Banská Štiavnica, a few hours east of Bratislava as the crow flies, is an old mining town that was once very wealthy. Today, it seemed to us that tourism is the biggest economic activity.
When the town was prosperous, many impressive buildings were constructed: castles, a mining academy, churches, synagogue, plague column, and hilltop Chapel of Calvary like no other we've seen. Most have been restored and some also re-purposed. There are also many cemeteries, new amphitheater and an exhibition mine.
We arrived by train from Bratisalva, stayed two nights and left by bus to the High Tatras.
The train from Bratislava to Zloven made just a few stops, one of which was at Surany.
From the train, we spotted more than a few Roma villages like this one.
Banská Štiavnica is very photogenic being a mining town in the hills.
Town Square with Plague Column.
The Botanic Gardens building.
A villa, with hints of Art Nouveau style, waiting to be restored.
Wikipedia says "Calvary Banská Štiavnica is the most important Baroque calvary in Slovakia and in the whole former Kingdom of Hungary – probably even in the whole of Europe." We've seen many Stations of the Cross with Chapels in our travels. This one rates a 10 while among all the others none is higher than a 5. It's been under renovation/restoration for 20 years and more work remains. It's a gem.
The scene inside one of the small chapels; restored.
And another - The Last Supper.
Chapels that have not yet been restored have a photo.
The Calvary/Kalvaria Chapel at the top is currently under renovation but we got a glimpse through the scaffolding of the bottom of the Crucifixion painting.
Some views from the top of the hill.
Around the Old Town.
The old Synagogue is now part of the ERB Brewery.
The New Castle.
One of the old City Gates.
The Old Castle (center with tower).
Looking past the Old Castle Tower to Calvary.
Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Uzbekistan: Elsewhere in Tashkent
We spent some extra time in Tashkent, because we wanted to catch the Persian New Year, Nowruz , in Tashkent, known as Spring Equinox to the ...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
Last week we hauled our canoe and tent over to Merchants Millpond State Park and enjoyed some very fine camping and paddling. One day we p...
-
Polonnaruwa is an archeological site in north central Sri Lanka. Between the 11th and 13th century Polonnaruwa was the capital of the island...
-
The day before Easter we took the regional FSE train from Martina Franca to Bari, the 2nd largest city in southern Italy (after Naples) with...
-
Everything happened smoothly with our Galapagos trip. We had really good weather, two full days of sun and a couple of partly cloudy day in...
-
Dubai, the most populated city in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), is an enigma for us. Dubai is now among the top 5 most visited cities in t...
-
We were forewarned against Nazare, but Nazare turned out to be the only place in this part of Portugal that had any kind of Easter activity ...
-
Founded in the fourth century BCE, Anuradhapura was the first Sri Lankan capital. Today there are still a dozen giant stupas, some dating ba...
No comments:
Post a Comment