Rákóczi House
The single-block building with four living rooms primarily served as a residence for the family during the grape harvest. The Baroque house was built in the 17th century but was slightly remodelled a century later, and it can still be admired in this form today. The house is notable for being the oldest non-religious building in the settlement, and a Latin inscription can still be read on its wall: "Peace be within your walls, tranquillity within your palaces."
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A plaque on the wall of the house still commemorates the name of Ferenc II Rákóczi, although during the division of the estate in 1699, Bodrogkeresztúr was given to the prince's sister, Julianna. The single-block building with four living rooms primarily served as a residence for the family during the grape harvest. The Baroque house was built in the 17th century but was slightly remodelled a century later, and it can still be admired in this form today. The house is notable for being the oldest non-religious building in the settlement, and a Latin inscription can still be read on its wall: "Peace be within your walls, tranquillity within your palaces." In 1667, a "Rákóczi estate" is specifically mentioned in the village, which, however, was a small, mud-plastered house; only the "large stone-built wine house" was of greater significance. The same inventory mentions the following among the Thököly estates: "There is a manor house enclosed on one side with stone, with its entrance gate... built of stone, consisting of four houses, with two chambers..." The "wine house" was already deteriorating. In the 19th century, the building was owned by Count Oswald Wolkenstein, and in 1890 it became the property of Lipót Goldmann, a quarry owner.
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Listen to the history of the location