PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA COVER PAGE Name of heritage asset Roštejn Castle (Hrad Roštejn) Type of heritage asset Global coordinates (X, Y, Z) 49°15'7.23"N; 15°25'34.716"E, elevation 667 m Country Czech Republic Date of record 21.09.2012 Characteristic photography Page 1 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 2 of 15 SUMMARY Historic background Originally a Gothic border castle was converted into a Renaissance mansion in huntinglodge style in the second half of the 16th century. After the Thirty Years War in the Baroque periods the interiors were new furnished and decorated by wall paintings. During the 19th century a dwelling of a forester was placed in the there. After a fire cause by a lightning in 1915 the castle was seriously damaged. Roofs of the main palace and tower were completed again between the years 1923-1928. In 1958 a total restoration and transformation to the castle museum have begun. Museum was open in 1969 and after another renovation again in 1981. Now the Castle of Rostejn is a seat of the branch of regional Highlands Museum (history of the castle, ethnographical collections, and nature of the Jihlava Hills, pewter dish making and stonemasonry of the Bohemia-Moravian Highlands). The historical feast has been annually held at the castle courtyard as well as traditional Jazz Festival. Brief description Originally medieval castle had a ground plan of an irregular triangle bounded by high stone walls. The main gate is protected by a slender tower, main living and representative rooms are located in the northern part of the yard behind the tower. The castle chapel is accessible from the courtyard and on the floor level also by covered walkways. Stone masonry is combined with bricks in walls and vaults, ceilings and roof frames are made from timber. All roofs are covered by wooden shingles. PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 1.0 Names and References No. Data Subfield Received Information 1.1 Type of heritage asset Castle 1.2 Name of heritage asset Roštejn Castle (Hrad Roštejn) 1.3 Unique reference numbers of asset 29908/7-4810 1.4 Dates compilation 1.4.1 Date of initial compilation 21.9.2012 1.4.2 Date of last update 21.9.2012 1.5 Record originator Jiří Bláha 1.6 Cross-reference to related asset record 1.6.1 Related record reference number 524278 1.6.2 Qualifier of Relationship IISPP - GIS – cultural heritage geographic information and database 1.6.3 Originator of Reference NPÚ – national heritage board 1.6.1 Related record reference number 23-41-17/1 1.6.2 Qualifier of Relationship IISPP - GIS – archaeological geographic information and database connected to it. Public with limited access. 1.6.3 Originator of Reference NPÚ – national heritage board 1.6.1 Related record reference number Not identified via public access. 1.6.2 Qualifier of Relationship IISPP - MIS – Metadata information systemvariety of information, photos, 1.6.3 Originator of Reference NPÚ – national heritage board 1.6.1 Related record reference number 141317 1.6.2 Qualifier of IISPP - MonumNet – information from Central Standards ÚSKP – central list of cultural heritage. No. obtained from IISPP web portal with public access obtained from IISPP web portal with public access obtained from IISPP web portal with public access obtained from IISPP web portal with public access obtained from IISPP web portal with public access Page 3 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Relationship register of cultural heritage (ÚSKP), cadastre 1.6.3 Originator of Reference NPÚ – national heritage board 1.6.1 Related record reference number LV 41 1.6.2 Qualifier of Relationship Ownership index under property register of cadastre – information about owners, administration and management rights, plots, etc. 1.6.3 Originator of Reference ČÚZK – Czech Office for Surveying, Mapping and Cadastre (COSMC) 1.6.1 Related record reference number ID 269 1.6.2 Qualifier of Relationship Tourist information available on the Internet http://www.hrady.cz/index.php?OID=269 1.6.3 Originator of Reference Hrady.cz obtained from Cadastre web portal with public access Internet search 1.7 Cross-reference to records of fixtures, fittings collections and artifacts 1.7.1 Reference number Not publically available 1.7.2 Originator of Reference Museum Vysočiny 1.7.1 Reference number 1.7.2 Originator of Reference 1.8 Cross-reference to documentations 1.8.1 Reference number 1.8.2 Type of documentation Surveys, plans, projects, photographs 1.8.3 Originator of Reference Archive of Museum Vysočiny Requires a personal visit 1.8.3 Originator of Reference Moravský zemský archiv Requires a personal visit 1.8.3 Originator of Reference Státní okresní archiv Jindřichův Hradec Requires a personal visit Collections and artefacts are in care of Museum Vysočiny Page 4 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 1.8.3 Originator of Reference Archiv NPÚ ÚP v Praze Requires a personal visit 1.8.3 Originator of Reference Archiv NPÚ ÚOP v Telči Requires a personal visit 1.8.3 Originator of Reference State Chateau in Telč Requires a personal visit 1.9 Cross-reference to archaeological records/events 1.9.1 Reference number 23-41-17/1 Archaeological database reference no. 1.9.2 Originator of Reference NPÚ – national heritage board 1.9.3 Start date of recording event Data publically not available 1.9.4 End date of recording event Data publically not available 1.10 Cross-references to environmental records Page 5 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 2.0 Location No. Data Subfield Received Information Standards 2.1 Administrative location 2.1.1 Country Czech Republic 2.1.2 Geo-political unit Vysočina 2.1.3 Administrative subdivision Jihlava district 2.2 Address 2.2.1 Postal name Hrad Roštejn Land Registry 2.2.2 Name of street/road Doupě Land Registry 2.2.3 Number in the street/road 1 Land Registry 2.2.4 Locality Roštejn 2.2.5 Town/city Doupě Land Registry 2.2.6 Postal or location code 58856 Land Registry 2.3 Cartographic reference 2.3.1 Spatial referencing system GPS 2.3.2 Global coordinates (X, Y, Z) 49°15'7.23"N; 15°25'34.716"E Internet - map 2.4 Cadastral reference/land unit 631451 Doupě Land Registry Page 6 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 3.0 Functional Type No. Data Subfield Received Information 3.1 Generic 3.2 Usage 3.1.1 Dates of usage 14 century to 1915 (tower burned down) 3.1.1 Dates of usage 1969 -2012 Museum Standards Page 7 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 4.0 Dating No. Data Subfield Received Information 4.1 Date range 1348-1568– castle 1569-1584– reconstruction 1585-1915– hunting lodge 1915 Tower and palace partially burned down 1923-1928 Repair of roof structures and roofing 1945 confiscated - state owned 1969 open to public 1977-1981 and 2006 – repairs 4.2 Method Archival research Standards Page 8 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 9 of 15 5.0 Structure No. Data Subfield Received Information Standards 5.1 Type of structure A2 castles According to the Perpetuate project methodology (see Table 2 below) 5.2 Structural material 5.2.1 Foundation Stone masonry 5.2.2 Walls/pillars Masonry 5.2.3 Interstorey structure Masonry walls, timber ceilings 5.2.4 Roof Timber frame 5.3 Finishing material 5.3.1 Foundation Rock 5.3.2 Walls/pillars Mortar, original and repairs 5.3.3 Interstorey structure Mortar 5.3.4 Roof Shingles PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA 6.0 Current Physical Condition No. Data Subfield Received Information 6.1 Date of assessment Variety of reports exist (Historic Structure Technical Report: Roofs and ceilings 2006, Historic Report: Castle Kitchen, 2008, Technical Inspection and Project: Outer staircase:, 2011, Project: electrification, 2012) not organised in any information system 6.2 Assessment originator JIří Bláha 6.2 General condition Well maintained, recently repaired 6.3 Condition of critical elements Standards Page 10 of 15 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 11 of 15 7.0 Protection / Legal Status No. Data Subfield Received Information Standards 7.1 Type of protection Kulturní památka (cultural monument) ÚSKP – central cultural heritage. 7.2 Grade of protection 7.3 Date of protection grant 3. 5. 1958 7.4 Reference number 29908/7-4810 list of The same number as in 1.3 PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 12 of 15 8.0 Major Risks No. Data Subfield Received Information Standards 8.1 Long-term environmental impact A1: Bio-attack A4: Water (Ground, Atmospheric) According to the EU-CHIC project methodology (see Table 1 below) 8.2 Sudden environmental impact B1: Wind storm B2: Fire According to the EU-CHIC methodology (see Table 1) 8.3 Anthropogenic impact C1: Economic activities According to the EU-CHIC methodology (see Table 1) PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 13 of 15 Data acquisition methods No. Data Subfield Method 1.0 Names and References IISPP – Integrated Information System of Cultural Heritage Objects 2.0 Location Land Registry, Czech Office for Surveying, Mapping and Cadastre (COSMC) 3.0 Functional type Documentation survey Archival research 4.0 Dating Art historical interpretation, Critical archive source analysis, Dendrochronological dating 5.0 Structure In-situ visual inspection 6.0 Current physical condition In-situ visual inspection, Technical survey reports Diagnostic/Measured survey 7.0 Protection / Legal status IISPP – Integrated Information System of Cultural Heritage Objects 8.0 Major Risks Risk analysis PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 14 of 15 Table 1. The list of major risks that influence heritage asset A&B: Environmental Risks C: Anthropogenic – Social Risks A: Long term influence B: Sudden events A1: Bio-attack B1: Wind storm C1: Economic activities A2: Climate conditions fluctuations B2: Fire C2: Accidental events A3: Aeolic impact B3: Flood C3: Improper decisions A4: Water (Ground, Atmospheric) B4: Earthquake C4: Vandalisms A5: Solar radiation B5: Landslide C5: Riots A6: Particle matter& aerosols B6: Avalanche C6: Wars A7: Long term loading B7: Tsunami A8: Geological conditions (including local particularities) B8: Volcano PROTOCOL LEVEL 1: GENERAL DATA Page 15 of 15 Table 2. Typology of heritage assets developed within FP7 project PERPETUATE Class Description Assets A Architectonic assets with two main bearing structural elements: vertical walls and horizontal floors. If they are properly connected, mutual cooperation between the structural elements allows the building to behave as a single box. A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 palaces, castles, religious houses, caravansaries, madrasas B Architectonic assets, which are characterized, by wide spaces without intermediate floors and few inner walls. An independent damage mechanism occurs in the different parts of the building, and it is often possible to recognize specific structural macro elements (façade, triumphal arch, apse, dome, transept,). B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 churches, mosques, temples, baptisteries, mausoleum, hammam theatres C Architectonic assets in which the vertical dimension prevails on the other ones. Since usually, these buildings are characterized by significant slenderness, their seismic response may be assumed as a global flexural behavior. C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 towers, bell towers, minarets, lighthouses, chimneys D Architectonic assets in which the main structural element is an arch or a vault. Both single arches and much more complex constructions based on this basic structural element are included. D1 D2 D3 D4 triumphal arches, aqueducts, bridges, cloisters E Massive constructions in which the wide thickness of walls, if compared to other dimensions, doesn’t allow the idealization as plane structural element. Local failure occurs as detachment of external leaf. E1 fortresses, E2 ramparts F Single, isolated architectonic assets, which does not delimit an interior space. F1 F2 F3 F4 G Historical centers composed of ordinary buildings’ aggregates, which assume the relevance of cultural heritage asset as whole in the urban context. Seismic response considers the interaction among adjacent buildings. columns, trilithons, obelisks, ruins