Destruction of the royal town at visegrád, hungary: Historical evidence and archaeoseismology of the a.d. 1541 earthquake at the proposed danube dam site

Miklós Kázmér*, Mohammad Al-Tawalbeh, Erzsébet Gyori, József Laszlovszky, Krzysztof Gaidzik

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract (may include machine translation)

    The Danube Bend is the site of the proposed Nagymaros dam, part of the Gabcikovo- Nagymaros hydropower complex in Slovakia and Hungary. The dam was designed in the 1970s to resist intensity VI seismic events. We present historical and archaeological evidence for an intensity IX earthquake on 21 August 1541, which destroyed buildings of the royal town of Visegrád. Evidence includes vertical fissures cutting through the 30- m-high, thirteenth-century donjon Salamon Tower, built on hard rock. Some parts of the adjacent fifteenth-century Franciscan friary, built on the alluvial plain, collapsed because of liquefaction of the subsoil. The date of a potentially responsible earthquake on 21 August 1541 was recorded in a sermon of the eyewitness Lutheran minister Péter Bornemisza, living at Pest-Buda, 35 km away. Taken by the Ottoman army in 1544, the royal town and the fortress lost strategic importance, never to be rebuilt. Photographs and drawings of the donjon made three centuries later faithfully reflect the status of sixteenth-century seismic damage, corroborated by modern archaeological excavations in the ecclesiastic complex.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3202-3214
    Number of pages13
    JournalSeismological Research Letters
    Volume92
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Sep 2021

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