Gołuchów Castle

Gołuchóch Castle - an early-Renaissance castle built between 1550-1560 used as a defensive and residence stronghold; on the plans of a square formation. The castle is located in Gołuchów, Greater Poland Voivodeship; in Poland.

History
This early-Renaissance castle was raised in between 1550-1560 close by Trzemna, as small river and estuary of the Prosna. The building was built for Voivode of the Brześć Kujawski Voivodeship, Rafał Leszczyński. The castle was predominantly used for defensive purposes with keeps in the corner's of the structure. The following owners expanded the residence - making the residence into a magnate-Renaissance stronghold. In 1853, the partially run-down castle was bought by Tytus Działyński, for his son Jan Kantega and his close wife Izabela of the House of Czartoryski. The castle was reconstructed in the nineteenth century, in the style of the French Renaissance architectural style, the residence is surrunded by the largest Landscape Park in Greater Poland Voivodeship, which asserted additional Romanesque and English architectural styles upon the castle. After the Second World War the castle housed the Branch of the National Museum in Poznań (Muzeum Narodowe w Poznaniu, Polish).