Fortress

Zamek Pieniński

Poland Krościenko nad Dunajcem immovable monument in Poland
Zamek Pieniński
Zamek Pieniński · Wikipedia

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Pieniny Castle (Polish: Zamek Pieniny), also known as the Castle of St. Kinga, is a ruined medieval Polish castle located near Krościenko nad Dunajcem, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in the Pieniny mountains. The stronghold was most likely built in the early 1280s. Its construction is associated with Saint Kinga, who is believed to have commissioned it as a refuge for the Poor Clares' monastery in times of conflict. The duchess and the nuns took shelter there during the third Mongol invasion of Poland. The castle's subsequent 14th-century history is poorly documented. While recent research suggests that it remained in use in the 15th century, the prevailing view among researchers holds that it was likely abandoned in the 14th century and destroyed during the invasion of the Hussites or the forces of Stibor of Stiboricz at the beginning of the 15th century. The building is one of the oldest brick castles in Poland and is an example of high-mountain castle architecture. It could accommodate a hundred people and several dozen soldiers. Designed to blend into the natural landscape, the castle was fortified by impassable rocks and located at a high altitude, making it difficult for the enemy...

Pieniny Castle is located on the northern slope of Zamkowa Góra [ pl ] (792.7 m above sea level), which descends towards the nearby Huliński Stream [ pl ]. The summit is part of the Trzy Korony Massif [ pl ], bordered by the Pieniny Stream [ pl ] valley to the south and northeast, and connected to Ostry Wierch and the main massif (including the Trzy Korony peak) by the1 Zamkowa Pass [ pl ] to the south.

The castle's position made it invisible from the valleys or the surrounding hills (except the hard-to-reach northern peaks of Pieninki [ pl ] ). It also created favorable conditions for defense, with rocky cliffs restricting access to the castle from the east, south, and west, posing an obstacle to invaders. In scientific publications, the castle is described as a structure with an unusual spatial layout, which was "masterfully integrated into the natural landscape". The stronghold had two entrances – the main western one led to Krościenko nad Dunajcem through the Szopka Pass [ pl ], while the eastern one descended through the Pieniny Stream valley to the Dunajec River Gorge.

An important aspect – probably decisive for the curtain wall 's placement – was a spring, which most likely existed in the place of the castle cistern before the construction of the stronghold and supplied the garrison with water. Naturally concealed under leaves and soil, it was discovered during research conducted at the ruins. Legends later appeared, attributing healing properties to the spring's water.

The remains of the fortifications are located between 740 and 760 meters above sea level. Assuming that the summit of Zamkowa Góra was also fortified, the structure is the highest brick castle in the Polish part of the Carpathian Mountains. Just below the stronghold is the Cave of St. Kinga [ pl ], a place of pilgrimage and worship of Kinga of Poland.

Zamek Pieniński

The castle ruins are located within the Pieniny National Park and are surrounded by rich vegetation, including carnations, alpine aster, golden alyssum, and Zawadzki's chrysanthemum. There is also a site of edelweiss, which, according to Józef Nyka [ pl ], may be a remnant of the 19th-century transplantation efforts of the Polish Tatra Society [ pl ]. The slopes of Zamkowa Góra, once covered with pine forest (which burned down in a two-week fire in 1915), are now dominated by sycamore woodland. The castle grounds themselves are covered with mixed conifer forest, mainly beech and fir.

The ruins are located on the blue trail of the Polish Tourist and Sightseeing Society, which leads to Trzy Korony. Stone steps, built during the excavation of the cave at the beginning of the 20th century from material obtained from the walls, lead from the trail to the ruins. The stronghold is almost 7 km from the Orlica mountain hut and less than 3 km from the Trzy Korony mountain hut.

Historians and archaeologists date Pieniny Castle to the second half of the 13th century, despite Jan Długosz 's account, which suggests that Duke Bolesław V the Chaste visited it during the first Mongol invasion of Poland in 1241 – most likely referring to another stronghold in the Pieniny Mountains. Thanks to research conducted in the 1970s, it was possible to approximate the date of construction of the stronghold to the early 1280s, although Daniel Gazda suggests that it could have taken place earlier or later – most likely before 1287. The event is associated with Duchess Kinga of Kraków, who had a large fortune at the beginning of her reign (40,000 grzywnas, equivalent to about 8.5 tons of silver), most of which was used to rebuild Lesser Poland devastated by the Mongol invasions. The castle likely served as a refuge for the Poor Clares of Stary Sącz during threats, and could accommodate a hundred people and several dozen soldiers. It was an example of a so-called refugium – used only in the event of an invasion.

The building was modern for its time – in the 13th century, most strongholds were still built using wood and earth, rarely stone, and even the Wawel Castle had only wooden, earth, and stone curtain walls. Pieniny Castle is one of the first in Poland and most likely the first in Lesser Poland to be built using stone and mortar. This may suggest that the builders came from the south – where such constructions were erected earlier than in Poland – perhaps from Hungary, St. Kinga's homeland. The builders may have drawn inspiration from the 13th-century Wawel palas or the 12th-century Spiš Castle.

The castle's existence is linked to the establishment of Sromowce and Krościenko settlements. According to Karol Potkański [ pl ], there must have been a larger settlement nearby, which would have provided economic support for the garrison and visitors, while Bronisław Krzan [ pl ] identifies it with Krościenko. The medieval settlement of "Crosno", as M. Książek writes in his work Zarys rozwoju przestrzennego Krościenka nad Dunajcem w okresie średniowiecza ( An Outline of the Spatial Development of Krościenko nad Dunajcem in the Medieval Period ), was originally located near the so-called Gródek, at present-day Pienińska Street [ pl ], on the road leading to the Pieniny stronghold.

Zamek Pieniński

The first reliable mention of the building dates back to the 14th century. The source suggests that after the third Mongol invasion of Poland, led by Nogai Khan, Kinga took refuge there with her court, priests, knights, and 70 Poor Clares (including her sisters, princesses Yolanda and Constance ) at the beginning of December 1287. The Tatars did not attempt to capture the stronghold at that time – they tried to set the castle on fire with a barrage of missiles, but withdrew in the face of reinforcements approaching from Hungary.

After the invasion, the stronghold ceased to appear in sources. The prevailing view in historiography is that in the 14th century it likely fell into disrepair and was reduced to the role of a local watchtower, which was of little use due to its distance from the main trade routes and the existence of the larger Czorsztyn Castle, which was undergoing expansion at the time. By the 15th century, Pieniny Castle was supposedly no longer in use at all. According to Andrzej Skorupa's theory, it was destroyed in 1410 by the army of Stibor of Stiboricz (sent by Sigismund of Luxembourg to help the Teutonic Order, then at war with Poland), which ravaged the Sądecczyzna region. A 19th-century source, on the other hand, says that the building was destroyed in 1431 or 1433 by Hussite forces. However, these dates are not certain – the castle may still have been used as a base by the Hussites or the Hungarian troops of Matthias Corvinus in 1474. Research conducted between 2020 and 2021 shows that the building was still in use in the 15th century. As late as the 17th century, Poor Clares were said to have taken refuge there from the plague.

During its relatively short history, the castle was not rebuilt in any way – research has shown that the walls are quite uniform and were built in the same period.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the stronghold was mentioned in geographical studies as an example of an exceptionally well-defended castle, including in Laurence Echard 's publication from 1782. In the 19th century, the ruins were a place of pilgrimage, including for patients from Szczawnica, and were also often visited by seekers of legendary treasures, which were said to be hidden somewhere in the stronghold, leading to amateur excavations. At that time, the ruins were sometimes mistakenly identified as the remains of Saint Kinga's monastery. The first scientific description of the castle appears in Feliks Jan Szczęsny Morawski 's publication entitled Sądecczyzna, published in 1863. In 1894, the Polish Tatra Society marked out an official path to the castle, which was marked out in 1906. In 1904, a hermitage was built there, and a statue by Władysław Druciak was placed in the Cave of St. Kinga [ pl ] below the castle. In 1925, the ridge of Zamkowa Góra was secured with iron railing.

In the late 1920s, further publications mentioning the castle appeared: Helena Langerówna's System obronny doliny Dunajca w XIV w. ( The Defensive System of the Dunajec Valley in the 14th Century ) and Tadeusz Szydłowski's [ pl ] Pomniki architektury epoki piastowskiej we województwie Krakowskiem i Kieleckiem ( Monuments of Piast-Era Architecture in the Kraków and Kielce Voivodeships ). These works essentially repeated the theses put forward by Szczęsny Morawski in Sądecczyzna. It was not until Szydłowski's next work, Inwentarz topograficzny powiatu nowotarskiego ( Topographical Inventory of Nowy Targ County ), that Morawski's proposed plan of the building was questioned. Between 1938 and 1939, Tomasz Szczygielski from the Pieniny Museum conducted the first archaeological research in the ruins, which resulted in, among other things, the discovery of bones of an aurochs and the remains of a cistern. Arrowheads, metal vessels, a spearhead, nails, and a belt buckle were also excavated. However, the work was interrupted by the outbreak of war, and Szczygielski died in Auschwitz. The artifacts and a significant part of the documentation were lost. Individual finds are preserved in the collection of the Józef Szalay Pieniny Museum in Szlachtowa.

Zamek Pieniński

Szczygielski was the author of several theories, which were later rejected by contemporary scientists. He believed that the construction of a stronghold such as Pieniny Castle must have been too costly for the weak Piast dukes and could have been initiated by Bolesław I the Brave. The discovery of pottery dating from the turn of the 10th and 11th centuries was supposed to confirm this theory. Another hypothesis put forward by Szczygielski was that the structure was built by Roman legionaries as a "watchtower" near the Amber Road, given that a coin from the time of Constantius II was found in the ruins. According to him, the building could also have been a shelter for robber barons who preyed on merchants.

In 1951, the ruins were included in the Catalogue of Art Monuments in Poland. Excavations resumed after 1953 and were conducted by the Carpathian Archaeological Expedition under the direction of Andrzej Żaki [ pl ]. These studies were conducted on a smaller scale and were exploratory in nature. Their results were partially included in the publication Archeologia Małopolski wczesnośredniowiecznej ( Archaeology of Early Medieval Lesser Poland ), although they were never fully published. Further work, carried out by the Institute of Archaeology of the Jagiellonian University, took place between 1976 and 1978 under the direction of Maria Cabalska [ pl ] (1976–1977) and Stanisław Kołodziejski [ pl ] (1977–1978). The line of the walls was reconstructed, traces of a cistern that supplied the defenders with water were revealed, and the remains of walls in the southern part of Zamkowa Góra were discovered. At the same time, more arrowheads and spearheads, fragments of clay pots, nails, and a ceremonial bronze mace were excavated.

In 2003, following efforts by the administration of the Pieniny National Park, the ruins were entered in the Registry of Cultural Property. The site was cleared of vegetation, water drains were profiled according to Piotr Stępień's concept, and a wooden platform was built above the basement's ceiling to relieve the load. In 2004, the stairs and paths leading to the ruins were renovated. Between 2006 and 2007, the Pieniny National Park attempted to save the relics. The work, carried out according to P. Stępień's design, was supervised by S. Kołodziejski. The walls were secured and the gaps in the stone were filled in, the cistern was completely uncovered (including the floor at the bottom), a 2-meter-deep well was excavated, and the area was drained. In 2009, after the trails had been marked out, the remains of the castle were opened to tourists.

In 2017, the ceiling of the basement of the gatehouse collapsed, and the stronghold was once again closed to visitors. In 2018, Daniel Gazda from the Ureusz Foundation in Warsaw began research on the castle. Further archaeological work took place between 2020 and 2021, led by D. Gazda and carried out by the Pieniny Archaeological Mission, which operates under the auspices of the foundation. At the same time, renovation work was carried out, during which the walls and ceiling of the building were reconstructed and covered with a new platform, with the necessary materials transported by helicopter.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the stronghold was mentioned in geographical studies as an example of an exceptionally well-defended castle, including in Laurence Echard 's publication from 1782. In the 19th century, the ruins were a place of pilgrimage, including for patients from Szczawnica, and were also often visited by seekers of legendary treasures, which were said to be hidden somewhere in the stronghold, leading to amateur excavations. At that time, the ruins were sometimes mistakenly identified as the remains of Saint Kinga's monastery. The first scientific description of the castle appears in Feliks Jan Szczęsny Morawski 's publication entitled Sądecczyzna, published in 1863. In 1894, the Polish Tatra Society marked out an official path to the castle, which was marked out in 1906. In 1904, a hermitage was built there, and a statue by Władysław Druciak was placed in the Cave of St. Kinga [ pl ] below the castle. In 1925, the ridge of Zamkowa Góra was secured with iron railing.