The renaissance castle of its builder Hídvégi Mikó Ferenc,
has been ravaged and raided by Turkish-Tatar troops in 1661, the ruined edifice being transformed into a fortified barrack by the newly installed Habsburg
power by the year 1716. Until 1970 it has been serving military purposes, and
then became the home of the Szekler Museum of Ciuc. The story of four centuries
is caught out here, since the tracks of successive events have constantly piled
up, keeping slumbering witnesses of earlier times. Going back from the present
through scientific researches, the historical past gradually unfolds before
our eyes. Archaeologists unravel layers beneath the face of the earth,
analyzing the artefacts discovered. During mural researches art historians do
similar work on rising walls progressing through layers (mortars, lime-washes,
walled off doors, windows, embrasures, and stairs).
In our exhibition of
castle-history we off er an insight to the first two centuries of the building
with the help of objects and architectural elements discovered in situ, and we
do this in an easily comprehensible way with short movies for our visitors.
First room
Most of the walls are original while the vault is a result
of latter reconstructions. Near the court-side window 17th century mortar- layers
have been discovered with inscription fragments on the earliest. The show-case
with layers playfully illustrates the order in which archaeologists come across
various objects and materials.
Fountain room
Today’s single room has once had more premises, witnessed by
the remains of demolished walls, doors transformed into windows, and imprints
of vaults. The 17th century latrine, the stairway leading to the story, and
the fountain inside the castle with its watercourse added in the 18th century
are not interesting only by themselves: through the discovered objects the
everydays of the 17th–18th century castle are outlined. With the help of the
period short movie the visitor may size up how the discovered materials have
ended up on the bottom of the fountain.
Kitchen room
In the ‘big kitchen’ of the 18th century they were probably mostly
cooking only for officers. During researches the stove and oven have been
found, and also the place of the pillars holding the smoke-keeper. Based on
these a reconstruction has been made that alongside the next store-room invites
the visitor to a gastronomic time travel. The short movie shot at his location animates
the bustling life of the long-ago kitchen.
Tower
The last room of the exhibition offers an opportunity to
extensively familiarize with the military history of the castle. Through
original 15–19th century weapons we present their evolution in the era and
region, while exact copies proffer the experience of touch. To help the
cognition of the building’s development and transformation serve the
scale-model, contemporary architectural surveys, and 3D animation.
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