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Kastel Fortress

523 m from the city center

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Description

Kastel Fortress is the stone heart of Banja Luka and the city's oldest monument, set in the centre on the left bank of the Vrbas, near where the Crkvena flows in. Life has gone on here for millennia – traces of a Neolithic settlement and the Roman fort Castra, from which the fortress likely takes its name, have been found. Kastel gained its recognisable form, with mighty stone walls, bastions and towers, in the Ottoman period, especially under Ferhad-paša Sokolović, and was later extended in the 18th century.

Once a stronghold guarding the Vrbas valley, today it is a calm oasis amid the city bustle: within its walls are a summer stage, a gallery, a children's playground and a riverside restaurant. In summer Kastel comes alive with concerts and festivals such as Demofest and Freshwave. It was last thoroughly restored in 2016 and remains the city's main symbol.

Best time: year-round
Facilities: stage, gallery, playground
Parking: Available

Activities

Walk the stone ramparts and the inner courtyard
Lunch at the restaurant overlooking the Vrbas
Catch summer festivals (Demofest, Freshwave, Dukatfest)
See the gallery and archaeological traces
Family time and a children's playground

Cultural Heritage

The oldest and largest monument in Banja Luka (first class)
Layers from the Neolithic and Roman Castra to the Ottoman town
Nine bastions, two towers and a central armoury
Banja Luka's name tied to the fortress ("Castell Bagna Luca", 1525)

History

The site holds Neolithic and Roman (Castra) remains
Its present form dates to the Ottoman period (Ferhad-paša Sokolović)
Extended on Vauban's system in 1714–1716
The last major restoration was completed in 2016

In front of Kastel's walls lies Safikada's grave, a spot that keeps one of Banja Luka's saddest love stories. The legend tells of a local woman, Safikada, and an Austro-Hungarian soldier who stood guard on the fortress, and of a love often compared to that of Romeo and Juliet. When the army suddenly left the town and news of her beloved's death reached her, the heartbroken Safikada threw herself before a cannon. On the spot where she fell, couples in love still light candles today.