Prešeren House

The Prešeren House (traditional Slovene oeconym pr' Ribču) is a house in the village of Vrba in the Municipality of Žirovnica in Slovenia. It is the house where the Slovene poet France Prešeren was born in 1800. The Slovene theologian and archbishop Anton Vovk was also born in the same house in 1900. The house is a good example of an Upper Carniolian farmhouse. Since 1939 it has housed a small museum collection with furnishings from the poet’s time.[1] It was originally a 16th-century wooden building with a stone built cellar. It was heavily damaged and rebuilt after a fire in 1856. It is mainly due to the efforts of Fran Saleški Finžgar that the house was turned into a museum.[2]. It is fitted with 19th-century furnishings. Of the original furniture from Prešeren's time, the benches in the hallway and the main room, a wooden chest from 1837, and the actual cradle in which France Prešeren is alleged to have been rocked to sleep as a baby are preserved and displayed in the museum. In 1985, a section with a collection of books was added to the museum and includes translations of Prešeren's poems into various languages, various editions of his poems, and books about his life and work.

The house and the nearby Church of St Mark are on the Cultural Heritage Route,[3] a trail through the villages of the Municipality of Žirovnica. In January 2011, the house, the Church of St. Mark, and the linden tree in the centre of the village were proclaimed cultural monuments of national importance by the Government of Slovenia.[4]

The museum is open to the public on weekdays from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm (closed Mondays) and on weekends from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm.

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