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Grassalkovich Palace

Coordinates: 48°08′57″N 17°06′28″E / 48.14924°N 17.10775°E / 48.14924; 17.10775
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Grassalkovich Palace
Grasalkovičov palác
Map
General information
TypePalace
LocationOld Town, Bratislava
CountrySlovakia
Coordinates48°08′57″N 17°06′28″E / 48.14924°N 17.10775°E / 48.14924; 17.10775
Grassalkovich Palace

The Grassalkovich Palace (Slovak: Grasalkovičov palác, Hungarian: Grassalkovich-kastély) is a palace in Bratislava, Slovakia, and the residence of the President of Slovakia. It is situated on Hodžovo námestie, near the Episcopal Summer Palace. The building is a Rococo-late Baroque summer palace with a French garden.

History

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President George W. Bush and Slovak former President Ivan Gašparovič in Grassalkovich Palace during the Slovakia Summit 2005

The building was finished in 1760, by architect András Mayerhoffer for Hungarian aristocrat Antal Grassalkovich of Croatian descent, a close friend of Maria Theresa.[1] Antal was then President of the Royal Hungarian Chamber (quasi-Minister of Finance), and as such he needed an apartment in the capital (since Pozsony was the capital of Hungary until 1848). It features many rooms and an impressive staircase. The chapel is decorated with frescoes by Joseph von Pichler.[2]

The building became a center of Baroque musical life in Pozsony. Joseph Haydn premiered some of his works here. Count Grassalkovich also had his orchestra and his "colleague", Prince Esterházy, used to "lend" him his favorite conductor, Haydn. Grassalkovich was Maria Theresa's vassal, so the palace was used for various balls and parties of the Habsburg royal court.[1] For example, it was Haydn who conducted the orchestra when Maria Theresa's daughter married Albert of Sachsen-Teschen, then governor of the Kingdom of Hungary (see Bratislava Castle). Ľudovít Štúr is said to have declared his love to Adela Ostrolúcka for the first time during a ball organized by Archduke Stephen Francis Victor (Buda 14 September 1817 – Menton 19 February 1867), son of the Palatine, Joseph. The last owners of the palace before the end of Austria-Hungary were Archduke Frederick of Teschen with his wife Isabella of Croy-Dülmen. After that, the building stood empty for years. After the Treaty of Trianon, it was first used again as the personal residence of the fascist Jozef Tiso, leader of the Slovak Republic but from 1919 the palace was occupied by the Territorial Military Command.[3]

During the 1939–1945 period, the palace was adapted by Emil Belluš[3] and became the seat of the President of the First Slovak Republic (i.e. of Jozef Tiso). During the Communist era, it was first (after 1945) the seat of the Council of Commissioners (also styled Corps of Plenipotentiaries), which was a quasi-government of Slovakia within Czechoslovakia. In 1950, the building was turned into the "Klement Gottwald House of Pioneers and Youth" (Dom pionierov a mládeže Klementa Gottwalda), which was an activity center for Bratislava's schoolchildren, all of whom were so-called pioneers at that time. The schoolchildren caused extensive damage to the palace, and the necessary restoration only became possible following the transition from Communism in late 1989 with the Velvet Revolution.

The restoration of Grassalkovich Palace during the early 1990s was overseen by the inaugural First Lady of Slovakia, Emília Kováčová.[4] Following its restoration, the palace became the residence of Slovakia's president on 30 September 1996. Its once-large gardens are now a public park, complete with a statue of Bratislava-born composer Jan Nepomuk Hummel.

The Grassalkovich Palace

References

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  1. ^ a b "GRASSALKOVICH PALACE IN BRATISLAVA: PRESIDENT'S SEAT". Welcometobratislava.eu. Archived from the original on 6 January 2023. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Chapel". Prezident.sk. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
  3. ^ a b "Prezident Slovenskej republiky". Prezident.sk. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  4. ^ "The Passion of Medak Mladek". Washington Post. 1998-02-02. Archived from the original on 2017-11-21. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
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