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1 et 2 juinPassat
Junh 2024
Dissabte 1
10:00 - 17:00
Dimenge 2
10:00 - 17:00

Pálffy Garden

Zámocká street, Bratislava
  • Bratislava I
  • Bratislavský kraj

THE FORMER PÁLFFY GARDEN

Saturday 1.6.2024 and Sunday 2.6.2024
1 et 2 juinPassat
©PÁLFFY GARDEN

Saturday 1.6.2024 and Sunday 2.6.2024

10:00, 11:00, 12:00, 14:00, 15:00 and 16:00_guided tours of the garden

https://www.vopz.sk/park/174-byvala-palffyovska-zahrada

Types of events
Guided tour
2024 Theme
Pas cap seleccion
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Conditions for participation
Free entrance
Type of audience
General public

À propos du lieu

Pálffy Garden
Zámocká street, Bratislava
  • Bratislava I
  • Bratislavský kraj
The Pálffy Garden (Slovak: Pálffyho záhrada, German: Pálffygarten, Hungarian: Pálffykert) was a 17th-century Renaissance garden belonging to the Pálffy ab Erdöd family[5] that was located on the slopes of Bratislava Foothills north of the walled city of Bratislava and east of the Bratislava Castle. Until the 19th century, it was considered to be unique and it used to be described as the pride of both Bratislava and the whole Kingdom of Hungary.
In the 1630s, Pál Pálffy (Hungarian: Pál III Pálffy), a palatine of Hungary, was charged with reconstructing the Bratislava Castle. He decided to build a palace for himself on the castle hill in the area of Podhradie. In around 1640, he bought extensive vineyards on the slopes of the Little Carpathians next to his palace and turned them into garden terraces, reinforced with walls.[6] Some of the remnants of these walls still exist on Zochova Street and Svoradova Street. They are the oldest walls in Bratislava outside of the fortifications of the city and Bratislava Castle's fortification system.
The garden was located between today's Zámocká Street, Škarniclova Street, Palisády Street, Zochova Street and Pilárikova Street.[7] It was a very long but quite narrow terraced garden almost 4 hectares (9.9 acres) in area and it was located on a hillside. It consisted mostly of terraces and tree alleys. The garden was first styled as a french garden but it was later turned in an english garden. The spacious garden contained several exotic plants, grottos, statues and fountains. It was divided into several parts. Its most striking attraction was a massive linden tree that was completely surrounded by wooden scaffolding and which allowed Count Pálffy's guests to admire the scent of linden flowers while enjoying the spectacular view.[8] The tree is depicted on a 1735 copperplate by M. Engelbrecht and F. B. Werner. The construction that surrounded the tree was onion-shaped and seven floors high.
In 1801, the garden was opened to the public. It became a popular place for social gatherings but by the end of the 19th century, it became neglected and became frequented only by the city poor. In 1905, historian Tivadar Ortvay describes the Pálffy Garden as a decrepit public garden, with plans for its demolishion and division into construction lots.
The garden featured the Pálffy Hall, which served as a riding hall, housed public happenings, cultural events, and briefly also theatrical productions. The Hall was demolished in 1893 and replaced by the State Real School (today the building of Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava). Soon afterwards, other buildings started to be built within the garden next to it – Jewish schools, a maternity hospital, school for midwives and a children's shelter.
After 1900, the garden was gradually replaced by new schools and campuses. Today, the last remaining remnant of the garden is a large hole near Podjavorinskej Street.[10] The remainders of what was a large gardening enterprise can still be seen in the area.
Etiquetas
Private garden