Bratislava’s Water Tower has not yet revealed all its secrets

Experts hope to find Celtic remnants below its thus-far examined remains.

The Water Tower area today.The Water Tower area today. (Source: Sme)

What is Bratislava’s most valuable historical monument? Very few people would mention the Water Tower, even though the landmark would be a valid guess.

“This is precisely the spot that gave rise to Bratislava,” said Ivo Štassel, art historian and director of the Municipal Institute of Monuments Protection in Bratislava. He affectionately calls Vodná Veža or Water Tower, “our diamond”.

SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement
SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement

Read also: What Vydrica will rise from the ashes? Read more 

Here beneath the Castle Hill, for a millennia, a single ford across the Danube was far and wide as its meandering flow spilled into the inland delta elsewhere. This ford was the source of wealth of every settlement that used to stand here. Without the tower, Bratislava would only be a small town today, claims Štassel.

SkryťTurn off ads

Bratislava’s strategic site

The Water Tower is part of Vydrica, an ancient settlement that used to sprawl below the Castle Hill for centuries. The neighbourhood survived for ages only to be demolished along with the neighbouring Zuckermandel in the 1960s. A hole separating the historic city centre from the Danube embankment remained at the foot of the castle hill for decades. Now it will be filled with the new Vydrica development, a combination of residential buildings, public and administrative premises, and shops. The developer, Vydrica Development, plans to build the centre of the new development around the Water Tower. It also claims that it is ready to financially support its restoration and revitalisation.

The ford was used from prehistoric times to the 15th century, when locals started building the first wooden bridges over the Danube. It was a strategic place, a crossing of important mediaeval trade routes – the Amber and Danube. Naturally, such a place offered great potential for growth for the coming settlement. The hill above was ideal for building a fort.

SkryťTurn off ads

“There was the geographic assumption that a major city would rise here,” said Štassel.

The Water Tower built at the ford served as a toll station on the international trade route and as a western fortification, important for the defence of the city and the castle.

The oldest architecture?

The Water Tower was assumed to be the oldest preserved archaeological site in the city until 2008. Then during the construction of the underground garages under Bratislava Castle, archaeologists discovered walled 1st century Celtic-Roman villas from the 1st century BC, when the local population was still dwelling in log cabins.

“It was a top-notch architecture no one expected here,” said Štassel. Experts discovered that these luxury two-storey villas were built by Roman masters for the wealthy Celtic nobility in those times.

The rest of this article is premium content at Spectator.sk
Subscribe now for full access

I already have subscription - Sign in

Subscription provides you with:
  • Immediate access to all locked articles (premium content) on Spectator.sk
  • Special weekly news summary + an audio recording with a weekly news summary to listen to at your convenience (received on a weekly basis directly to your e-mail)
  • PDF version of the latest issue of our newspaper, The Slovak Spectator, emailed directly to you
  • Access to all premium content on Sme.sk and Korzar.sk

Top stories

From left to right: Culture Ministry Chief of Staff Lukáš Machala, Culture Minister Martina Šimkovičová, SNS leader Andrej Danko.

MP Huliak's odd test, whooping cough on the rise, and a Slovak detained in Congo.


New projects will change the skyline of Bratislava.

Among the established names are some newcomers.


Píšem or pišám?

"Do ľava," (to the left) I yelled, "Nie, do prava" (no, to the right), I gasped. "Dolšie," I screamed. "Nie, nie, horšie..." My Slovak girlfriend collapsed in laughter. Was it something I said?


Matthew J. Reynolds
SkryťClose ad