Romanischer Stadtrundgang, Hartberg
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When you visit a city, you are touched by its essence. Which century and which architectural style shaped the image of the city? Hartberg's most precious treasure is the Karner, a jewel of Romanesque architecture.
At the foot of the Ringkogel, the town's local mountain, findings prove Roman settlement. The Western Roman Empire fell, but the Roman road network remained. Where the Hartberg Road and the Strata Hungarica intersect, Margrave Leopold of the House of Traungau decided to found Hartberg as a regional market and trade centre.
From 1122 onwards Hartberg was developed as the first palatinate (provincial administrative centre) of the Traungau dynasty. That period is still reflected today; medieval traces lend the townscape an incomparable atmosphere. After the Hungarian invasions had been overcome, the town began to flourish. The beginning of an artistic activity thus lies in the Romanesque period and covers the reign of the Traungau dynasty, the Babenberg dynasty that inherited it, up to the Bohemian King Ottokar.
The Traungau dynasty resided as Margraves of Steyer in the town of Steyr. They initiated a large-scale wave of clearing, which resulted in the founding of settlements. Graz is considered to be the second palatinate of the Traungau dynasty, which developed into the residence of the country. In 1180, the Margraviate of Steyer became the Duchy of Styria.
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Hartberg (422m)