Ksiaz Castle and 1500 unknown photos. Straight from Canada! [VIDEO]
This fantastic collection has been discovered in a Canadina town of Burlington. Jean Wessel – the granddaugher of the photos' author – had kept them in her house.
This retired nurse remembers her grandfather very well as well as her father who spent his childhood in Castle Ksiaz. - I would like the future generations to see these photos – she underlines.
In Burlington she was visited by the team from Poland – the representatives of the Castle and journalists. They acquired a collection of about 1500 invaluable photos in a very good quality. This autum they will be presented in a special exhibition and later in an album. This is the biggest photo collection which has been. acquired by Castle Ksiaz so far.
Książ (german: Schloss Fürstenstein) is a castle in Wałbrzych in Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Poland. It was built in 1288-1292 under Bolko I the Strict, rebuild in baroque and neo-romanesque style in XVIII and XX century by the family of the counts von Hochbergs. It lies within a protected area called Książ Landscape Park, overlooks the Pełcznica River and is one of the city's main tourist attractions. The original fortification was destroyed in the year 1263 by Ottokar II of Bohemia.
Bolko I, Duke of Świdnica and Jawor built a new castle between 1288 and 1292. Duke Bolko II of Świdnica died in 1368 without having children with his wife Agnes von Habsburg. After her death in the year 1392 King Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia obtained the castle. In 1401 Janko from Chociemice obtained the castle. The Bohemian Hussites occupied the castle between 1428-1429. In the year 1464 Birka from Nasiedla obtained the castle from the Bohemian crown. He sold it to Hans von Schellendorf.
This second castle was destroyed in 1482 by Georg von Stein. In the year 1509 Konrad I von Hoberg (from 1714: Hochberg) obtained the castle hill. The Hochberg family owned the castle until the 1940s. The castle was seized by the Nazi government in 1944 because the Prince of Pless Hans Heinrich XVII had moved to England in 1932 and become a British citizen, also his brother Count Alexander of Hochberg who was a Polish citizen and the owner of Schloss Pleß (today Pszczyna Castle), had joined the Polish army. Fürstenstein castle was a part of the Project Riese until 1945 when it was occupied by the Red Army. All artifacts were stolen or destroyed. It has been claimed that the castle was outfitted and excavated to become an abode for Adolf Hitler.
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