Skoči na glavni sadržaj

Kratko priopćenje

https://doi.org/10.17018/portal.2014.5

A Contribution to the Further Research of Medvedgrad

Hrvoje Malinar orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-1413-5435


Puni tekst: hrvatski pdf 382 Kb

str. 71-80

preuzimanja: 627

citiraj

Puni tekst: engleski pdf 382 Kb

str. 80-80

preuzimanja: 584

citiraj


Sažetak

Medvedgrad, a medieval burg near Zagreb, was abandoned in the 17th century. Literature has so far mentioned a severe earthquake that demolished the burg in 1590. The author, based on his observations and mineralogical-petrographic analyses conducted, argues that the deterioration of the structure was in large part due not only to the earthquake, but also to a fire accompanied by an explosion of stored gunpowder. Even nowadays that Medvedgrad has been renovated, charred portions can be spotted on the stone walls of Sts. Phillip and Jacob’s chapel and the staircase leading up to the chapel, while during the course of archaeological excavations, the traces of fire were clearly visible on the stone frontispiece between the old centre of the burg and a more recent courtyard with the southern tower. The original frontispiece was dilapidated and had to be fully renovated with new stone, so this portion no longer has visible traces of fire. All the portions that were exposed to the fire are discernible by a red tone over the originally yellowish variety of lithothamnium limestone from the Miocene period. When exposed to heightened temperature caused by fire, the original yellowish-ochre colour of stone, which comes from the limonite mineral, turns red, as the mineral changes into hematite. Apart from the fire, there was also an explosion of gunpowder that was stored in small wooden barrels. The hoops of the barrels went flying across the magazine, and locked padlocks with hasps were found further away from the door openings, indicating that they were blasted off from the slots by the force of the explosion.
The paper also argues for the existence of an eastern tower, whose space was thus far usually interpreted as the residential area of the eastern palas. The author bases his arguments on several existing photographs and drawings from earlier periods, as well as the present-day state, the shape and the function that the tower had in the first phase of construction of the northern portion of the fortress. As a conclusion, the possibilities for further conservation work on Medvedgrad are discussed.

Ključne riječi

Medvedgrad; burg; conservation work; fire; eastern tower

Hrčak ID:

133042

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/133042

Datum izdavanja:

22.12.2014.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 2.347 *