09 March 2024

Lednice Castle, Liechten­steins, Czech heritage - guest writer

I left Czechoslovakia at 3.5 years old, and remembered almost nothing. But my mother thought her homeland was the most beautiful country anywhere. So tours back home as an adult were very impressive, starting with Lednice

Lednice, in English Tudor neo-Gothic style 

Lednice traced its Czech history back to a 1222 document of Bishop Rob­ert when it was a Gothic fort. The Gothic fortress stood ab­ove the town of Dyjí which guarded the river crossing and the trade route. Later Led­nice manor be­came the pr­op­er­ty of the noble Licht­enst­ein family from Styria in SE Aus­tria; it stayed in their ownership for until 1945, when Lednice castle became a state prop­erty. In the SE corner of the Czech Republic, it is visited by c400,000 guests annually. La­ter the Liech­tenst­eins also built Valtice Chat­eau, 8 ks away on a fine road. The two chateaus area is a very large land­scape c300+ square ks.

During the C16th, Lednice became a Renaissance chateau. Karel Liechten­stein served as the representative leader of Moravia in the early C17th and was given the title of Prince. When the Czech Protestant nobility rebelled against the Catholic Habsburgs, the Liecht­ensteins supported the monarchy, so they were not punished when the Protestants lost. The family became very wealthy via planned marriages and the careful pur­chase of confiscated prop­erty after the Battle of Bílá Hora 1620, becoming the richest noble clan in all of Moravia.

The family demol­ished the original medieval water fortress and ord­er­ed a rebuilt Ren­aissance castle in its place, which was later mod­ified in the Baroque style, and a large park. The current neo-Gothic design was from 1846–58, designed by court architect Jiří Wingelmül­l­er and used as the Liechtensteins’ summer residence.

Spindle shaped staircase, leading from the library
built in 1840s. Facebook

Library
Histouring

The castle’s most fascinating part is the spindle-shaped stair­case. It came from a single oak tree, comm­issioned by Liech­tenstein’s Prince Alois II, a fan of English Gothic, and was created by the Viennese firm of Karl Leister during the castle’s neo-Gothic recons­truction, 1851. The car­v­ed det­ails of the spiral stairs have plant and animal mot­ifs, based on Bur­gun­d­ian and En­glish Gothic. The staircase goes up to the castle library where the wood panelling is very special, accompanied by dark blue wall­paper. Even the woodwork on the door is exquisite.

The Chinese Lounge is a delight, with royal blue furn­ishings and a Ch­inese lantern. Its walls are covered with ear­ly C18th hand-painted wall­paper made from Chinese pap­er, showing an idyllic landscape with bright fig­ures. The Red Smoking Lounge has wine-red wallpaper and lavish furn­ishings, including stunning chandeliers. The Family Hall displays simple elegance, including a fine porcel­ain col­lection. See the elegant desk in Princess Frances’ Bedroom and great Neo-Gothic chairs with complex back pat­terns. The Tur­quoise Hall, named for its turquoise wall­paper, feat­ures carved wood décor as well as a superb chandelier. The Liecht­en­st­einers loved to travel, to Italy, France and Africa, as seen in the ob­jects they brought back. Bec­ause the family rem­oved many furn­ish­ings in WW2, most of the original interior décor was sal­vag­ed.

 Tur­quoise Hall with wallpaper and carved wooden decor

Blue Room
Histouring

Around the castle and in the Chateau Park, the family commis­s­ioned many romantic buildings that fitted into the landscape, including Temple of Three Graces, Temple of Apollo, a romantic 1817 chateau; Reis­tna and Ch­apel of St Hub­ert. The 92 ms long, cast-iron green­house with arched roof was progressive when it was built in the mid C19th and still tourable. Valtice’s chapel is a fine example of Central European Baroque design.

Another park highlight is a Moorish-style Minaret (1797-1804), designed by Josef Hardtmuth and dec­orated with Arabic inscript­ions. It includes lower arcades, 8 oriental rooms on the upper floor, and a 3-storey tower and gallery serving as a site for the Lie­chtenst­einer coll­ect­ions from their trav­els. A helmet and half-moon crown the breath­­taking structure, the ?oldest pres­erved observ­ation tower in the Czech Repub­lic. Steps lead up 3 storeys, making it possible to look right round from the Mina­ret top, en­joying the beauty of the park and lakes with remote is­lets.

Sailing through the Lednice estate was noted with the disc­ov­ery of gondola drawings on which the Liechtensteiners once sailed on the Dyja River. After the modernising of the channel, the first ships could sail. A modern com­pany has now continued the gondola legacy of the Liechtensteiners. Travel the Dyja River on 2 routes: one fr­om the Moorish Water­works to the Minaret (25 mins) and one from the Min­aret to Jan Castle (40 mins). Jan’s Castle is a romantic castle whose artif­ic­ial ruins were created in the early C19th to Josef Hardt­­muth’s plans. 

Greenhouse and gardens

Minaret across the park and lake
Visit World Heritage

Lednice was recognised in 1996 by UNESCO on its World Cultural and National Heritage List. The basic tour goes around the Representative rooms while further options are the Private Princely apartments, Children's room & Museum of marionettes. All tours offer visitors a great experience.

Czech Republic map
with Lednice on the southern border near Austria
CZ Euro Tour

By Czech born Joseph 

30 comments:

Luiz Gomes said...

Boa tarde de sexta-feira e bom final de semana minha querida amiga. Feliz Dia Internacional da Mulher. Mesmo, sabendo que agora aí seja sábado.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

This was such and interesting read with such awesome photos that made me go wow

roentare said...

The spindled staircase is indeed a classic

Deb said...

Joe where is Lednice? I know Prague fairly well.

diane b said...

What a history! The wood work is amazing and the staircase carved out of an oak tree. Wow!

My name is Erika. said...

That is a gorgeous castle. I bet it was amazing when you visited it, and it has a great story behind it also. Have a great weekend.

River said...

It's so beautiful! All of it. The spindle staircase is amazing and all carved from one tree!
In my early years I recall my Dad mentioning Lichtenstein (?) and always sounding happy but don't remember a single word of what he said.

Katerinas Blog said...

Amazing post! With wonderful photos and a detailed tour of the text that makes us feel like we are in the castle! Thanks for the ride! Have a nice weekend!

Andrew said...

Ha, I thought it was Hels who was writing and I was surprised that she was born in Czechoslovakia. No matter. What a wonderful building that has survived trough difficult times. The staircase is close to be a Wonder of the World. Not visiting Czech is one of my life's regrets.

Hels said...

Luiz

thank you my friend. It is a public holiday here too this week, for Labour Day.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels and Joseph, That Lednice Castle is quite over the top, as is much in Gothic Revival. The library staircase reminds me of a photo I saw just recently on Ebay, of a fence which is probably from about the same time as the staircase, located in Meriden, Connecticut. Notice the beautiful Greek Revival house behind the fence.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/293814638910?itmmeta=01HRH89Y8KK5Z81013G9CYZ9P6&hash=item4468b7993e:g:Y~gAAOSwzl9fouBb&itmprp=enc%3AAQAIAAAAwG%2BLEwJbhbtZscwM5Mag22dcgWQKByESqdalaLvV%2FxM3YCyOc3VVcOFObJxjQnW%2FqxuGsc%2FGtWkQMeH%2BE7x2oEdtc5Mz0hj4cXwiMSiq5gmU8gbAFAXnadNlLZtsZqDGJvY1HCjSagDgJjiTEsCvzPPggVn6AcKSGX6T08ZwAMCVbng3bo1ElN%2FiUm5lHaO22pdSjDVOkkcEYJWujx4dWFnP7L89jvomKVDTwNdy9ALTDEwIT1vXbeuyU55h6gEtPA%3D%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR8Lkp6jEYw
.
The 1945 date made me suspicious, so I checked and found that much of the Lichtenstein's family property, including Lednice Castle, was expropriated at that time, although they supposedly were neutral during the war. I would love to tour the "Czechoslovakia" area one day--that is prime Jan Svankmajer country, so much of it featured in his fascinating films and animations (also some parts of my family come from there).
--Jim

Joe said...

Jo-Anne

photos become extremely important if it is a country you have never visited or architecture you know nothing about.

Joe said...

roentare

if you can believe it, that speccy spindle-shaped stair­case came from a single oak tree. You must examine it to see if you believe that is possible.

Joe said...

Deb
I added a map of the Czech Republic. See Lednice two hours south of Prague, on the Austrian border.

Joe said...

diane
I did all my history studies in Australia, and knew about Czech history only by reading books my family gave me in high school. The history in this part of Europe was fascinating.

Joe said...

Erika
I was a bit worried about going back to my birth country in case I was still liable to be conscripted in the Czech army. Once that was improbable, everything was amazing - the parts I knew all about and the places I had never heard of.

Joe said...

River
what part of the world did your father come from? The Liechtensteins were an amazing dynasty of lords, princes, land owners, castle builders and royal advisors, competent and very fair.

Joe said...

Katerina

you are only 5 or 6 countries away from the Czech Republic. I would warmly recommend you go on an organized tour of Southern Czech Republic and Northern Austria. My next tour will be to Bratislava.

Joe said...

Andrew
Helen only checks my written English, spelling, grammar and vocabulary. I promise I do the rest.

Not only is it exciting to see the facilities inside the castle. But the gardens, parks, lakes, minarets, river and ships are probably the best part for us tourists.


Joe said...

Parnassus
it must have been a terrible time for the Liechtensteins, although worse for everybody else. The Czech properties were taken away and I believe the Russian zone properties were not resumed by the family. So whoever the family supported, they still lost much of their lands. Imagine the struggle to regain and restore their many castles.

I hope you do book and really enjoy a trip through Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Margaret D said...

Beautiful to see Hels. What an amazing staircase, it's just magic and so much work has gone into it.
I'm sure you would have loved your visits back to where you were born, and I can't imagine what is would have been like to leave that country for another even though you were very young, more so for your family.

Liam Ryan said...

Wow. Very interesting to read and the photos are great, esp the Blue Room.
:)

Joe said...

Margaret
My family had a very happy life before 1939, but once both my maternal grandparents and three of the six siblings were killed in the war, the survivors wanted safety. We waited in a refugee camp until visas arrived, in this case to Australia thankfully.
Helen was born in Australia, thankfully.

Joe said...

Liam
The Blue Room had been called the Music Room, a fine space where princely functions could be held for guests. Most of the contents of the rooms were put into hiding during the war, so this room may look more original than expected.

River said...

@Joe; we are from Hamburg in Germany, but I don't know my father's ancestry beyond his parents who were also German. My mother's ancestry is Swedish.

Joe said...

River, everyone in that part of Europe knew of the dynasty!

Liechtensteins came from Lower Austria buying land in 1136, also receiving land on the Danube, near Hungary's border. One lord was given Nikolsburg in southern Moravia. For centuries, the family took over vast estates, predominantly in Moravia, Lower Austria, Silesia and Styria, territories part of Habsburgs countries.

In early C17th, the family re-converted from Protestantism to Catholicism and supported Habsburg Emperors in ending the Bohemian Revolt. Thus they acquired huge lands in Bohemia and Moravia from dispossessed Protestant nobles. In 1719 Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI declared Liechtenstein a principality. After 1806, Johann I acquired estates in Austria and on their Moravian and Bohemian estates, until Czechoslovakia took them in 1945.

DUTA said...

Lednice Castle and its surroundings look exciting!
The Czech Republic is a beautiful and interesting country, worth visiting.
I've been To Prague and a few other places, and got very impressed by the sights: history, architecture, cultural facilities etc...

Joe said...

DUTA
My mother was correct about Czechoslovakia being the most beautiful country in the world. You are correct about Prague still having exciting architecture and cultural facilities.

rv exterior wall panels said...

I like this structure is beautiful and classic

Hels said...

rv

I hope you get the chance to visit in person, having read up all the details _before_ you leave home. And make sure you leave enough time to absorb Lednice castle, parks and the other facilities - it takes ages to give it full attention.