Staré Hory
By Petra and Daniela
"Old Mountain" is a Slovak village in the district of Banská Bystrica, Horehronie region.
"Old Mountain" is a Slovak village in the district of Banská Bystrica, Horehronie region.
The village is surrounded by mountains and it´s really worth to visit.
You can find there different
kinds of special plants and animals, for example butterflies, birds, wild cats,
deesr, bears and foxes living freely in a wild nature.
If you like hiking or trekking, you can go on a hiking tour to the place
called Majerova skala (rock) The tour is a two hour walk. When you get on the top of the hill you will have a picturesque view on a nearby mountains.
If you like hiking or trekking, you can go on a hiking tour to
Majerova skala
Staré Horý - is a catholic village. It's the
oldest village from the Banská Bystrica district. It was founded in the 13th century.
It is situated between two national parks the Low
Tatras and Big Fatra at 475m above the sea level. It has 500 people living there. The church is a
dominat feature of the town and was build in the 15th century. Nowadays a natural spring with a statue of Virgin Mary is well-known as a pilgrim place.
If you want to stay there over night and relax after a tour you can accommodate in a
boarding house Daymont
the environment is ideal for families with children.
Nice, clean accommodation with an excellent cuisine.boarding house Daymont
Špania
dolina
Špania Dolina is a village and
municipality in central Slovakia, near the city of Banská Bystrica. Although its permanent population does
not exceed 200 people, it is a picturesque historic village situated 728 m
above sea level and is surrounded by the Staré Hory and Veľká Fatra mountains. It has become a
popular tourist recreation centre.
Špania
Dolina, together with mining villages Staré Hory, Richtárová, Piesky, Moštenica
and Tajov gave the name to the nearby town Banska Bystrica (Banska means Mining
in Slovak). To attract German settlers to develop the mining of precious metals
in the area, mainly copper, Hungarian King Belo IV granted the settlement town
privileges in 1242. “Waldbürgers” – as the families were called – who built
their houses around the town square, owned the mines. The house of Karoli,
Jung, Ernst, Königsberger, Mühlstein, Kolmann, Lang were well known in those
times. The mining prospered but it required more and more investment. In the 80s
of the 15th century the proprietors were able to run the mines only on the
loans from Jan Thutzo, a nobleman and businessman from the Spiš region. Later
Jan Thurzo (1437-1508), bought up almost all the mines in the region from their
desperate owners and brought in a foreign investor (Jakub Fugger). Together in
1495 they formed a powerful copper company called, the Ungarischer Handel or
Neusohler Kupferhandlung.
Thurzo
– Fugger joint venture (1493 – 1546). In 1494 Jan Thurzo stated to excavate a
new type of a shaft, which was called the main, later Ferdinand shaft. It
reached the depth of 250 m. and was used for mining as well as draining the
whole ore field until the last quarter of the 16th century. The Thurzo-Fugger‘s company with its huge complex of copper smelters, warehouses, skilful
organisation of transport, and advanced accounting system, became one of the
largest and most modern early-capitalist firms. They also realised that it was
important to care about workers, thus established Brother’s Treasury that gave
workers sickness and old-age insurance, and paid pensions to their widows and
orphans. Thurzo also bought two houses in Banska Bystrica Main Square , built
the new Renaissance house and rented the Chamber house. That entitled the
Thurzo-Fugger company to enter the local market with cheaper products . The
competition resulted in conflicts with the town’s officials. The company then
increased its profits by capping workers’ wages that culminated in a miners’
riot in 1525. The furious aristocracy forced the company to withdraw from the
local markets, but the Hungarian King rented the mines back to the Fuggers, who
administered them until 1546. After that, the monarchy took over, and established
the new Mining Chamber to run the mines.
After
the first difficulties new shafts Maximilian, Maria and the deepest one
Ludovika, reaching the depth 440 m, were excavated. Wheels powered by water
from the unique mining watercourse replaced the old horse driven ones.
Approximately 36 km long system of wooden troughs, leats, and ditches directed
water from the Prasiva Mountain in the Low Tatras to the four shafts in Spania
Dolina. The watercourse was in operation until the beginning of the 20th century.
Water system
Shaft Ludovika
The face of the village was gradually
changing. Small, scattered miners’ houses on the steep hillsides were
replenished by new technical buildings (workshops, dressing floors, storage
houses, ore crushers, sample rooms, administration and maps houses) as well as
private houses and workshops (blacksmith’s, carpenter’s, tallow house, doctor
etc.)
In the end of 17 th century Spania
Dolina mines were able to employ only 800 workers. Women and children worked at
the dressing floors separating the waste rock. They supplemented the families’
income by making bobbin laces. Thus a tradition of Spania Dolina’s bobbin laces
started and in 1883 a bobbin laces craft school was established. The threads
for the laces were manufactured in a small local factory.
In the 18 th century the cooper ore
deposits were almost exhausted. In the 19 th century the production went to
decline. The changes within the monarchy and the turbulent 40s brought the
cooper ore mining to its end. The mines closed down in 1888.
Tomáš,Juraj,Daniela,Petra
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