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The Erdödy-Choron Castle is one of
the few surviving medieval castles in Eastern Europe. It is located
in the Transdanubia region of western Hungary near the Austrian border.
The castle has a tower surmounted with an onion shaped dome and is
encircled by a wet moat.
The eastern wing was constructed at the end of the 15th century. In
the early 16th century, Péter Erdödy enhanced the castle
with Renaissance details and in 1558 sold it to András Choron,
another eminent commander. The castle passed to his son Baron János
Choron, who maintained a permanent army. At this time the western
wing was added and the height of the tower increased.
In the mid-17th Century, the Choron family sold the castle to Palatine
Miklós Illésházy. His daughter richly decorated
the rooms of the piano nobile with wall paintings. Following the death
of Anna Illésházy Erdödy in 1765, the castle passed
to Sándor Erdödy VI, who restored the castle in 1935.
After World War II, the castle, under the Communist regime, became
State owned and was used as a school until 1979. Between 1979-86 the
Hungarian National Board for the Protection of Monuments (OMvH) performed
research and conservation work.
In 1998, the Hungarian government granted the castle and its property
to Joseph Pell Lombardi. A complete history of the castle is presently
being compiled and the property is being conserved under the direction
of the Budapest office of Joseph Pell Lombardi & Associates, Architects. |
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