Huniade Castle
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The Huniade Castle (Romanian: Castelul Huniade, Hungarian: Hunyadi kastély) is the oldest monument of Timișoara, built between 1443 and 1447 by John Hunyadi and over the old royal castle dating from the 14th century (built during the reign of Charles I Robert).[1]
The castle was rebuilt by the Turkish pashas in the 17th century and by Prince Eugene of Savoy in the 18th century. The structure owes its present appearance to the 1850s reconstruction campaign. It houses the History Section and the Natural Sciences Section of the Banat Museum.
In front of the museum there are two lamps reminding that Timișoara was the first European town to have introduced electric public lighting on 12 November 1884.
See also[]
- Timișoara Fortress
- Hunyad Castle in Hunedoara
- List of castles in Romania
- List of places in Timișoara
- Tourism in Romania
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Huniade castle. |
- ^ Guides, Rough (4 August 2016). The Rough Guide to Romania (Travel Guide eBook). Rough Guides UK. ISBN 978-0-241-29161-0.
Coordinates: 45°45′11″N 21°13′37″E / 45.75306°N 21.22694°E
- Castles in Romania
- Buildings and structures in Timișoara
- Historic monuments in Timiș County
- Romanian building and structure stubs
- European castle stubs