exploreCARPATHIA
Attractions along the Carpathians
Upper Hungary / Slovakia

Berencs

Hrad Branč
Berencs
Hungarian:
Berencsváralja
Slovak:
Podbranč
Condition:
Ruined
Entrance:
Entrance fee
Settlement:
Berencsváralja, Podbranč
Historical Hungarian county:
Nyitra
Country:
Slovakia
District:
Trnavský kraj
Geographic region:
White Carpathians
GPS coordinates:
48.733386, 17.467563
Google map:

History

895
Arrival of the Hungarians
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895
The alliance of the seven Hungarian tribes took possession of the then largely uninhabited Carpathian Basin. Until then, the sparse Slavic population of the north-western Carpathians had lived under Moravian rule for a few decades after the collapse of the Avar Khaganate in the early 9th century.
1000
Foundation of the Hungarian Kingdom
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1000
The Kingdom of Hungary was established with the coronation of King Stephen I. He converted the Hungarians to Christianity and created two archdioceses (Esztergom and Kalocsa) and ten dioceses. He divided Hungary into counties led by ispáns, who were appointed by the king.
1241-1242
Mongol Invasion
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1241-1242
The hordes of the Mongol Empire invaded Hungary and almost completely destroyed it. One third to one half of the population was destroyed. The Mongols also suffered heavy losses in the battle of Muhi and they could not hunt down the king. After their withdrawal, King Béla IV reorganized Hungary. He allowed the feudal lords to build stone castles because they were able to successfully resist the nomadic Mongols. The vast majority of stone castles were built after this. The king called in German, Vlach (Romanian) and Slavic settlers to replace the destroyed population.
second half of the 13th century
The Aba family constructed the castle.
1297
Ábrahám son of Cseklészi Majnold obtained Berencs in exchange for the lordship of Galgóc.
1301
The extinction of the House of Árpád
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1301
The House of Árpád, the first Hungarian royal dynasty, died out with the death of King Andrew III. Hungary was ruled by oligarchs, the most powerful of whom was Csák Máté, whose main ally was the Aba family. King Charles I (1308-1342), supported by the Pope, eventually emerged as the most prominent of the contenders for the Hungarian throne. But it took decades to break the power of the oligarchs.
1309
The oligarch Csák Máté took hold of the castle by intimidation.
1321
Csák Máté died. His cousin, the baron Sternbergi István received Berencs, after he surrendered the castle of Trencsén, the former seat of Csák Máté, to King Charles I of Hungary.
1332
Berencs Castle returned to King Charles I of Hungary as a result of the peace treaty that ended the Czech-Hungarian-Austrian wars.
1386
During the game of thrones that followed the death of King Louis I of Hungary (Louis the Great), Queen Mary, the wife of Sigismund (later Holy Roman Emperor) pawned Pozsony County to the Moravian marquess Jodok and Prokop to gain their support.
1389
King Sigismund of Hungary paid the debt. Unlike Jodok, Prokop was unwilling to return the properties to Sigismund, so the Hungarian king had to retake many castles of Pozsony County by siege, including Berencs.
1394
King Sigismund gave the castle to his loyal vassal, the Polish Stiborici Stibor. When he died in 1414, his son Stiborici Stibor Jr. inherited his lands.
1434
Stiborici Stibor Jr. died without children, Berencs Castle returned to King Sigismund.
1453
The baron Szentmiklósi Pongrácz received Berencs as a fief, but it had already been pawned to him earlier.
1454
Hunyadi János, former Regent-Governor of Hungary, became the owner of the castle.
1526
Battle of Mohács and the splitting of Hungary into two parts
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1526
Sultan Suleiman I launched a war against Vienna, instigated by the French. Ferdinand I, Duke of Austria, was the brother-in-law of King Louis II of Hungary. The army of the Ottoman Empire defeated the much smaller Hungarian army at Mohács, and King Louis II died in the battle. A group of the barons elected Ferdinand I of the House of Habsburg to the throne, who promised to defend Hungary from the Turks. He was the younger brother of the most powerful European monarch Emperor Charles V. But the nobility chose the most powerful Hungarian baron, Szapolyai János, who was also crowned as King John I. The country was split in two and a decades-long struggle for power began.
1541
The Turkish occupation of the capital, Buda, and the division of Hungary into three parts
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1541
The Turks conquered Buda, the capital of Hungary, after the death of King John I. The central part of the country was under Turkish rule for 150 years. The western and northern parts (including present-day Slovakia) formed the Kingdom of Hungary ruled by the Habsburg emperors. The eastern parts (now mainly under Romanian rule) were ruled by the successors of King John I of Hungary, who later established the Principality of Transylvania.
1557
The widow of Hunyadi János, Szilágyi Erzsébet gave Berencs back to Szentmiklósi Pongrácz for his support. Afterwards it became the property of the Nyáry family.
16th century
The castle was fortified with modern angle bastions.
1570
The establishment of the Principality of Transylvania
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1570
John II (John Sigismund), the son of King John I of Hungary, renounced the title of King of Hungary in favor of King Maximilian of the House of Habsburg, and henceforth held the title of Prince. This formally created the Principality of Transylvania, which was the eastern half of Hungary not ruled by the Habsburgs and was also a vassal of the Ottoman Empire. John II died in 1571, after which the three nations of Transylvania (the Hungarian nobility, the Székelys and the Saxons) elected the prince.
1664
Victory over the Turks at Szentgotthárd and the shameful Peace of Vasvár
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1664
The imperial army achieved a significant victory over the Turks at the battle of Szentgotthárd. Despite this, Emperor Leopold I concluded a 20-year peace treaty with the Turks at Vasvár on terms that made it look as if the Turks had won. This caused a huge outcry in Europe and among the Hungarian nobility, who expected the country to be liberated after the victory. The formerly Habsburg-loyal Catholic Hungarian barons began to plot against the Emperor with the leadership of Wesselényi Ferenc. In 1668, at the end of the Franco-Spanish War, King Louis XIV of France withdrew his support for the conspiracy, and the support of the Turks was not obtained.
1671
Exposure of the Wesselényi conspiracy
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1671
After the exposure of the anti-Hapsburg Wesselényi conspiracy, the main organisers, Zrínyi Péter, Nádasdy Ferenc and Frangepán Ferenc were executed. Wesselényi Ferenc died in 1667. The Croatian uprising, which was part of the conspiracy, was crushed by the Habsburgs in 1670.
1674
As retaliation for the anti-Habsburg Wesselényi-conspiracy, 67 Protestant priest was imprisoned here temporarily. They were sentenced to the galleys.
1686
Recapture of Buda and the liberation of Hungary from the Turks
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1686
The army of the Holy League recaptured Buda from the Turks by siege. In 1687, the Imperial army invaded the Principality of Transylvania. The liberation was hindered by the French breaking their promise of peace in 1688 and attacking the Habsburg Empire. By 1699, when the Peace of Karlóca was signed, all of Hungary and Croatia had been liberated from the Ottoman Empire with the exception of Temesköz, the area bounded by the Maros, the Tisza and the Danube rivers. It was not until the Peace of Požarevac in 1718 that Temesköz was liberated from the Turks. However, the continuous war against the Turkish invaders and the Habsburg autocracy, which lasted for more than 150 years, wiped out large areas of the Hungarian population, which had previously made up 80% of the country's population, and was replaced by Vlachs (Romanians), Serbs and other Slavic settlers and Germans. The Habsburgs also favoured the settlement of these foreign peoples over the 'rebellious' Hungarians.
1691
The castle burned down due to a lightning strike.

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