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Ribnica Castle
Exhibitions and events at the castle
The museum in the castle holds three separate exhibitions. The first one presents the centuries-old tradition of cottage industry in Ribnica, focusing on wooden-ware and pottery. The second, smaller presentations shows and explains the wider history of the area. The third display is centred on the issue of witchcraft and on the infamous witch trials during the 16th to 18th centuries in Slovenia and Europe, thus elaborating on the fact that one of the last recorded witch trials in Slovenia was held in Ribnica.
Among other things, the garden annually hosts a festival of amateur theatres, is the place for the "Castle Evenings" concert series and sometimes hosts the International Music Festival Imago Slovenia.
Recent castle history
The present-day castle complex was renovated in years 1958–61, with the Mikl House Museum (now the Museum of Ribnica) established in 1958 and presenting its museum exhibitions to the public in 1961. Its cafeteria was transformed into a wedding hall in 1978.
A park was opened on the castle grounds in 1982, honouring prominent personas from the area like the linguist Stanislav Škrabec, the cartographer Peter Kozler and the politician Janez Evangelist Krek. In the 1980s artist colonies began to be organised there and artists participated in some kind of a Forma Viva in the castle's park.
The castle history
The castle had a strategic position on the market trail towards the town of Kočevje and further down to the port of Rijeka (formerly Fiume) on the Adriatic sea. Written sources first testify about the existence of this castle, calling it Castrum Reuienz, in 1264. Around 1220 the castle was owned by the family of Auerspergs, who had got the castle from the Žovnek family as a dowry. In the middle of the 13th century the Ortenburg family divided the land among themselves. In the 15th century the Counts of Celje got the castle back based on the Žovnek family being their ancestors.
During the later dynastic struggles with the Habsburgs and upon the murder of the last Count of Celje, Ulrik II, in 1456, the Habsburg family acquired all of their possessions. Many owners changed hands from the 16th to 19th century: Lamberger, Moscon, Gall, Khisel families and the Counts of Kobenzl. The famous Renaissance composer Jacobus Gallus Carniolus was born there in 1550.
Eventually in the early 19th century the property passed to the Rudež family, its last private owners. It was sold to the Yugoslav Government in 1937 as a military base. For sometime during the Second World War the castle was used as a hospital but in 1944 it suffered the same sad fate as many other castles in this region; it was burned down so as to prevent the Germans for using it as a military base. The renovation of what was left started after the WWII, but a lack of funds brought the castle to ruin again.
See also
- Museum of Ribnica
- Mikl House Gallery
- International Music Festival Imago Slovenia
- Virtual Guide to Slovene Museums and Galleries
- Mikl House Library
- Public Institute Ribnica Handicraft Centre
External links
- Ribnica Museum website (in Slovene)
- The Ribnica Handicraft Centre website
- Ribnica Castle on Milan Hribar's website
- VR panorama of Ribnica Castle on Virtual Guide to Slovene Museums and Galleries
- Castle Ribnica on Wikipedija (in Slovene)
- Jacobus Gallus Carniolus on Wikipedia
- Peter Kozler on Wikipedia