ROUDNICE nad Labem - Czech Rep.

#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#batfam#tim drake#batfamily#dc fanart


seen from Canada

seen from Canada

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from France

seen from Australia
seen from Poland
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Mexico

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Yemen
ROUDNICE nad Labem - Czech Rep.
Video ze závodu Unie amatérských cyklistů v Roudnici nad Labem
Rodinný dům Roudnice II — OK Plan architects Roudnice nad Labem / 2014 www.okplan.cz
publikováno: www.archiweb.cz
foto © Jaroslav Hejzlar
– Rodina –
/ „Víš, já mám tvoje příbuzný rád,“ řekl mi Adámek, když jsme dorazili domů z dobronický poutě. Jen tak.
A já nemůžu než s ním plně souhlasit. Mám tu nejúžasnější rodinu na světě. Je to totiž ta nejlaskavější.
Memorial Air Show
27. a 28. června se v Roudnici nad Labem konala akce Memorial Air Show 2015, hlavním tématem letos bylo 70leté výročí konce Druhé světové války. Pro všechny milovníky letadel (a nejen těch historických) se jednoznačně jedná o “must see” akci. Ale mně to pořád nevycházelo, tu jsem se o akci dozvěděla pozdě, tu mi nevycházel termín, tu ještě něco, ale letos se konečně poštěstilo a 27. června…
View On WordPress
Roudnice Castle
Historical Origins
In the 12th century, on the site where Roudnice Castle now sits, a fortress-style castle was built by the powerful archbishops of Prague. This castle served as a popular summer residence for Prague's bishops and archbishops and is said to be the place where Jan Hus was ordained a priest.
Gothic additions and alterations were made to the original Romanesque structure in the 14th and 15th centuries. The castle changed from religious to secular hands and eventually came into the Lobkowicz family in 1603, when Zdeněk Vojtěch, 1st Prince Lobkowicz (1568-1628) married then-owner of the castle, Polyxena Pernštejn (1566-1642).
In 1652, their son Václav Eusebius, 2nd Prince Lobkowicz (1609-1677) commissioned Italian architects Francesco Caratti and later Antonio della Porta to demolish most of the original structure and create in its place a masterpiece of the high baroque style. This grand 200-room residence included massive twin entry staircases, a stately clock tower, an elaborately decorated chapel and an elegant theater. Other outbuildings, such as the riding stables and the family administrative building, were subsequently developed on the castle grounds. Václav Eusebius’s major reconstruction also included the creation of magnificent formal gardens in the castle courtyard and on the surrounding grounds.
When construction of Roudnice Castle was completed, the rooms were filled with the finest works from the family's ever-expanding art collections. These included paintings by many of the greatest European artists, precious religious objects, specialized weaponry, and fine porcelain and decorative arts from Europe and the Far East. Additionally, the gardens and estate holdings flourished and the many rooms devoted to the library, which became known as the Roudnice Lobkowicz Library, were filled with important books, manuscripts and The Archive.
The collections at the Castle also included musical instruments and autograph manuscripts by many of the greatest composers of the 18th and 19th century, including Glück, Mozart, and particularly Beethoven, who dedicated his 3rd (Eroica), 5th and 6th symphonies to his great patron Joseph František Maximilian, 7th Prince Lobkowicz (1772-1816). Many of these compositions were performed by the house orchestra in the Roudnice Castle theater.
Significant Architectural Features
Preserved from the original Romanesque castle, below the northwest terrace of the present-day structure, is a section of peripheral wall, fortified by several small towers. Also preserved from this period and accessible from the present-day courtyard are a large vaulted hall and several smaller vaulted rooms, one of which contains a base of a 12th-century column.
Significant features from the baroque period include the chapel, which boasts magnificent frescoes by Giacomo Tencalla (1644-1692).
Many rooms also have unique architectural features, including 18th and 19th century ceramic stoves, ceilings decorated with frescoes and stucco work, and large balconies.
Recent History
With the onset of World War II, the Lobkowicz family was forced to flee Roudnice Castle and the country. Maximilian Lobkowicz (1888-1967), the Ambassador of Czechoslovakia to Great Britain, and his British wife, Gillian Somerville, lived in exile in London. Nazi troops occupied the Castle and confiscated its collections, using the building as an SS youth training camp. The library's specially-designed cabinetry was destroyed and its rooms were turned into communal latrines. In the final days of the war, bombs fell and severely damaged the theater in the castle's west wing.
After the war, Maximilian returned home and repairs to the damaged castle were initiated. Not long after, when the Communist government seized power in 1948, all the Lobkowicz properties and possessions were confiscated for a second time. The contents of the collections were evacuated from Roudnice Castle and scattered across the country. The greatest treasures were absorbed by the national libraries and museums.
For the next five decades, Roudnice Castle was used as a military music school and for military administrative offices. In 1965, the Castle Riding Hall became home to the Central Bohemian Gallery of Modern Art, which remains there to this day. The Gallery has an excellent reputation for presenting high quality exhibitions and is an attractive destination for local visitors and tourists alike.
The Lobkowiczes were able to trace and reclaim much of their property, including Roudnice Castle, thanks to the enlightened restitution laws signed into effect by President Václav Havel. After restitution, the family continued to rent the Castle to the military music school, all the while using rental and other income to initiate improvements – such as restoring the iconic bell tower and replacing the roof. Funding for the military music school was recently terminated by the government, and the school was officially closed at the end of 2008.
Since 2009, the Lobkowicz family has undertaken a series of repairs to the Castle property and is actively seeking partners and alternative uses for the Castle and grounds.