Palace in Nakło
Poland · Europe

關於
The Palace at Nakło, located in the village of Nakło, administrative district of Lelów; Częstochowa County, province of Silesia, is an example of neoclassical architecture. It was designed by the architect Jan Ferdynand Nax (1736–1810). It is a downsized and simplified reflection of the much larger and grander neoclassical palace at Szczekociny, six kilometers to the east. Nax, who was also a prominent economist of the time, constructed the two palaces simultaneously between 1770 and 1780.
The 8.5-hectare (21 acre) park surrounding the Nakło palace, of a classic Arcadian style, most likely also was designed by Nax. Eighty of the trees in the park have stood for more than 230 years; five of those are designated as Polish national treasures.
For the Nakło palace's foundation, Nax used calcium-based stone, which is natural to the Kraków-Częstochowa Upland of Poland, and situated the building on the highest point of the property, thus creating a natural drainage system.
The palace was built as a residence for newlyweds Kajetan Bystrzonowski and Marcyanna Młodzianowska, and was the center of an estate that stretched over a vast swath of land that had been deeded to the groom as a dowry from his future wife in 1764.
The Bystrzonowski newlyweds lived in the palace for only a short time, however, as the bride died four years after the couple passed over the threshold on their wedding day.
內容改寫自 Wikipedia (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.