Slovenske Konjice


Slovenske Konjice is a town in northeastern Slovenia. It is the seat of the Municipality of Slovenske Konjice. The area is part of the traditional region of Styria.

History and town sights

The town of Slovenske Konjice lies below the northern slopes of Mount Konjice and the winegrowing Škalce Hills. On a hill above the town to the southwest are the ruins of 12th-century Gonobitz Castle, which has later additions and was abandoned in the 18th century. Its ruins have been partially restored.
Immediately above Old Square stands the medieval Trebnik Mansion. The 850-year-old dense town line is a sloping square, from Trebnik Mansion past St. George's parish church, along a small stream in an open channel, down to the Dravinja River. The new Town Square is on the other bank of the river, connected with Old Square by a bridge with four horse heads on the corners.
The dominant structure in the upper part of the town's medieval core is the archparish church dedicated to Saint George and belonging to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Maribor, dating back to the late 13th century with 18th-century additions. The veneration of the saint at this place goes even further back in history. The town was mentioned in written sources dating to 1165 as a seminal parish. The castle was first mentioned in 1148 and the market town in 1236. The town itself was not surrounded by walls. At the time of the Ottoman raids, the church with its vicarage served as a fortified refuge. A second church in the settlement is dedicated to Saint Anne. It dates to the mid-16th century with a 17th-century belfry and Baroque additions.
The main street and the transversal connections above the Dravinja are lined with longitudinal or transversally positioned one-storey houses with well-preserved Gothic cores and Renaissance additions. The façades were restyled in the 19th century. A rarity is the Art Nouveau building of the former savings bank. A Marian column dating to the mid-18th century and a column shrine dedicated to Saint Florian above the stream dominate the open square. The town core is well preserved.
Slovenske Konjice played a role during the Slovenian peasant revolt of 1515, with rebels here composing a letter with their demands to send to the emperor in Vienna. Economic development was boosted after construction of main Vienna to Trieste road in the 18th century. During the 19th century the town got a local court. The Austrian Southern Railway was built in 1846, but it ran east of Konjice. On 20 June 1892, work started on a narrow gauge steam railroad line called Konjičanka from Poljčane to Slovenske Konjice, which was opened on 20 December 1892. On 29 June 1921 it was extended to Zreče. It was closed in 1963, and the tracks were removed in 1970. A museum locomotive K.3, built by the Krauss factory at Linz and used on this line, is on display at the Slovenian Railway Museum in Ljubljana.

Name

Over the centuries, the name Konjice appears in written documents in various forms: Gonviz, Gombicz, Gannabitz, Gonaviz, Gonavitz, Gonwitz, Gonowitz, Ganowiz, Gonnawitz, and modern German Gonobitz. The adjective Slovenske was added to the Slovene name Konjice in 1934, under the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in order to distinguish it from the town of Konjic in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Owners of the castle

The town has been rewarded for its efforts with the national "Most Beautiful Excursion Destination" award by the Tourist Association of Slovenia for many years in a row.

Culture

The town of Slovenske Konjice hosts an international festival of underwater film and photography named "Sprehodi pod morjem", which is held every year at the end of January.

Sport

Notable people that were born or lived in Slovenske Konjice include:

Twin towns – sister cities

is twinned with:

International projects and other forms of cooperation