Siedlęcin Tower

Tower castle in Siedlęcin, Poland
50°56′06″N 15°41′08″E / 50.935°N 15.6856°E / 50.935; 15.6856Construction started1313Completed1315ClientHenry I of Jawor

Siedlęcin Tower (Polish: Wieża książęca w Siedlęcinie) is a 14th-century tower castle situated in the southwestern Polish village of Siedlęcin in the Karkonosze County.[1][2]

The keep in Siedlęcin is one of the best-preserved examples of such buildings in Central Europe; its construction was probably started in 1313 or 1314 by Henry I of Jawor. He and his wife Agnes of Bohemia also commissioned the medieval Gothic fresco murals depicting the legend of Lancelot that are painted in the great hall of the keep.

The tower, surrounded by a moat, is a keep of a relatively modest sort, which combines the functions of housing, ceremony, and defence in a vertical disposition analogous to those found in other castles in Europe: the lower storeys were designed for defence and for trade and business; the upper floors consisted of living quarters, and fulfilled the ceremonial functions of the dukes; the topmost floor also served defensive purposes.

References

  1. ^ "Ducal Tower in Siedlęcin – Wieża Książęca w Siedlęcinie". wiezasiedlecin.pl. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
  2. ^ "Siedlęcin - ducal tower". Ancient and medieval architecture. Retrieved 2022-11-06.

External links

  • History and photos of the Ducal Tower in Siedlęcin (in Polish)


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