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Sivá Brada - remains of a geyser. 
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Sivá Brada - remains of a geyser.

When driving from Levoča to Spiš Castle you pass a small hill with a chapel on top. It is called Sivá Brada ("White Beard"). Now people stop here to taste mineral water tricking from a small spring, but until a few years ago this place had been a major tourist attraction. A geyser had been erupting from the hillside 2-3 times a day, spitting water up to 15 meters in the air. Sadly, with time eruptions got weaker and rarer, then stopped completely, leaving only bubbling water.

# • Added to the gallery on Nov 21, 2007File size: 2.5 MBViews: 2605 (#137)
The mineral spring under the Sivá Brada hillOne of the springs on the Sivá Brada hillThe chapel of the Holy Cross on the top of the Sivá Brada hillThe chapel of the Holy Cross on the top of the Sivá Brada hillThe chapel of the Holy Cross on the top of the Sivá Brada hill - stone portal
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Banská Štiavnica - New Castle. 
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Banská Štiavnica - New Castle.

This monumental tower was built on a hill near the Piarg Gate in 1564-1571. It was a part of a system of signal- and watchtowers of the Union of central Slovak mining towns. Nowadays there is a museum exhibition presenting the history of Turk wars inside and from the top floor you can have a wonderful view of the historical town centre and the surrounding mountains.

# • Added to the gallery on Apr 10, 2008File size: 2.0 MBViews: 1661 (#388)
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The 17th century wooden church in Svätý Kríž in the Liptov region of Slovakia. 
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The 17th century wooden church in Svätý Kríž in the Liptov region of Slovakia.

Wikipedia: "Articular churches are wooden churches for Evangelical congregations erected under the terms of the Congress of Sopron of 1681. At this congress, summoned by the Habsburg Emperor Leopold I, permission was for the first time granted for followers of the Augsburg and Calvinist confessions to erect and maintain churches within the Emperor's dominions. As this permission was contained in Articles (i.e. clauses) 35 and 36 of the Congress's deliberations, the term 'articular' was applied to them.

The Sopron Congress was called against a background of social unrest, including civil revolt, religious friction and continuing threat of invasion from Turkey. The Emperor therefore determined that it was necessary to make concessions to his Protestant population to secure its loyalty. However, severe restrictions were placed on the Protestant congregations. No more than two churches could be built in each administrative region — in areas of strategic importance, the limit was one church — and buildings had to be outside city walls. Further regulations determined siting, and building procedures. As a consequence, the articular churches were all built of wood, mostly in the period 1681-1730. There were originally 38 such churches, nearly all located in the region of today's Slovakia.

Five articular churches survive today in Slovakia. Perhaps the most well-known is the church in Kežmarok, built between 1718 and 1730 under the direction of Juraj Müttermann, replacing an earlier structure of 1687. Others are at Leštiny (1689, restored 1860s), Hronsek (1725-6, a wood-framed structure now without internal wall-paintings), Istebné (built between 1686 and 1731) and Svätý Kríž (about 1693). The latter church was originally located at the village of Paludza, which was submerged in the Liptovská Mara reservoir in the late 1970s. Between 1974 and 1977 the church was carefully dismantled and restored before being rebuilt in Svätý Kríž, where it was reconsecrated in 1982".

# • Added to the gallery on Oct 27, 2009File size: 4.3 MBViews: 521 (#1281)
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St. Martin's church in Krempachy (16th century). 
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St. Martin's church in Krempachy (16th century).
# • Added to the gallery on Jan 31, 2007File size: 3.2 MBViews: 1400 (#542)
Iron cross on a grave near the church in KrempachyA plaque on the wall of the church in Krempachy, commemorating Józef Dziurilla, a priest who died during a cholera epidemic in 1873
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