Kežmarok

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Kežmarok
Coat-of-arms N/A
Region (kraj) Prešov Region
District (okres) Kežmarok District
Location 49°08′01″N, 20°25′35″E
Altitude 626 m
Population 17,383
Area 24.83 km²
Time Zone
• Summer DST
CET: UTC+1
CEST: UTC+2
Telephone prefix +421-52
Postal code 06001
Car registration plate KK
Kežmarok location map

Kežmarok (German: Kesmark/Käsmark, Hungarian: Késmárk, Polish: Kieżmark, Latin: Kesmarkium) is a town in the Spiš region of eastern Slovakia (population 17,000), on the Poprad River.

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[edit] History

Kežmarok: view from above
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Kežmarok: view from above
Lutheran Church in Kežmarok
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Lutheran Church in Kežmarok
Kežmarok Castle
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Kežmarok Castle

Settlement at Kežmarok dates back to the Upper Stone Age. In the 13th century the region contained a community of Saxons, a Slovak fishing village, a Hungarian border post and a Carpathian German settlement. Its Latin name was first mentioned in 1251 as Villa (Saxonum apud Ecclesiam) Sancte Elisabeth. In 1269 Kežmarok received its town charter. It also had the right to organize a cheese market (hence the German name Kesmark ("Käsemarkt" - "cheese market"). In 1433 the town was severely damaged by a Hussite raid. After 1440, the count of Spiš had a seat in Kežmarok. In the 15th century (and then once more in 1655), Kežmarok became a free royal town].

The town was a stronghold of the noble Thököly family. The Hungarian magnate and warrior Imre Thököly was born in the town in 1657. He died in exile in Turkey in 1705 but in the 19th century his body was returned to Kežmarok and he is buried in a noble mausoleum in the town's Lutheran Church.

The town's other monuments include a castle, many Renaissance merchant houses, and a museum of ancient books. In pride of place is the Protestant Church built in 1688 entirely of wood. The church also contains an organ of 1719 with wooden pipes.

Kežmarok had a large ethnic German minority until the end of World War II (see Carpathian Germans). It also had a large and active Jewish community. During World War II, under the auspices of the First Slovak Republic, nearly 3,000 of the town's Jews were deported to German death camps. The town's pre-war Jewish cemetery has now been restored.

[edit] Twin cities

[edit] Famous people

[edit] External links


edit Municipalities of Kežmarok District Flag of Slovakia

Kežmarok | Spišská Belá | Spišská Stará Ves
Abrahámovce | Bušovce | Červený Kláštor | Havka | Holumnica | Hradisko | Huncovce | Ihľany | Javorina | Jezersko | Jurské | Krížová Ves | Lechnica | Lendak | Ľubica | Majere | Malá Franková | Malý Slavkov | Matiašovce | Mlynčeky | Osturňa | Podhorany | Rakúsy | Reľov | Slovenská Ves | Spišské Hanušovce | Stará Lesná | Stráne pod Tatrami | Toporec | Tvarožná | Veľká Franková | Veľká Lomnica | Vlková | Vlkovce | Vojňany | Vrbov | Výborná | Zálesie | Žakovce