The Batthyány Palace

Originally a royal
estate, after passing through the
hands of a queen and several magnates, the estate became a possession
of the
Batthyány family in 1604.
The palace, built in the Baroque style, was
designed by the famous Italian architect Donato Felica de Allio and
built on the foundation of the town's medieval castle.
The large building complex acquired its present form between 1730 and
1745.
After 1716, the palace became the administrative
center for all the Batthyány estates.
The gardens around the castle were originally
laid out in the French style in the 1700s, but redesigned as an English
landscape garden during the 1800s. Today, they comprise a 37
hectare nature reserve that is open to the public with reputedly some
of the finest magnolias in all of Hungary.
Currently, the palace houses several
museums. The Rába Museum of Local History (named for the
river that runs through the town) contains WWI
mementos, handicrafts, old machinery and other items. There is an
adjoining shoe museum, which is the only museum in Hungary devoted to
the history of shoes and footwear. The palace also houses a
museum named for Dr. László Batthyány-Strattman,
who lived from 1870 - 1931 and was the last owner of the palace.
Dr. Batthyány-Strattman was known as the "physician of the poor"
as he treated patients for free. He was beatified by the Catholic
Church in 1992. The
museum contains treasures of natural history, archeological exhibits
from prehistoric and Copper Age times, as well as artifacts of the
Batthyány family, including the 16th century will of Ferenc
Batthyány.
In the Batthyany Library there is allegedly a
fragment of the codex of Rabbi Jacob Ben Asher's Tur, which was used as
the binding
board of a socage register. It was allegedly in possession of the
Batthyany family as early as 1541, having passed to Körmend from
Sopron after the expulsion of the Jews in 1526.
Webmaster notes:
Rabbi Jacob Ben Asher (ca. 1269, Cologne,
Germany - ca. 1343, Toledo, Spain), an influential Medieval rabbinic
authority. His main halachic work was the Arba'ah Turim "Four
Rows", named so as it was divided into four sections, each one called a
"tur", in reference to the rows of jewels on the High Priest's
breastplate.
Socage: a form of feudal land tenure in which
the tenant lived on the lord's land and in return rendered a certain
agricultural service or payment of rent.
codex: A precursor of the bound book,
developed in the second century C.E. to replace the old form of the
roll, which could only be written on one side. A codex would
consist of a designated number of parchment sheets (cattle hides
treated so that both sides were suitable for writing) that were
stitched together and folded, and a binding board, or cover. To
ensure durability, binding boards were often padded with the worn out
(or in the case of some Jewish manuscripts, confiscated) parchment of
other codices or manuscripts.
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© Copyright 2008 Judy
Petersen