Description of the attraction
The Krevo Castle was built by Prince Gediminas in the XIII-XIV centuries. This defensive structure was built to protect against the attacks of the Crusaders, who haunted the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
The fortress was built of stone and brick. It was an irregular quadrangle of massive high walls with towers at the corners and a pond in the middle. The walls were additionally protected by deep ditches filled with water.
The Great Prince's Tower in the southern corner reached 25 meters and had three levels. The tower was not only a defensive structure, but was also used for housing. On the second floor there were princely chambers, the windows of which were higher and wider than others, and the walls were decorated with frescoes. The second tower was erected above the gate, to which a road led from the north. Now this tower is almost completely destroyed.
The height of the walls reached 13 meters. Inside, at a level of 10 meters, the towers were connected by a gallery serving to defend the walls. There were also dungeons in the castle, and in them, as usual, torture chambers and prison casemates.
In the 16th century, the castle was very useful to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, repeatedly withstanding the sieges of the Moscow and Tatar-Mongol troops. The design of the castle was so successful that it was considered completely impregnable.
Unfortunately, what the formidable troops could not do, time did. In the 19th century, the castle was considered morally obsolete and abandoned. It was finally destroyed during the First World War. Although during the stay of the Poles on the territory of Belarus, they tried to reconstruct or at least preserve the ancient ruins, alas, the castle continued to collapse. Now you can only see what was once a formidable stronghold that terrified enemy troops.