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Susedgrad

Susedgrad Castle
Zagreb, Croatia
Attempted reconstruction of Susedgrad's early appearance with confluence of Sava and Krapina rivers visible behind.
Coordinates45°49′16″N 15°49′52″E / 45.82106°N 15.83105°E / 45.82106; 15.83105
TypeHilltop castle
HeightBuilt on 194 meters high hilltop
Site information
Owner
Conditionin ruins
Site history
Built14th century (14th century)
In use14th–17th century
Materialsstone
DemolishedLeft to ruin after 17th century.
Battles/wars
TypeProtected cultural good
Reference no.Z-7528[2]

Susedgrad Castle (Hungarian: Szomszédvár), or earlier also only Sused, is a ruined medieval fortress on the far-western hill of mount Medvednica, while also marking the far-western part of modern-day Zagreb, Croatia.

Position

As written on billboard near Susedgrad ruins, the fortress overwatched an important crossroad at Krapina-Sava confluence, and therefore enabled control over nearby landways and waterways. Archeological and paleontological findings suggest that the place was settled since antiquity. Nearby quarries are also believed to exist since antiquity, supplying stone for building forts and churches in the surrounding area.[3]

History

Medieval Slavonia

A Susedgrad Castle layout.

Written sources from 1299 and 1287 indicate that the castle was constructed somewhere throughout the second half of 13th century, when it was owned by Cistercian order.[4] It is then mentioned in 1316 in one charter of king Charles I of Hungary as his property.[5] The castle was a royal property until 1345 it was given by king Louis The Great to Nikola III. Aka - Toth, who supported king Louis in his wars.[6][5] Nikola III. also gained control over significant possessions in Hrvatsko Zagorje, which would subsequently evolve in what would later be known as Susedgrad-Stubica Segniory.[6] The family branch which controlled Susedgrad became known as Toths of Susedgrad.[6] Toths however died out, and their last heiress - Doroteja, married to Nicolas Henning, whose family in 1439 took over rights to Aka's possessions.[6]

Early Modern Period

Hennings held complete control over the castle, until 1502 when they died out, after which several contestants laid claims to the castle through the female line.[7] Legal dispute arose over the question, whether such "female" claims are legal, or does the king owns a right to give the castle to the new owner. In the end, emperor Ferdinand gave one half of the estates to Styrian noble Andrew Teuffenbach who changed his last name to Henning through his mother's line, while he gave another half to Andras Bathory, also a Henning descendant.[8]

Henning-Tahy Wars

Andrew Teuffenbach - Henning died in 1563, while his wife Ursula Meknitzer Henning lived on. While he was alive, Teuffenbach leased half of his Susedgrad estate to his wife Ursula Meknitzer, while he leased the other part to Andras Batory. Since he was often away in Hungary, Batory sold his complete rights to both Susedgrad and Stubica to Ferenc Tahy for 50 000 Forints, who thus became a majority owner.[7] Ursula, however, refused to accept Tahy as a rightful owner, while Tahy also refused to give in to Ursula which brought these two nobles into confrontation. Both Ursula and Tahy started gathering powerful allies around them, with Ursula enjoying support of Croatian viceban Ambroz Gregorijanec, while Tahy enjoyed support of Croatian ban Peter Erdody.[7] Ursula made the first move 1565 when she gathered an army of some 800 local peasants had Tahy's family kicked out of the possession. When Croatian ban Petar Erdody gathered Army of Croatian ban to punish her, Ursula and her allies again gathered 3000 strong peasant army and routed Army of Croatian ban in Battle of Susedgrad in July 1565. The issue was then lifted to Croatian parliament who raised a lawsuit against Ursula, while Royal Chamber confiscated her possessions until the lawsuit is resolved. Tahy was meanwhile brought back in following year, and started to make revenge against local peasants who fought along Ursula against him, and this would eventually escalate in Croatian-Slovene Peasant Revolt of 1573.[7] Since Tahy died same year, Hennings bought back Tahy's part of the estate from his descendants in 1574.[4]

Abandonment

Historian Stjepan Laljak notes that in 1590, Susedgrad was shaken by a violent earthquake.[9] In the beginning of 17th century, the castle burnt down, and it was later abandoned and left to ruin. One of the main reasons was that there was no need for a large fort since danger from Ottoman akinji incursions diminished. Also, the methods of warfare evolved, making this castle useless.[10]

Contemporary Period

The castle gave name to today neighbourhood of Podsused, meaning literally "under Sused".

For a while in the late 20th century the name Susedgrad had been used for a city municipality that was dissolved in the 1999 municipal reform and has subsequently been transformed into Podsused - Vrapče and Stenjevec city districts.[11]

Restoration initiatives

What remained of the castle was significantly damaged in 2020 Zagreb earthquake.[12] Despite wishes of local people to restore the castle, according to writing of Croatian daily Večernji list, Republic of Croatia and City of Zagreb are for years unable to reach an agreement about the land ownership and financing of the project so everything is standing still. Meanwhile, the castle remains are left to ruin.[12]

Location and access

ZET bus line 123 from Črnomerec terminal is the closest transport to the ruins at the "(Aleja) Seljačke bune" stop. With a short walk (additional 5 min) from the center of Podsused, it can also be accessed by bus lines 116, 119, 122, 172, 176 and 177, and by suburban commuter trains directly from the city center.

See also

References

  1. ^ It is known that in 1474 Ottoman akinjis burnt down a village of Brod na Krapini, which today doesn't exist anymore. For details consult a book: Ljudi, prostor i mijene : susedgradsko i donjostubičko vlastelinstvo : 1450.-1700., by Branimir Brgles in chapter concerning local settlements.
  2. ^ "Stari grad Susedgrad u Podsusedu". Registar Kulturnih Dobara. Retrieved 2023-05-28.
  3. ^ For a detailed description of history of Susedgrad see: Brgles, Branimir (2019). Ljudi, prostor i mijene – Susedgradsko i donjostubičko vlastelinstvo 1450. - 1700. Zagreb: Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje. ISBN 978-953-7967-63-5.
  4. ^ a b Nadilo, Branko. "Medvedgrad i druge zagrebačke utvrde". Građevinar: 484–485.
  5. ^ a b Enciklopedija hrvatskog Zagorja. p. 791.
  6. ^ a b c d "Aka | Hrvatska enciklopedija". www.enciklopedija.hr. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  7. ^ a b c d Klaić, Vjekoslav (1988). Povijest Hrvata: knjiga peta. Zagreb: Matica hrvatska. pp. 353–373.
  8. ^ Brgles, Branimir (2018). "Tko se buni pod Susedgradom i Stubicom? Prilog proučavanju društvenih nemira 1565. – 1573". Povijesni prilozi/Historical contributions. 37 (55): 139–203. doi:10.22586/pp.v55i0.68. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  9. ^ Laljak, Stjepan (1991). Novi dvori od Jelačića bana do današnjih dana. Zagreb: Matica hrvatska. p. 9.
  10. ^ "Susedgrad | Hrvatska enciklopedija". www.enciklopedija.hr. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  11. ^ "Grad Zagreb službene stranice".
  12. ^ a b "Potres je dodatno oštetio utvrdu Susedgrad, urušili su se cijeli zidovi". www.vecernji.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2023-05-30.

45°49.1′N 15°51.7′E / 45.8183°N 15.8617°E / 45.8183; 15.8617