitavou (on
a gentle hill in the village confines Tesárske Mlyňany
and Vieska nad Žitavou) +421 (0)37 633-4211
www.arboretum.sav.sk Nov-Mar: Mon-Sun
8:00-16:00; Apr-Oct: Mon-Sun 8:00-18:00 €3.5
WC
The small village of Tesárske
Mlyňany is mostly known for the
67-hectare arboretum, which was
formed in 1892 by lawyer Štefan
Ambrózy-Migazzi as an evergreen
park. Today the arboretum is
administered by the Slovak
Academy of
Sciences,
InsideoftheChateauTopoľčianky
Chateau Topoľčianky
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/western slovakia 83
which continues in Ambrózy’s
work, introducing and
acclimatising evergreen trees by
importing as many non-native
species as is possible to grow in
Slovakia. There are now more than
2,000 deciduous and coniferous
plants from around the world.
While the character of Ambrózy’s
original park of 40 hectares, in
which the trees were grouped
together regardless of their origin,
has been preserved, more recent
areas of planting are divided and
named according to areas from
which their trees and plants
come. These include sections
dedicated to East Asia, North
America, Korea and plants
native to Slovakia. In
the arboretum there is
a highly specialised library
focusing on dendrology and
dendrobiology.
40 mocHovce
(nuclear power plant)
page 288
41 levice
map D 5 149 km / 93 miles (93 min) E of
Bratislava 34,844 Holubyho 6, Levice +421
(0)36 631-8037 www.levice.sk 1.8 km /
1.1 miles SW of centre
Levický hrad (Levice Castle - ruins)
Sv. Michala, Levice (near the Jewish synagogue)
+421 (0)36 631-2112 www.muzeumlevice.sk
Jun-Sep: Mon-Fri 9:00-18:00 Sat-Sun 10:00-18:00
Apr, May, Oct: Mon-Fri 9:00-16:00 Sat-Sun 10:00-
16:00; Nov-Mar: Mon-Fri 9:00-16:00 Sun 10:00-16:00
€1 (partly) WC
Židovská synagóga (Jewish synagogue)
Kalmána Kittenbergera 2281, Levice +421
(0)36 381-2211 www.mskslevice.
sk May-Oct: Tue-Sun 10:00-13:30, 14:00-
18:00 Mon-Fri 9:00-13:00, 13:30-17:00
Sat-Sun 10:00-12:00, 14:00-17:00 €0.5
WC
When you say Levice, the
capital of the Tekov region,
almost everybody thinks
about Hungary. It is because the
town Levice was in the past a
part of Hungary and the most
important history belongs to the
Levice Castle built in the 13th
century. The castle protected
against Ottoman invaders, but was
finally conquered in 1663. The
last owners were the Eszterházy
family in the 18th
century.
Currently the castle consists of
the inner castle with ruins of the
gothic palace and the watchtower
originally protected by bastions
(one now houses a tea house) and
the lower castle with the Dobó’s
manor house and the so-called
Captain’s House. The castle houses
the Tekov Museum and
cultural events take
place here, too. Near
the castle is another
notable building –
the Jewish synagogue
built in 1853 and rebuilt in
1883. The synagogue, built in an
eclectic style, underwent extensive
reconstruction in 2010-2012
and now serves as a place for
marriages, exhibitions and other
cultural events.
42 BrHlovce
map D 5 161 km / 100 miles (105 min) E of
Bratislava 310 www.brhlovce.sk
Skalné obydlia (cliff dwellings)
Brhlovce 142, Brhlovce +421 (0)36 631-2112
www.muzeumlevice.sk Nov-Mar: booking nece-
ssary; Apr-Oct: Mon-Sun 09:00-12:00, 12:45-16:00
€0.66
Brhlovce is famous in Slovakia
for its cliff dwellings. Despite the
name, these are not the remains
of a prehistoric civilisation,
though some are pretty old, but
the product of some ingenuity in
exploiting local geography. The
rock hereabouts is largely volcanic
tuff: light but strong and easily
worked. In Brhlovce it emerges
from the ground as a cliff, into
which several houses have been
cut over the years. The downsides
of this approach
(no chimney;
no windows
on three sides;
every extra inch of headspace
requires a lot of extra chiselling)
were outweighed by the cheap
real estate (just find a patch of
rock and start digging) and the
inside temperature (the rooms
are a constant 17-18 degree
Celsius, winter or summer). There
is also the security aspect: the
caves are popularly believed to
have provided protection from
marauding Ottomans in the 16th
and 17th
centuries. Each cave-house
in the village now has a more
conventional dwelling in front of
it, though several of the caves are
reportedly still inhabited. One has
been turned into a museum. Its
rooms, and especially the open-air
workshop, have very low ceilings.
But they are south-facing and so
not as dingy as they may sound.
There is even a moderately pleasant
first-floor terrace. Inside plumbing
was never really an option, and a
deep well in the courtyard provides
water. Outgoing traffic is left to the
imagination.
43 podHájSka (thermal
park) page 262
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/1 Hrad,Bazilikasv.Emeráma
(Castle,StEmeram’sCathedral)
NámestieJánaPavlaII.7,Nitra +421(0)37772-
1724www.biskupstvo-nitra.skMon-Sat9:00-12:00,
13:00-18:00;Sun10:00-12:00,14:00-17:00
Mon-Sat9:00-12:00,13:00-16:00Sun10:00-12:00,
14:00-16:00bookingnecessaryMon-Sat7:00Sun
7:00,9:00€0.3 WC
The castle hill is part of the upper
town and is the most significant
sight in the city centre. This
fortified complex consists of the
cathedral, the bishop’s residence and
a seminary. St Emeram’s Cathedral
dominates the complex and actually
consists of three churches: the 11th
-
century romanesque St Emeram
church; the originally gothic,
14th
-century upper church; and the
lower church from the 17th
century.
The oldest church contains relics
of St Andrew-Svorad, St Emeram
and St Benedict. The complex is
dedicated to these three saints, who
were very significant
in Slovak history.
The reliquary of
St Cyril, the
missionary
who
brought
the first
Slavic script to the current territory
of Slovakia, was a gift from Pope
Paul VI. The building’s history can
be seen in the rich decorations,
which span centuries. A recent
reconstruction uncovered a unique
fresco of high artistic value and
technical quality from around
1400, showing that the church may
still contain hidden treasures. The
Diocesan Museum in the bishop’s
residence offers insight into the
history of the place as well as the
Nitra Bishopric.
Many of the buildings surrounding
the cathedral are either private
residences or administrative offices
and are off limits to the public.
But it is possible to explore some
areas of the former fortifications,
including star-shaped, single-
man watchtowers, and also to
look at the imposing statues of
Ss Cyril and Methodius,
the trailblazers who
brought Christianity
and literacy to
Slovakia.
2 Pribinovo
námestie (Pribina
Square)
Down the
hill, but still in
“upper” Nitra,
the small Staré Mesto
(OldTown) is essentially
defined by a tranquil, grassed
square featuring two notable statues
and a church, hemmed in by a
series of elegant buildings, most of
which are protected cultural sites.
The two statues are of the proud
Prince Pribina, the first ruler of
Nitra, who stands haughtily in
the centre of the square that bears
his name, and the crumbling,
legendary Corgoň, Nitra’s very
own Atlas character, who single-
handedly repelled an Ottoman
invasion and is now forever cast
holding something heavy above his
head. In this case, it is the corner of
the Canon House. Corgoň’s toes are
also slightly the worse for wear, the
result of generations of superstitious
passers-by attempting to absorb
some of the strongman’s might by
touching his feet.
84 western slovakia - nitra
36 nitra X
map C 4 95 km / 59.3 miles (60 min) NE of Bratislava 78,916 Štefánikova trieda 1, Nitra +421 (0)37 741-0906
www.nitra.sk 1.8 km / 1.1 miles SW of centre June: Musica Sacra; May: Adrenaline weekend; July: Days of Slavs; August: Agrokomplex; September: Theatre
Nitra; December: Christmas market
Called the mother of Slovak towns, Nitra is
Slovakia’s fifth largest city, and the country’s
oldest. The first mention of Nitra was in
828, but the region was settled thousands
of years earlier. Nitra was at the centre of
events that formed the history of
Slovakia, and also became one of the significant
centres of the once huge Great Moravian
Empire. The city is directly linked with the first
Slavic, Glagolitic, script, and the first Christian
church was built here in 828. The next milestone in
the city’s history came in 1248, when Nitra became
a free royal town. Several centuries and battles
later, the uprising of Francis II Rákóczi in the 18th
century devastated the city, which had to be rebuilt.
Today the city is the regional capital, bubbling over
with university, cultural and industrial life. Nitra
hosts numerous events throughout the year, including
theatre and music festivals. Perhaps the most popular is the
international Divadelná Nitra theatre festival, held in the
modern building of the Andrej Bagar Theatre. One of the
symbols of Nitra is the noted beer Corgoň, dating back to
1896, and named after a legendary blacksmith who
saved the city from the Ottomans. The city centre is
divided in half: the old “upper” town which includes
the cathedral and historic Pribina Square, with the
bronze statue of Prince Pribina; and the distinctly
20th
-century “lower” town. For those fancying a hike,
Nitra’s seven hills (like in Rome) are ideal and plenty
of energetic visitors opt for Zobor, easily recognised
by the eye-scarring television tower at its summit. It’s
about an hour’s trudge from the outskirts of the town.
Walkers with a more religious purpose are drawn to
the calvary, the destination for pilgrims since the 18th
century, which occupies a limestone hillock south of
the centre.
Bishop’s
palace
Statue of Prince
Pribina
Tourist train in Nitra
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/3 Kostol sv. Petra a Pavla
(Church of Ss Peter and Paul)
Samova 2, Nitra +421 (0)37 651-3091
before the service and for performances
Mon-Sat 6:30, 18:30 Sun 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30
(H), 18:30 voluntary
The Franciscan monastery with
the Church of Ss Peter and Paul is
one of the upper town’s dominant
structures. The complex was built
in 1624-1634 in the Renaissance
style and given a baroque facelift in
the 18th
century. The most valuable
features of the church’s interior
include 33 wooden reliefs depicting
the life of St Francis of Assisi, the
patron of the order. It is the work
of Austrian sculptor Franz Xaver
Seegen. Like many churches, this
one has an organ, but it also allows
visitors to go upstairs to get a closer
look at it, as well as to take in the
attractive view of the church below.
4 Nitrianska galéria (Nitra Gallery)
Župné námestie 3, Nitra +421 (0)37 657-9641
www.nitrianskagaleria.skTue-Fri 10:00-18:00
Sat-Sun 13:00-18:00 €3 WC
At the foot of the upper town,
within the ornate regional
government building, is the Nitra
Gallery. Aside from traditional
exhibition spaces, a former Cold
War bunker under the building
has been converted to house art
installations.
5 Ponitrianske múzeum (Nitra Museum)
Štefánikova trieda 1, Nitra +421 (0)37
651-0000
www.muzeumnitra.sk Mon 9:00-15:00; Thu-Fri
9:00-17:00; Sat-Sun 10:00-17:00 €1
WC
The regional museum documents
the development of nature and
society in the districts of Nitra,
Zlaté Moravce and Šaľa, covering
archaeology, ethnography, history,
numismatics, botany, geology
and zoology. Its history dates
back to the second half of the 19th
century, when the founders and
first collectors of artefacts were
professors and students of the
Piaristic secondary
school in Nitra.
The museum sits in
the former town hall
building, constructed
in the neo-renaissance
style, designed by architect
Ján Lyka.
6 Synagóga (synagogue)
Pri synagóge 3, Nitra +421 (0)37
652-5320
Tue 13:00-18:00 Wed-Thu
9:00-12:00, 13:00-18:00 Sat-Sun:
13:00-18:00 open also for performances €1
(partly) WC
One of the biggest Jewish
communities in Slovakia
could be found in Nitra
at the turn of the 19th
and the 20th
centuries,
and Nitra was an
important centre of
Jewish life in the
country. There were
two synagogues in
the city, as well as
a famous yeshiva of
Rabbi Samuel Unger.
Most of the Jewish
community, which
made up about one-quarter of the
city’s population in 1942, perished
during the Holocaust.Today, the
Neolog synagogue, built in 1908-
1911 according to the design of
Budapest-based architect Leopold
Baumhorn, is the
most visible reminder
of the former Jewish
presence in the city.
The twin-tower
synagogue, which fuses
Moorish, Byzantine and
art nouveau styles, no longer
functions as a place of worship,
and is now the property of
the municipality and used
to host cultural and
social events. It also
holds the permanent
exhibition, the Destiny of the
Slovak Jews, and a permanent
display of paintings by prominent
Israeli artist Shraga Weil, a native
and an honorary citizen of Nitra.
For information about Slovak
Agricultural Museum in Nitra see
page 211 and forTourist flights in
Nitra see page 268.
western slovakia - nitra 85
Sládkovičova
Trainstation19min
FraňaMojtu
Župné nám.
Na vŕšku
Podzámska
Sládkovičova
Mariánska
Farská
JesenskéhoFarská
AndrejaŠulgana
JozefaVuruma
FraňaMojtu
Štefánikovatrieda
Samova
Sládkovičova
Podzámska
Parkovénábrežie
Nábrežiem
Jesenského
Farská
Kmeťkov
Podzámska
Kmeťkova
Piaristická
Mostná
BoženyNemcovej
Kúpeľná
Radlinského
Pri synagóge
Kupecká
Wilsonovonábrežie
Napredmostí
Podzámska
Ďurková
Kúpeľná
Mostná
Kráľovskácesta
Svätoplukovo
nám.
Samova
NámestieJánaPavlaII.
Východná
NámestieJána
PavlaII.
SamovaPribinovonám.
Mapka_Nitra.indd 1 20. 8.
N
i
5
6
1
3
4
2
Entrance
to the castle
Diocesan
Museum
St Emeram’s
Cathedral
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/SP013111/001
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/44 nové zámky
map C 5 115 km / 71.5 miles (89 min) SE of Bratislava 39,646 Hlavné námestie 7, Nové Zámky +421 (0)35 644-5303
www.novezamky.sk June: Countryfest; June/September: Aviation Day
In the centre of Slovakia’s agricultural
heartland and near the Nitra River stands
Nové Zámky.
The area was already inhabited in the
early Stone Age – archaeological discoveries
revealed that these prehistoric people, just
like the civilised people later on, took advantage of this
fertile soil. There are also some discoveries of cemeteries from
the 6th
century located around the town, which indicate the
presence of Slavic people in this
area. But the most important event
for this town was the inglorious
battle near the Hungarian town
of Mohács in 1526, in which
armed forces of the Kingdom
of Hungary were defeated by
armies of the Ottoman Empire
led by Sultan Suleiman the
Magnificent. This was a decisive
event for the history of eastern
and central Europe for several
centuries. The Ottoman victory
led to the partition of Hungary
between the Ottoman Empire,
the Habsburg Monarchy, and
the Principality ofTransylvania.
The southern part of what is now
Slovakia became a kind of a buffer
zone, with many anti-Ottoman
fortresses being built. The first
fortress in Nové Zámky was
completed in 1546, but it was a
later version on adjacent grounds
called Nové Zámky Castle that played the most important
role in the city’s history. Somewhat smaller than the fortress
in Komárno, this fort was hexagonal in shape with six
bastions and two gates. The town it encircled was laid out
with rectangular streets with an oblong
square in the middle. The fortress
was enclosed with up to a 35-metre
wide and 4.5-metre deep moat.
The architects of this fortification,
considered at the time one of the
most modern Renaissance fortresses in
Europe, were the Italian military
engineers and brothers Ottavio
and Giulio Baldigara. The fortress
withstood several Ottoman attacks
and it was not until the invasion in
1663 that the Ottomans were able to
overrun it. The fall of Nové Zámky
had serious consequences for the
entire region – opening the way for
the Ottomans to occupy the regions of
Nitra, Levice, Hlohovec and more.
Nové Zámky was the northernmost
fortress controlled by the Ottomans,
who ruled town for 22 years. The
town was liberated from Ottoman
rule in 1685. The fortress was
restored and played a significant
role during the anti-Habsburg
rebellion. Francis II Rákóczi, the
leader of the rebels, stayed there for
a time in 1706. After the rebellion
was suppressed, Emperor Charles III
ordered the fortress demolished in
1724. This marked the end of Nové
Zámky’s strategic importance.
DuringWorldWar II, Nové Zámky
belonged to Hungary based on theVienna Arbitrage, and
was seriously damaged by bombing by the Allies. Now
reconstructed, the town is proud of its cultural and natural
landmarks.
western slovakia - nové zámky 87Photo:courtesyoftheErnestZmetákArtGalleryinNovéZámky
Sculpture of the Holy Trinity
CourtesyofthetheErnestZmetákArtGalleryinNovéZámky
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/Kostol Povýšenia Svätého kríža
(Church of the Holy Cross Elevation)
Hlavné námestie, Nové Zámky
+421 (0)35 640-0435 exterior views only
Mon-Fri 16:30, 17:00,17:30,18:00; Sat 7:00,
17:30, 18:00; Sun 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30, 18:00
The tallest building of the main
square, standing directly in front of
the sculpture of the HolyTrinity,
is the Roman Catholic Church
of the Holy Cross Elevation.
It was built between 1584 and
1585 and originally it was a late-
gothic church. However, it was
reconstructed so many times that
it eventually lost these features.
During the times of the Ottoman
occupation, it was rebuilt into a
mosque. In 1810, the church was
completely destroyed in a fire and
in 1877 it was rebuilt into the neo-
classicist church that is seen today.
Súsošie svätej Trojice
(Sculpture of the Holy Trinity)
Hlavné námestie, Nové Zámky
The baroque Sculpture of the
Holy Trinity includes some
rococo features and was
created in 1749 to mark the
end of the plague. It now
dominates the main square
of Nové Zámky, where it
was relocated in 1993.
This is actually a copy of a
masterpiece by an unknown
sculptor. This version is
thought to be the work of
several Italian artists. Remains
of the original sculpture are
in the local Museum of Ján
Thain devoted to the history
of Nové Zámky.
Kalvária (Calvary)
Forgáchova bašta / Pod kalváriou, Nové Zámky
open for visitors only on Easter and during the
town market
The baroque Calvary was built
in 1779 based on the initiative
of the local parish priest Martin
Predmerský. It sits on a hill, which is
actually the remains of the Forgách
bastion in the southeastern part of
the town fortress. It consists of 12
late-baroque chapels of the Stations
of the Cross. The main chapel is
from the early 19th
century. It can be
reached by stone stairs leading up to
the sandstone Calvary and chapels.
Františkánsky kostol a katakomby
(Franciscan Church and catacombs)
Kostolná 1, Nové Zámky +421 (0)35 640-0435
exterior views only Mon-Fri: 6:45, 17:00 Sun:
6:45, 8:00, 10:00, 17:00 (the catacombs under
the church are not open to the public, it is necessary
to call the monastery before visiting to make an
appointment)
Nové Zámky is a notable centre of
the Franciscan Order in Slovakia –
not only because it is a magnificent
church built between 1626 and
1631 but also because of the
catacombs. The church has always
stood among the most important
churches in the southern part of
the country and was consecrated
by Archbishop of Esztergom Péter
Pázmány. During the Ottoman
occupation, the monastery served
as accommodation for Ottoman
officers. The church was turned
into a warehouse and its tower
into a minaret. After the
Ottomans were pushed away
from the city, it was rebuilt
into its current shape. The
catacombs were built at the
same time as the Franciscan
monastery and the church.
Originally, they were used as
a sacred burial site for monks,
but during World War II, they
served as a hiding place for
thousands of people. Afterwards,
the catacombs were used to store
groceries. With the fall of the
communist regime, the monastery
returned to the Franciscans, who
will open the catacombs for visitors
upon request.
Galéria umenia Ernesta Zmetáka
(Art Gallery of Ernest Zmeták)
Björnsonova 1, Nové Zámky +421 (0)35 640-
8440 www.galerianz.eu Tue-Fri 8:00-17:00;
Sat 9:00-13:00 €1.5
The art gallery was launched in
1979 at the impetus of Nové
Zámky artist Ernest Zmeták (1919-
2004). The permanent exhibition
focuses on central-European visual
art of the 18th
and 19th
centuries as
well as 19th
and 20th
century art in
Slovakia and Hungary. Most of the
exhibited artworks were donated
by Zmeták and his wife Danica.
88 western slovakia - nové zámky
St Helena
Catacombs in the Franciscan Church
CollectionoftheErnestZmetákArtGalleryinNovéZámky
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/western slovakia - nové zámky 89
Their collection is considered to be
one of the most important private
collections in Slovakia.
Zmeták, a painter, graphic artist
and illustrator, is one of the most
prominent Slovak artists of the
second half of the 20th
century.
In Slovakia, Zmeták joined the
movement begun by the most
significant representative of Slovak
modernism, Ľudovít Fulla, and
drew inspiration from Slovakia’s
traditional and folk-art heritage.
Between 1946 and 1949 he
systematically devoted his attention
to graphic art, especially wood-
printing. With this technique,
Zmeták illustrated several books,
mainly collections of ballads,
poems, and fairy tales. His oeuvre
included landscapes, simple rural
motifs, still-lifes, portraits, and
self-portraits.
Letisko (airport) Komárňanská cesta 94,
Nové Zámky +421 (0)948 822-966 www.aeroklub-
novezamky.sk booking necessary: aeroklub.nz@
mail.telekom.sk from €15
Coming on the road from
Komárno near Nové Zámky,
there is a small airport with a
somewhat surprising history.
It was founded in 1931 by the
well-known Slovak businessman
Tomáš Baťa, who was an early
aficionado of air travel. Sadly,
after Baťa’s death in an airplane
accident in 1932, the airport
fell into disuse until the end
of World War II. Since then a
group of flying buffs has formed
a club (Aeroklub Nové Zámky)
and taken over the airport which
has become a haven for non-
commercial fliers. It also rents
hangar space for private planes
and offers aviation lessons for
would-be pilots.
Zúgov (water cascades)
4.9 km / 3 miles NE of centre of Nové Zámky;
located at the northeast edge of the town of
Nové Zámky
The waterfalls called Zúgov are
part of a natural reserve located in
the north-east corner of the city.
The Nitra River separates into
two different flows, thus
creating two different
waterfalls. When
driving from
Komárno, visitors
have to cross the town and then
turn left. Residents willingly
point visitors in the right
direction if they want to check
out this hidden natural beauty.
Termálne kúpalisko Štrand Emila Tatárika
(thermal swimming pool)
Bezručova 21, Nové Zámky (3 km / 2 miles NE
of centre of Nové Zámky) +421 (0)35 691-1310
www.novovital.sk Jun, Sep: Mon-Sun 10:00-
18:00; Jul-Aug: Mon-Sun 9:00-19:00 from €3
45 kolárovo
map C 5 88 km / 55 miles (91 min) SE of
Bratislava 10,696 www.kolarovo.sk
Vodný mlyn Kolárovo (Kolárovo Mill)
Petõfiho rad 23, Kolárovo +421 (0)908
781-146 www.vodnymlyn.sk Sat-Sun
10:00-17:00 Mon-Fri booking necessary €2
WC 20 min
The water mill in
Kolárovo stands on two
anchored boats on
the arm of the Little
Danube River. It
is 500 metres from
town and accessible via
an 86-metre-long wooden
bridge, which is said to
be the longest wooden
bridge in Europe.
The mill is a functional copy of
a historical mill, which originally
operated on the Danube near
Radvaň. Such floating mills,
which are called shipboard or
river mills, were actually at one
time built on boats that were able
to travel up and down the river.
These floating mills sometimes
combined together to create small
floating settlements. Their largest
concentration was on the rivers
of the Danube and Váh. They
disappeared in the 20th
century.
The area around the water mill
in Kolárovo includes an open-air
museum exhibiting historical
agricultural machinery, an oven
for baking bread and a restaurant.
FromtheprivatecollectionofErnestandDanicaZmeták
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/46 komárno W
map C 6 127 km / 79 miles (79 min) SE of
Bratislava 34,349 Nám. gen. Klapku (next
to Town Hall), Komárno +421 (0)948 830-202
1.4 km / 0.9 mile (17 min) N of centre
April/May: Komárno Days; July: Komárno Summer
Festival; November: St Andrew’s Fair
Komárno is one of the oldest
permanently inhabited regions of
Slovakia. Situated at the confluence
of the Váh and Danube rivers, it
is one of the oldest settlements
in the Carpathian basin. Its
dominant feature is the Komárno
fortress, which gives it a worldwide
reputation as a city that cannot
be conquered. The town is the
birthplace of many artists, military
leaders and rulers. A visitor can
have a look at the old historic town,
where tall aristocratic buildings
contrast with the rough façades and
thick walls of defensive structures.
Komárno today is a border town
divided by the Danube, with one
part in Slovakia and the other in
Hungary. The Hungarian town is
called Komárom. Komárno has
many Hungarian influences going
back hundreds of years and many
of its inhabitants speak Hungarian.
There is even a Hungarian college,
J. Selye University. A bridge and a
10-minute walk are all that separate
the two countries.
1 Fortress
Hradná 1, Komárno (place to buy tickets and
from here you will go with guide to fortress) +421
(0)910 366-659 www.pevnost-komarno.sk
Tue-Fri 9:00, 11:00, 14:00; Sat-Sun (only in Jul, Aug)
11:00, 13:00 booking necessary €2
One of the Europe’s largest
fortresses, Komárno, lies at the
confluence of the Danube and Váh
Rivers. Through its 500-year history
it has never been conquered. The
full boundary of the city fortification
comprises 10 bastions standing
in a circle around the old town of
Komárno, the old and new fort, a
few stand-alone bastions by the river
and three forts on the Hungarian
side of the Danube. The old and
new fortresses are the core of an
extensive defence system.
2 Old Fortress
The old pentagon-shaped fortress
was modelled on the best designs of
the time. It was constructed on the
site of a mediaeval castle during the
years 1546-1557, after a loss to the
Ottomans in the Battle of Mohács
(1526) and was one of a network
of anti-Ottoman fortresses built to
protect the northern territories of
the Kingdom of Hungary.
3 New Fortress
After 50 years renewed Ottoman
incursions forced a strengthening of
defences. A new fortress was built
between 1663 and 1673. Again, it
was able to withstand the Ottoman
attacks. Later, the fortification of the
city was extended by the so-called
Palatine line, which was designed
as an answer to the development
of new weapons and strategies.
It encircled the fortress and the
90 western slovakia - komárno
Europe‘s largest fortress
Leopold‘s Gate
Military
barracks
Some parts of
the fortress were
reconstructed
The yard of the
Old Fortress
Old Fortress
New Fortress
Atunnelunderthefortress
Thefortressisdilapidated
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/western slovakia - komárno 91
city and consisted of defensive
walls, ramparts and bastions.To
better protect the city, three other
fortresses were built on what is now
the Hungarian bank of the Danube
River and another fort was built on
the Váh River’s embankment.
The complex of new and old
fortresses has stood for many
centuries, defending against
Tartars, Ottomans and even the
empire’s armies. It was built to
house 200,000 soldiers, and was
the largest fortress of the Austro-
Hungarian Empire. It even had the
capacity to house large numbers
of civilians inside its walls. This
ability came into play a number of
times when Vienna and other large
cities were besieged. At one point
the entire royal court moved into
Komárno. All the parts of the fort
are connected with tunnels which
are still not completely charted. The
whole fortification system, thanks
to its gradual growth, is now an
excellent example of the evolution
of war architecture.
Visitors might be surprised by
the current condition of the main
fortress as soldiers were stationed
there as late as 2003. The fortress
became badly rundown during its
occupation by Soviet forces who
only left in 1991.
4 Kostol sv. Ondreja apoštola
(Church of St Andrew the Apostle)
Palatínova 11, Komárno +421 (0)35 773-0036
exterior views only Sat 17:00; Sun 9:00,
11:00, 17:00 (due to the reconstruction masses are
held only during weekends)
The dominant feature of the town
of Komárno is the double-tower
single-nave Church of St Andrew
the Apostle on Palatínova Street.
This baroque building was
constructed between 1768 and
1771, but it was not the first church
on this site. The church has a rocky
history, to say the least. Around
1674, Jesuits completed a church in
the same space. It was an impressive
building with a two-metre statue of
St Andrew on its tower which also
served as the town’s watchtower.
But as the local population grew,
the church became too small
to suit the town’s needs and the
councillors decided they needed a
larger building. The new church,
dedicated to the same saint, was
finished in 1734. However, it was
constructed with faulty building
materials from the fortress of the
nearby town of Nové Zámky and
part of the church collapsed in
1738. The church was reconstructed
once more only to be damaged
again, first by a major earthquake
in 1763 and later by a devastating
fire in 1848. The church had to be
repaired after each event. At present,
the church in undergoing yet
another reconstruction.
5 Podunajské múzeum (Museum of the
Danube Region) Palatínova 13, Komárno
+421 (0)35 773-1476 www.muzeumkn.sk
Apr 15–Sep 30: Tue-Sat 9:00–17:00; Oct 1–Apr 14:
Mon-Fri 9:00–16:00 €1.5 WC
6 Nádvorie Európy (Courtyard of Europe)
Nádvorie Európy, Komárno non-stop
Some time back, the town of
Komárno decided to collect
architectural examples from
across Europe and display them
in one place. They stand in a
ring around a fountain named
Millennium in the Courtyard
of Europe. The display consists
of more than 40 buildings,
each representing architecture
of a different European state,
including English, Spanish, Irish
and Turkish styles. The square was
built between 1999 and 2000 to
symbolise European integration
and togetherness. The fountain
is a copy of one that stood on
this square in front of the town
hall beginning in 1848. It was
removed in the late 20th
century.
The square offers a relaxed
atmosphere with cafés, shops,
restaurants and benches.
7 Mestská radnica (town hall)
Nám. gen. Klapku, Komárno
exterior views only
Pevnostnýrad
Train
station
17min
Svätoondrejská
Valchovnícka
M.Čáka
Hradná
Nám.gen.Klapku
Strieborná
JánaHollého
Letná
NádvorieEU
Športová
Palatínova
Nám.sv.Trojice
Pohraničná
Župná
Jókaiho
Nám.M.R.
Štefánika
Parná
Elektrárenskácesta
Hradná
Dunajskénábrežie
Vnútornáokružná
Františkánov
BastionVI
(30min)
Hradná
Župná
Dunajská
Elektrárenskácesta
Zámoryho
Školská
Vnútornáokružná
Tabaková
Palatínova
Vnútornáokružná
Mapka_Komarno.indd 1 20. 8. 2014
N
8
9
65
4
7
1
2
3
i
ThemainentrancetotheNewFortress
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/92 western slovakia
8 Dôstojnícky pavilón (Officer Pavilion)
Palatínova and Pevnostný Rad streets, Komárno
+421 (0)35 771-3439 booking necessary
The Officer Pavilion in Komárno,
a magnificent neo-gothic structure,
was built between 1858 and 1863.
It brings to mind aristocratic
English architecture and the
façade bears the inscription
VIRIBVS VNITIS, a slogan used
by Emperor Franz Joseph I, which
means ‘with united forces’. The
building was primarily used as
living space for the families of
the Komárno fortress officers.
It also included a casino. Today,
the pavilion is used for various
cultural and social purposes. The
attached park includes an open-air
amphitheatre.
9 Limes Gallery page 207
Rímske lapidárium – Bašta VI
(Roman Lapidarium – Bastion VI)
Okružná cesta 272, Komárno (3.4 km / 2.1
miles N of the new fortress) +421 (0)35 771-0066
€1.5 WC Jun-Aug: Tue-Sat 9:00–17:00;
Sep-May: Tue-Sat 9:00-16:00 booking necessary
Bastion VI houses an exposition
of stone relics from the Roman
times. There is also a restaurant
and a private gallery. While some
bastions and part of the main
fortress have been repaired, the
city is looking for money to do
more renovations.
47 iža map C 6 134 km / 85 miles (87
min) SE of Bratislava
Rímsky vojenský tábor Kelemantia
(Celemantia Roman Military Camp)
the camp is located next to the river out of
town, can be easily reached on bicycles on a bike
route leading from Komárno to Iža near the Danube
1 km / 0.6 mile NE of camp Iža free
+421 (0)35 778-3153 non-stop (open air)
The excavated and partly-
reconstructed Roman camp is
accessible via a rough, narrow,
road from Iža. It was the second
camp built on the left bank of
the Danube River in the late
2nd
century in a place known
as Leányvár, which means
Virgin Castle. It was part of the
fortifications known as Limes
Romanus set up to protect the
borders of the Roman Empire.
The fort, once called Celemantia,
contained barracks, stables and a
bathhouse. It was surrounded by a
stone wall two metres thick and up
to five metres high. The camp was
a bridgehead of the legionnaires’
fortress in Brigetio, built on the
opposite bank at the confluence
of the rivers Danube and Váh and
it was probably abandoned at the
end of the 4th
century. Parts of
these structures are now visible and
described in information boards in
four languages, including English.
48 patince (wellness)
pages 262-263
49 Belá (luxury,wine)
pages 274-275
50 Štúrovo (aquapark)
page 262
51 veľký meder
(thermal park) page 262
52 GaBčíkovo (dam)
page 288
53 dunajSká Streda
page 93
54 orecHová potôň
(car racing) page 270
55 Báč (golf) page 277
56 Šamorín (horses)
pages 242-244
57 jelka
map B 5 37 km / 23 miles (40 min) E of
Bratislava 3,906 Mierová 959/17, Jelka
+421 (0)31 787-6182 www.jelka.sk
Mlyn Jelka (Jelka mill)
+421 (0)905 133-095
www.maly-dunaj.sk Mon-Sun 8:00-18:00
Mon-Sun 8:00-15:00 €1 WC
A central European rarity can
be found in a small village not
far from Slovakia’s capital. The
Németh Water Edge-Runner Mill
in Jelka is unique for its relatively
modern machinery. The mill,
whose first written mention dates
back to 1894, was originally built
as a floating mill, also known as a
shipboard or river mill. These were
built on boats that would float up
and down the river. It was only later
rebuilt into a water edge-runner
mill, standing on wooden poles that
harnessed it to the waters of the
Little Danube or Malý Dunaj.
After the mill stopped serving
its purpose, it underwent
reconstruction and since 1993
it has served as a museum to
demonstrate how such mills used
to work. Those who would like
detailed information about the mill
can also visit Galanta’s Homeland
Museum. Children can learn from
the museum’s commentary and
test their knowledge with a booklet
offering simple questions and
interesting exercises – though only
in Slovak or Hungarian. Near the
mill is an area where it is possible
to camp, fish or canoe on the Little
Danube.
Part of Roman Military Camp is still visible
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/western slovakia 93
58 Galanta
map B 5 57 km / 35 miles (44 min) E of Bratis-
lava 15,138 Sídlisko Jas 936/5, Galanta
+421 (0)911 266-246 www.galantsko.eu
0.8 km / 0.5 mile (9 min) S of centre
Neogotický kaštieľ (Neo-gothic Mansion)
Parková, Galanta +421 (0)903 459-
878 www.nkga.sk
Mar-Nov: Sat 9:00-14:00 free
WC
Vlastivedné múzeum (Homeland
Museum)
Hlavná976/8,Galanta +421(0)31780-5535
www.galanta.skhasrecentlybeenreconstruc-
tedandisduetobereopenedbyendof2014
Renesančný kaštieľ (Renaissance mansion)
Ulica Eszterházyovcov, Galanta +421 (0)31
780-4731 www.galanta.sk Tue-Fri
8:00–17:00 Sat 13:00–18:00 from €1 WC
Galandia (thermal park)
Kapitána Nálepku 43, Galanta (1.5 km / 0.9
mile from city centre) www.galandia.aquapark.
skMon-Sun 10:00–22:00 from €6
The oldest written document
referencing Galanta dates to the
13th
century and its history is closely
connected to the Eszterházy family,
which owned estates here since
1421. Descendants of the family
still use the name Eszterházy von
Galanta.
The Eszterházys built two manor
houses in Galanta dating to the
17th
century, originally designed
in the Renaissance style. The older
manor house was rebuilt in baroque
style in the 18th
century, and
nowadays stands in the middle of a
panelák housing estate. It presents
the history of Galanta, as part of
Galanta’s Homeland Museum.
The Homeland Museum also
explores the history of water mills
along the Little Danube, in a
former bank on Hlavná Street. The
younger manor house was given
a neo-gothic update in 1861 and
stands in a park recallingTudor
castles in England. After years of
neglect, this expansive estate is
undergoing reconstruction.
Of the sacral monuments, the most
important are the twin-tower
Roman Catholic Church of
St Stephen, with the baroque-
classicist façade and a valuable
baroque altar, and a romanesque
brick church from the 12th
century in Gáň, now part
of Galanta.
The Jewish cemetery
serves as the only remaining
monument of Galanta’s once-strong
Jewish community, to whom
Count Ferdinand Eszterházy
granted a room for praying and
grounds for a cemetery in 1729.
At the cemetery, which is still in
operation, a commemoration to
Holocaust victims is held every year.
Foreign investors have had a hand
in developing today’s Galanta.
Korea’s Samsung Electronics
Slovakia company in Galanta is the
largest Samsung plant in Europe,
and produces LCD televisions with
LED technology.
The Aquapark Galandia and the
Silver Lake Ranch on the outskirts
of Galanta offer recreational
opportunities for the whole family.
59 tomáŠikovo
66 km / 41.5 miles (60 min) E of Bratislava
1,601 Hlavná 319, Tomášikovo +421
(0)31 785-5231 www.tomasikovo.sk
Vodný kolový mlyn (Water Edge-Runner Mill)
Tomášikovo +421 (0)31 780-5535
www.muzeum.sk Sep-Jun: Wed-Sun 10:00-18:00;
Jul–Aug: Mon-Sun 10:00-18:00€1
On the surface of the Little
Danube is a golden boat with
an oar and a harpoon presenting
the symbol of the little village
Tomášikovo, founded in the
16th
century. The wooden mill is
located nearly two kilometres from
Tomášikovo in a tranquil natural
setting, with only a few houses
nearby. The mill, built in 1893,
is still in its original condition,
without having undergone any
radical reconstruction, and is still
functional. Its operation ceased in
1960 because of collectivisation, the
communist regime’s consolidation
of individual land and labour into
collective farms.Today it serves
as a museum managed by the
Homeland Museum in Galanta,
which itself presents the history of
millers’ trades in the region of the
Little Danube and the lower part
of the Váh River, tracing its origins
until the end of the 20th
century.
Fishing is also common in the area.
53 dunajSká Streda
map B 5 46 km / 28.7 miles (40 min) E of
Bratislava 22,477 Hlavná 50, Dunajská
Streda +421 (0)31 555-2104 www.regionds.sk
0.9 km / 0.5 mile W of centre
Dunajská Streda, located on the
fertile Žitný Ostrov (Rye Island)
created by the Danube and the
Little Danube Rivers, used to be
a significant ancient trade route
crossroads. The town’s trading
history is reflected in its name,
as the word streda translates as
Wednesday, which identifies the
day on which the town can host a
market.
Kostol Nanebovzatia Panny Márie
(Church of the Virgin Mary’s Assumption)
Námestie Ármina Vámberyho, Dunajská Streda
+421 (0)31 552-4465 exterior views only
Mon-Tue 17:00 (HU), 18:00; Wed 7:00; Thu-Fri 17:00
(HU), 18:00; Sat 8:00; Sun 9:30
The oldest monument in the city
is the Church of the Virgin Mary’s
Assumption, originally devoted to St
George, with gothic wall paintings
inspired by Italian masters. The
church was built in the gothic style
in the first half of the 14th
century,
but rebuilt several times and today it
retains a baroque appearance.
Neo-gothicmansioninGalanta
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/Žitnoostrovné múzeum
(Museum of Žitný Ostrov)
Múzejná 2, Dunajská Streda +421 (0)31
552-2402 www.muzeum.sk Thu-Fri 9:00–17:00
Sat 10:00–16:00 €1 WC
Visitors can explore the town’s
history in the Museum of Žitný
Ostrov, located in a yellow, 18th
-
century baroque manor house.
The museum, founded in 1964,
contains historical exhibitions
divided into different sections,
focused on the culture of housing,
historical weapons, peasant cuisine,
traditional furniture and hunting
trophies.
Vermes Villa - Contemporary
Hungarian Gallery
Gyulu Szabóa 304/2, Dunajská
Streda +421 (0)918 607-307 www.
kmgaleria.eu Mon-Fri 9:00-17:00; Sat
10:00-16:00 free (only ground
floor) WC
The Vermes Villa, originally
built as a one-storey
construction for Ferenc Vermes, a
landowner and supervising
judge, has been the home of the
Contemporary Hungarian Gallery
since 2005. The villa took its
current shape in 1909, when it was
extended and small towers were
added. During World War II, the
villa served as the headquarters of
both the German and the Soviet
armies. Under the communist
regime it hosted free-time activities
of the Communist Party children’s
organisations. Between 1988 and
2002, it was the home of a branch
of the Slovak National Gallery.
The mission of the Contemporary
Hungarian Gallery is to display the
works of contemporary artists of
Hungarian origin regardless of their
nation of residence.
Židovský cintorín (Jewish cemetery)
Gyulu Szabóa 28, Dunajská Streda
+421 (0)907 627-550
every day except Sat free
The town’s history is preserved
through several memorials. The
Holocaust memorial in the city
centre, unveiled in 2001, recalls the
once 3,000-strong Jewish minority
which used to reside in the city,
but perished during World War II.
There is also one of two memorials
in Slovakia marking the Roma
Holocaust, also called the Forgotten
Holocaust. It was initiated by the
Roma Institute located in Dunajská
Streda and unveiled in 2006.
The Orthodox Jewish
cemetery, the oldest burial
grounds in the town, was
founded in 1740. The
Jewish community had a
significant impact on the
development of the town
and generations of Jewish
families are buried there.
Visitors can find tombs of
several prominent rabbis, includ-
ing Rabbi Yehuda Assad, which,
according to the town’s official
website, has become a place of
pilgrimage.
Radnica (Town Hall)
Hlavná 50, Dunajská Streda
exterior views only
Of the newer architecture, it
is worth mentioning the town
hall and the commercial centre,
designed by Imre Makovecz, a
Hungarian architect renowned for
his organic architectural designs.
Hotelier Károly Pleyer sold the
two-storey house, formerly a coffee
house and hotel, to the municipality
in 1901. The building, which
during its history also housed also a
pharmacy, city prison and a police
station, has been reconstructed
several times. However, its real
transformation began in 1995
thanks to Makovecz and it is now
one of the symbols of Dunajská
Streda.
Diving Centre Immersion
Tichá 707/75, Veľký Meder
+421 (0)907 861-911 www.potapacskecentrum-ds.
sk Jun-Aug: Sat-Sun 9:00-16:00 (booking neces-
sary) from €30 (diving with instructor)
Thermal Park Dunajská Streda
Gabčíkovská cesta 237/38, Dunajská Streda
+421 (0)31 551-0096 www.thermalpark.sk Mon-
-Sun 9:00-21:00 from €7.5 WC
Dunajská Streda also boasts a
thermal water park offering 10
outdoor and indoor pools with
mineral water, which the park
operator claims have health benefits
for muscles and joints. Regardless,
the park is a good option for
families with children. The more
adventurous can sign up for a scuba
diving course led by a professional
instructor.
94 western slovakia - dunajská streda
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/This ancient settlement lies in the heart of the Žitný ostrov region in the south-western part of Slovakia,
situated 45 km from the capital, Bratislava, and 35 km from the town of Győr in Hungary. Its name stems
from the privilege of organising markets onWednesday (Dunaj means the Danube River and Streda means
Wednesday) which is mentioned in deeds dating back to 1324.The town organises the annual Traditional
Žitný Ostrov Market (Tradičnýžitnoostrovskýjarmok).
Today, this dynamically developing town is an important cultural and tourist centre. Apart from its
historical monuments, visitors can enjoy a thermal pool, accommodation facilities, a car camp and a park
o ering culture and leisure activities.
Thetown’smostimportantsitesare:theRoman-CatholicChurchofStGeorge,TheYellowMansion
(Žltý kaštieľ - currently housing the Žitný Ostrov Museum) and the Vermeš Villa – currently the Gallery
of Contemporary Hungarian Artists.
Park is situated on an area of 18 hectares with 10 outdoor and indoor pools containing mineral therapeutic
and thermal water with temperatures ranging from 24 °C to 40 °C.Thermal water emerges from the depth of
1600metersanditstemperaturereaches57°Conthesurface.Visitusandexperiencethatourthermalwateris
suitablenotjustforswimmingbuthasbene ciale ectsonlocomotiveorgansandtheirdi cultiesanddiseases.
THERMALPARKDunajskáStreda,Gabčíkovskácesta237/38,DunajskáStreda,Tel:+421(0)31551-0096
www.dunstreda.sk
Let us invite you to spend a pleasant holiday
inTHERMALPARK Dunajská Streda!
www.thermalpark.sk
Dunajská Streda
SP013329/001
http://www.floowie.com/cs/cti/spectacular-slovakia-western-slovakia-2/