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Ždiar (Hungarian: Zár, German: Morgenröthe, Goral: Zor) is a village and municipality in the Poprad District in the Prešov Region in Spiš in northern Slovakia. History [ edit ]
This is a list of castles in Slovakia. This list includes palaces, citadels and manor houses. These Slovak words translate as follows: hrad, hrádok - castle; zámok - correctly: château, commonly translated as castle; pevnosť - fortress, citadel; kaštieľ - mansion or manor house
Slovak National Museum in Martin; Slovak Red Cross Museum; Slovak Technical Museum; Small Carpathian Museum; St. Urban Tower; See also. Slovakia portal;
Slovakia's largest open-air museum, located in Martin. Múzeum liptovskej dediny - Museum of the Liptov Village, Pribylina; Located in Pribylina, in the Liptov area. Vlkolínec Museum Village; Features many traditional buildings and is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Múzeum kysuckej dediny - Museum of the Kysuce Village, Vychylovka
The Slovak National Museum (Slovak: Slovenské národné múzeum) is the most important institution focusing on scientific research and cultural education in the field of museology in Slovakia. Its beginnings "are connected with the endeavour of the Slovak nation for national emancipation and self-determination ".
Sediul Muzeului de Științele Naturii (Mureș County Museum, Natural History Department), Târgu Mureș; Székely National Museum (Székely Nemzeti Múzeum), Sfântu Gheorghe; Szekler Museum of Ciuc (Csíky Székely Múzeum), Miercurea-Ciuc; Vrancea Museum, Natural Sciences Department, Focșani
The Tatras are the highest mountain range in the Carpathian Mountains and span the border between Slovakia and Poland. Though currently ice-free, they were covered by glaciers in the Pleistocene epoch. Several glacial landforms are visible, including moraines and glacial lakes. In Slovakia, the area is protected as the Tatra National Park. [24]
The castle was partly reconstructed in the second half of the twentieth century, and extensive archaeological research was carried out on the site. The reconstructed sections house displays of the Spiš Museum, which is responsible for managing the castle, [5] and artefacts such as torture devices formerly used in the castle.