The queen's furniture has returned home!
The queen's furniture has returned home!
The castle grew with personal belongings
Queen Elizabeth's personal furniture, dressing table and glass showcase arrived at the Royal Palace of Gödöllő. With the help of the National Castle Program and the NÖF National Heritage Development Development Nonprofit Ltd., the public can meet the works of art repurchased from Germany in the permanent exhibition of the castle.
It has a symbolic message that Elizabeth’s personal pieces of furniture may have returned to the former summer residence of the Queen, also known as Sisi. At the same time, history is an economic resource, a driving force of tourism, the government spokesman said at a press presentation of the furnishing objects at Royal Palace of Gödöllő on Friday.

The queen's furniture has returned home! Queen Elizabeth's personal furniture, dressing table and glass showcase arrived at the Royal Castle in Gödöllő
Dr. Tamás Ujváry, the managing director of the Royal Palace of Gödöllő Public Benefit Nonprofit Ltd., reminded that the castle operates as a real Sisi cult place. The building also celebrates its anniversary, as it was abandoned by the Soviet army thirty years ago and then opened in 1996, albeit only in part, to visitors in 1996. The anniversary is also connected with the arrival of the two special pieces of furniture, which were successfully repurchased with the help of the National Castle Program and the NÖF, said Dr. Tamás Ujváry. Speaking about the National Castle Program and the National Castle Program, which he supervised as a ministerial commissioner, Zsolt Virág said that they are aimed not only at the restoration of the buildings, but also at their mental rehabilitation. This includes returning any former furnishings to the walls, he noted.
According to him, Queen Elizabeth's former dressing table and glazed display case appeared at an auction in Germany, where they were bought back at a starting price, and from Friday the public can meet the artefacts in the castle's permanent exhibition in the queen's dressing room.