Konopiště Chateau

Top choice in Bohemia


Archduke Franz Ferdinand d’Este, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, is famous for being dead – it was his assassination in Sarajevo in 1914 that sparked WWI. But the archduke was an enigmatic figure who avoided the intrigues of the Vienna court and for the last 20 years of his life hid away in what became his ideal country retreat. Konopiště, lying amid extensive grounds 2km west of the town of Benešov, is a testament to the archduke’s twin obsessions – hunting and St George.

Having renovated the massive Gothic and Renaissance building in the 1890s and installed all the latest technology – including electricity, central heating, flush toilets, showers and a luxurious lift – Franz Ferdinand decorated his home with his hunting trophies. His game books record that he shot about 300,000 creatures in his lifetime, from foxes and deer to elephants and tigers. About 100,000 animal trophies adorn the walls, each marked with the date and place it met its end – the crowded Trophy Corridor, with a forest of mounted animal heads, and the antler-clad Chamois Room, with its ‘chandelier’ fashioned from a stuffed condor, are truly bizarre sights.

There are four guided tours (in English) available. Tour 3 is the most interesting, visiting the private apartments used by the archduke and his family, which have remained unchanged since the state took possession of the chateau in 1921. Tour 1 visits the apartments in the south wing; Tour 2 takes in the Great Armoury, one of the largest and most impressive collections in Europe; and Tour 4 visits the archduke's hunting trophies.

The archduke’s collection of art and artefacts relating to St George is no less impressive, amounting to 3750 items, many of which are on show in the St George Museum beneath the terrace at the front of the castle.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Bohemia attractions

1. St George Museum

0.04 MILES

This museum, housed beneath the southern terrace of Konopiště chateau, is testament to one of Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s obsessions: St George. Here he…

2. Tábor Gate

22.08 MILES

The first of two main gates into the Vyšehrad complex when coming from the metro is a 17th-century archway marked with a lively, faux-Gothic top.

3. Peak Gate

22.14 MILES

Just beyond the Tabor Gate stand the remants of the original Gothic Peak Gate, which once served as the main entryway into the complex.

4. Vyšehrad Citadel

22.15 MILES

The Vyšehrad Citadel refers to the complex of buildings and structures atop Vyšehrad Hill that have played an important role in Czech history for over…

5. Kafka's Grave

22.23 MILES

Franz Kafka is buried in the New Jewish Cemetery, which opened around 1890 when the older Jewish cemetery – at the foot of the TV Tower – was closed. To…

6. Leopold Gate

22.23 MILES

The baroque Leopold Gate marks the impressive entryway into the inner Vyšehrad complex. It was built in the mid-17th century to serve both a ceremonial…

7. New Jewish Cemetery

22.24 MILES

Franz Kafka is buried in this cemetery, which opened around 1890 when the older Jewish cemetery – at the foot of the TV Tower – was closed. To find Kafka…

8. Rotunda of St Martin

22.26 MILES

The 11th-century Rotunda of St Martin is Prague’s oldest surviving building. The door and frescoes date from a renovation made about 1880. The rotunda is…