istorians usually believe that the founder of the castle in Prochowice was Iko von Parchwitz, palatinus of Legnica and long-time companion of Duke Bolesław Rogatka (d. 1278). Some of them, however, doubt the existence of a brick castle in the 13th century, pointing to the initiative of Stephan von Parchwitz (d. 1342) - grandson of the mentioned Iko, who in 1305-42 controlled the town. This knight, together with his sons, Peter and Mirzan, created around his ancestral seat in Prochowice a complex of properties forming a semi-independent territorial state. He maintained private officials in it who supported him in imposing power on his neighbors, whom he turned into fiefs. The von Parchwitz family at that time belonged to the elite of the Duchy of Legnica, as evidenced not only by the size of their estates, but also by their family connections reaching the highest levels of the social hierarchy. Both of Stephan's sons were married to women belonging to prominent families: Mirzan married Czuchna, daughter of the voivode of Kraków, Spycimir of Melsztyn, while Peter married Elżbieta Piastówna (d. after 1412), alleged daughter of the Duke of Świdnica
Bolko II and his wife Agnieszka Habsburg.
VIEW FROM THE WEST, MEDIEVAL GOTHIC HOUSE ON THE LEFT, TOWER AND RENAISSANCE PART OF THE CASTLE ON THE RIGHT
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owever, the power of the von Parchwitz family weakened with time, and its debts grew. Therefore, in 1383 Piotr was constrained to sell to the Dukes of Legnica, Ruprecht (d. 1409), Wacław (d. 1419) and Henrik (d. 1398), the Parchwitz property which included, besides the castle, also the town, surrounding lands, rents, fishing grounds, pastures and everything on and under the ground. In 1400 Wacław and Ruprecht handed over the Prochowice property to knight Otto Elder Zedlitz and from then until 1554 the stronghold was owned by this aristocratic Silesian family. In the 1420s Otto modernized the castle by extending its fortifications and raising the main tower. He also built the nearby
castle church of St. Andrew. During the reign of von Zedlitz family, at the beginning of the 16th century, the transformation of the medieval knight's seat into a fashionable Renaissance residence began. As part of this process, the original fortifications were modernized to create an outer bastion perimeter, and a chapel was added.
VIEW OF THE TOWN AND CASTLE IN THE ENGRAVING BY FRIEDRICH BERNHARD WERNER, "TOPOGRAPHIA SILESIAE 1744-68"
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n 1554 Otto the Younger von Zedlitz (d. 1562) passed the castle with the town and the whole estate to his son-in-law, the Imperial Field Marshal Hans von Oppersdorf (d. 1584). The new owner demanded that Duke
Friedrich III declare the Prochowice land a free estate, which resulted in long conflict between them. This struggle was only stopped by Emperor
Maximilian II, who decided in 1567 that Oppersdorf had to pay the Duke a compensation of 20,000 ducats. In the same year Friedrich's son
Heinrich XI (d. 1588) settled in Prochowice together with his court, taking shelter from the plague that was spreading in Legnica. After the prince left, the castle and the surrounding lands were leased to member of the Imperial War Council
Fabian von Schönaich (d. 1591) and his wife Eufemia von Zedlitz.
CASTLE ON OTHER ENGRAVINGS BY WERNER, ON THE LOWER PICTURE ON THE RIGHT WE CAN SEE THE MONASTERY IN LUBIĄŻ (NO. 5)
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his very wealthy nobleman, who had made his fortune during his military service and whose ambitions reached the ducal title, expanded and modernized the castle in Prochowice. He added new buildings, applied new plaster, and decorated the facades with sgraffito. He also installed a clock on the castle tower, whose hands can be seen well and the exact mechanism can be heard well. In 1597 the town became the property of the Dukes of Legnica and Brzeg. Consequently, the castle, as an unimportant family seat, fell into decline, which was further exacerbated by the Swedish invasion in 1612. Although soon afterwards Duke
Georg Rudolph (d. 1653) renovated the interiors (1617), and in the following years his sister Marie Sophie slowly continued the construction works, the next Swedish occupation in 1642 had such an adverse effect on the building that some parts of it had to be demolished.
CASTLE ON CARL FRIEDRICH STUCKART'S DRAWING FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE XIXTH CENTURY
ARTWORK BY THEODOR BLATTERBAUER, 1885
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hanks to the efforts of Duchess
Louise von Anhalt-Dessau (d. 1680), wife of Duke
Christian, the castle was renovated in the 1660s, but despite that it never regained its former glory. After the death of the last Piast Duke of Legnica and Brzeg
Georg Wilhelm (d. 1675), it became the possession of Emperor
Leopold Habsburg (d. 1705). In 1741 it was incorporated into property of Prussian kings from the von Hohenzollern dynasty and then leased as a residential building. In 1820 the dilapidated residence was purchased by Erdman Sylvius von Pückler (d. 1843), who in 1835-37 thoroughly renovated and rebuilt it. In the second half of the nineteenth century the castle belonged to Ernst Liman, then to Ernst Schleger, and at the beginning of the twentieth century it was in an ownership of Leopold Weber. Frequent changes of owners had a negative impact on the condition of the building and only in 1906, when the castle and the grange became the property of Count Kurt Strachwitz von Gross-Zauche und Camminetz, a thorough renovation of the facade and interior was carried out. However, these works were realized without any respect for the historical heritage, as a result of which many Renaissance architectural details were irretrievably destroyed.
PHOTOS FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE 20TH CENTURY, IN THE TOP: THE GOTHIC HOUSE AND THE RENAISSANCE COURTYARD
IN THE MIDDLE: XVI-CENTURY GATEHOUSE AND INTERIOR AFTER RESTORATION IN 1909
BELOW: THE RENAISSANCE COURTYARD ONCE AGAIN
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n the 1930s, an educational center was organized in the castle, where Nazi indoctrination of local youth was carried out. At the end of World War II, the building was damaged by the Soviets, and its furnishings were vandalized and looted. This tragic episode began the period of the greatest decline in the history of the former ducal seat, which was the result of abandonment and insufficient care provided by the town and provincial authorities. Despite the fact that in the 1960s some work was done here to protect the walls and interiors of the Gothic house was partially renovated, during the entire period of communism this valuable monument
fell into complete ruin. In 2000, the ruined castle was bought by a private owner.
SOUTHERN ELEVATION OF THE CASTLE IN THE 1920S AND TODAY (2021)
he middle age castle was built on a roughly rectangular plan, measuring 26x38 meters. In its northern part there was a Gothic dwelling house (10x25 meters), built in the lower parts from stone, and in the upper parts from brick. The building had four stories: a basement, a low ground floor and two floors, 4 and 3.5 meters high, with two rooms on each floor. The curtain wall of the castle measured about 11 meters high and was topped by a guard porch and a crenellation. In its southern part a gate was located, preceded by a wooden drawbridge connecting the castle island with the mainland. The gate passage was flanked by a quadrilateral tower with a base of 7.5x8 and a height of about 30 meters, with a prison in the lowest storey. In the second half of the 15th century or at the beginning of the 16th century the castle was surrounded new defensive wall with a quadrilateral gate tower on the southern side and two bastions on the eastern and western side.
CASTLE RECONSTRUCTION FROM THE EARLY XIV CENTURY BY JAN SALM
MEDIEVAL GOTHIC HOUSE, VIEW FROM NORTHEAST
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n 1548-62, under the supervision of Hans Lyndner,
a chapel and a perpendicular east building were erected, and the exterior elevations received Renaissance-style decoration. Two decades later Fabian von Schönaich built a three-storey eastern wing, to which
a risalit topped with a late Renaissance gable was added on the southern side. The interiors of the residence and its elevations have been decorated with pseudo-rustication and sgraffito at that time. During the reconstruction of the residence after Swedish invasion in the second half of the 17th century, the castle chapel was rebuilt and a small south-west wing was erected. In the southern part of the castle a bailey has been developed since the Middle Ages, with farm buildings and servants' quarters. A park was established to the north and east of the castle. It was accessed from the south wing through
two pseudo-Gothic portals and a wide staircase, the remains of which have survived to the present day.
CONTEMPORARY VIEW OF THE CASTLE: 1. GOTHIC HOUSE, 2. TOWER, 3. CHAPEL, 4. MEDIEVAL GATEWAY,
5. EASTERN WING, 6. RISALIT, 7. RENAISSANCE GATEWAY, 8. SOUTHWESTERN WING (NOT EXISTING),
9. BUILDING IN THE MEDIEVAL COURTYARD (NO LONGER EXISTING), 10. DEFENSIVE WALL WITH BASTIONS
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t the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, the castle moats, no longer needed at that time, were partially levelled and transformed into garden beds. Several decades later, most of the defensive walls were also demolished, including the western section of the castle's curtain wall and the entire line of the outer ramparts. Already in the 20th century, during the renovation carried out by Count Kurt Strachwitz, the top of the main tower was changed and the southern building was lowered. Some porches and Renaissance architectural details were also removed. After the end of World War II, the southwestern building and the edifice standing between the middle wing and the Gothic house were demolished.
ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS FROM PROCHOWICE CASTLE, BELOW THERE IS A PLAQUE
COMMEMORATING COMPLETION OF CONSTRUCTION WORKS IN 1581
he basic spatial layout of the castle and its most important buildings have been preserved, while its fortifications, such as defensive walls and bastions, have hardly survived. The oldest part of the stronghold - a medieval Gothic house with relics of as many as four latrine bays is now in a partial ruin. Looking at the castle from the front, our attention is attracted by
the entrance gate to the northern courtyard, richly decorated with antique motifs, and valuable
stone details placed in the top of the south wing.
The garden pavilion, or rather its remnants, located on the border with the town park, remains in a very bad condition. After many years of systematic neglect, the castle has been in private hands for some time, and under the care of a new owner, its slow revitalization is underway.
FACADE OF THE RENAISSANCE COURTYARD BEFORE (2005) AND DURING (2021) REVITALIZATION
THE EASTERN WING OF THE CASTLE IN 2005 AND AT PRESENT (2021)
The castle is not open to the public. You can see it only from outside.
There is a large park adjacent to the castle, just right for a walk with your dog.
No restrictions for drone flights.
VIEW OF THE CASTLE FROM THE NORTH
IN THE PARK
GETTING THERE
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rochowice is situated about 16 km north-east of Legnica, by the national road no. 94, connecting Lubin with Wrocław. The town is served by public transport bus line 10 from Legnica and often by private buses operating from neighbouring towns. The castle stands 300 meters northwest of the Market Square, on Zamkowa Street.
1. M. Chorowska: Rezydencje średniowieczne na Śląsku, OFPWW 2003
2. S. Horodecki: Przeszłości okruchy. Zabytki i przyroda powiatu legnickiego; wyd. Skryba
3. T. Jurek: Zapomniana Piastówna: Elżbieta córka Bolka II świdnickiego
4. I. T. Kaczyńscy: Zamki w Polsce południowej, Muza SA 1999
5. K. Kalinowski: Sala Książęca opactwa cysterskiego w Lubiążu, Wydawnictwo Fundacji Lubiąż 2001
6. L. Kajzer, J. Salm, S. Kołodziejski: Leksykon zamków w Polsce, Arkady 2001
7. A. Wagner: Murowane budowle obronne w Polsce X-XVIIw, Bellona 2019
8. M. Wójcik: Kto był mężem Katarzyny….Przyczynek do genealogii panów von Parchwitz, Rocznik Lubelskiego Towarzystwa Genealogicznego Tom II, 2000
THE FORMER GRANGE AND CASTLE BREWERY ARE NOW USED AS PRIVATE APARTMENTS
Castles nearby: Legnica - the Duke's castle from the 13th century, rebuilt, 16 km Lubin - the remains of Duke's castle from the 14th century, 19 km
Wołów - the Duke's castle from the 14th century, rebuilt, 26 km Źródła - the fortified church from the 13-17th century, 31 km Jawor - the Duke's castle from the 13/14th century, rebuilt, 32 km
Chojnów - the Duke's castle from the 14th century, rebuilt, 35 km
Rokitnica - the ruin of Knight's castle from the 14th century, 35 km
Chobienia - the castle from the 16th century, 36 km
ALSO WORTH SEEING:
St. Andrew's Church, built in the first half of the 15th century as a foundation of Otto von Zedlitz, the owner of the castle and the town. It was erected from brick, on a rectangular plan, with a sacristy and a quadrangular tower added to the eastern elevation. In the following centuries the building was rebuilt many times, e.g. at the beginning of the 20th century it was given neo-Gothic style. Until 1945 it served as an Evangelical church; after the war it was turned into a warehouse, later abandoned. Today somewhat neglected, it is noteworthy only for the historic 16th century epitaphs that decorate its exterior facades and interior. Among nineteen tombstones, the largest group is represented by those belonging to the members of the Czedlicz and von Zedlitz families. The church is situated on Legnicka Street, about 150 meters south of the castle.
Monumental post-Cistercian complex in Lubiąż, called a masterpiece of Silesian Baroque. It is the second largest religious building in the world (first is the Spanish
Eskurial). The scale of its size is illustrated by the numbers: the main facade measures 223 meters in length, the facades have 600 windows and the roof occupies 2.5 hectares! The monastery was built in the middle of the twelfth century by the Benedictines and extended by the Cistercians, who, thanks to ducal and private donations, became one of the largest landowners in Silesia. In the fourteenth century the abbey property extended from Wielkopolska almost to Kraków. At that time, a Gothic church and new monastery buildings were erected. The buildings that exist today are mostly the result of the building campaign carried out between 1681 and 1720 on the initiative and under the supervision of abbots: Hans Reich, Dominic Krausenberg, Balthazar Nitche and Ludwig Bauch. The monastery in Lubiąż served as the main Cistercian center in Silesia.
The Cistercian Order was dissolved in 1810 by the King
Wilhelm III of Prussia, and its property was confiscated by the German state. The abandoned and looted monastery was turned into a hospital, first a military hospital, then a psychiatric asylum. During the Third Reich, the monastery buildings were used to produce military equipment and to accommodate the slave laborers who worked there. The interiors of the former abbey suffered particularly heavily during the Soviet offensive in the winter of 1945. Looking for treasures, the Russians not only destroyed the Baroque stucco and decorations, but also desecrated the remains of the Silesian Piasts, robbing them of valuable insignia. The building was taken under conservator's care in 1950, but only since 1989 have major repairs and renovations been carried out here.
The central part of the monastery complex is occupied by a two-tower church erected on the foundations of a Romanesque temple. It is the 14th century Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, preserved in austere condition, with the tombs of the Silesian Piasts, the mummies of Cistercian abbots and monks (there are 98 of them). Adjacent to the south are the monastery buildings, much in need of repair, but already with the beautifully restored Summer Refectory and Library. In the northern part of the complex there is a magnificent palace of the abbots, which is unique in Poland. The massive body of the monastery is surrounded by farm buildings and
the church of St. James, whose relatively modest forms and small size create an architectural backdrop for the silhouette of the abbey, standing atop the hill.
The most representative part of the monastery was and still is the Prince's Hall, after the recent renovation full of Byzantine and Baroque ornamentation. It is located in the north wing of the abbots' palace, occupying its eastern, last four bays. The impression of exceptional splendor and spaciousness of this magnificent chamber is caused both by its size (400 square meters) and its considerable height (13 meters), but also by the multitude of motifs and decorative elements, as well as the varied colors. Surprisingly, the author of the architectural design of this great work remains anonymous, although the creators of the individual decorations are known by name. The Baroque sculptures were made by the Wrocław master Joseph Mangoldt (d. 1761), and the accompanying marble and stucco decorations are the work of Austrian artist Albrecht Ignaz Provisore (d. 1743). The huge plafond decorating the vault of the Hall and the paintings hanging on its walls were created by the Dutchman, Christian Philip Bentum (d. 1757).
The former post-Cistercian complex is now in the hands of the Lubiąż Foundation and is open to visitors all year round. The guided tour lasts about 45 minutes and includes a visit to the Abbot's Refectory, the Prince's Hall, the Blessed Virgin Mary Church, the monastery cloisters and the Summer Refectory. These rooms do not have any furnishings and some of them are in a deplorable condition and need very expensive renovations. The monastery also hosts
temporary exhibitions, which you can visit on your own. Lubiąż is located about 14 km east from Prochowice. There is a large, free
parking lot on site.