Site overview

Žigmund šachta is one of the historic precious-metal mine shafts of Banská Štiavnica in central Slovakia, whose mining district was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1993. The shaft was first sunk around 1631 at an altitude of 583.28 metres, with an earlier attempt abandoned after two years because of extreme rock conditions at depth. It was connected to the Svätotrojičná dedičná štôlňa (Holy Trinity drainage adit) during the seventeenth century.

The shaft was progressively deepened and by 1836 had reached its final depth of 359.715 metres, connecting to the drainage adit of Emperor Joseph II. In 1759 the engineer Jozef Karol Hell installed two water-column pumping engines at the shaft, each capable of lifting 494 cubic metres of mine water per day. In 1865 a steam pump by J. Sigla of Vienna replaced earlier arrangements.

The baroque pump engine house of 1759 survives at the shaft site and is a listed Národná kultúrna pamiatka (National Cultural Monument), declared in 1970.

The shaft lies on the wooded hillside above Banská Štiavnica, where surviving historic buildings read as distinct elements within a dispersed mining landscape.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

Žigmund šachta forms part of the historic silver and gold mining complex of Banská Štiavnica, a town whose documented mining activity reaches back to 1156. Banská Štiavnica gained the status of a royal town in 1238 and by the eighteenth century was one of the most significant mining centres in the Kingdom of Hungary.

The shaft known as Žigmund was first sunk in 1631 at an altitude of 583.28 metres above sea level. An earlier attempt at the same location was abandoned after two years when the timber lining proved unable to withstand extreme ground pressures and hydrothermal alteration, which had caused the shaft casing to deviate from the vertical. When very hard rock was encountered at depth, a new shaft was begun approximately 40 metres higher in 1633, at the elevation that survives as the present shaft. During the seventeenth century the shaft was connected underground to the Svätotrojičná dedičná štôlňa (Holy Trinity drainage adit). A decision was subsequently taken to deepen the shaft further to reach the level of the Ján ore vein.

In 1759 the engineer Jozef Karol Hell installed two water-column pumping engines (vodostĺpcové čerpacie stroje) at the shaft. These machines drew on water supplied from the Klinger reservoir via a channel that is still partly visible behind the engine house building. Each machine was capable of lifting 494 cubic metres of mine water per day to the level of the Svätotrojičná dedičná štôlňa, a lift of 137.76 metres. A horse-operated pump served as a reserve during periods when water supply for the column engines was insufficient. The installation represented a significant technological advance and was part of a wider programme of water-column engine construction in the Banská Štiavnica district during the second half of the eighteenth century.

From 1826 the shaft underwent its final deepening, with the objective of reaching the level of the drainage adit of Emperor Joseph II. This work was completed in 1836, when the shaft attained its definitive depth of 359.715 metres. A period of increased pumping demand arose when part of the Emperor Franz drainage adit between Žigmund šachta and the neighbouring Amália shaft became flooded. To address this, a new steam pump manufactured by J. Sigla of Vienna was installed in 1865, with the pumps themselves supplied by the ironworks at Hronec.

Mining activity at the shaft declined in the second half of the nineteenth century as the richest ore zones were exhausted and the economic conditions of the district deteriorated. The shaft eventually ceased active extraction, though the surviving surface complex remained intact.

The baroque pump engine house building of 1759 stands at the shaft mouth on the street Na Žigmund šachtu in the Mestská pamiatková rezervácia (Urban Conservation Area) of Banská Štiavnica. It is a single-storey structure with a cellar, rectangular in plan. It was declared a Národná kultúrna pamiatka (National Cultural Monument) in 1970. The shaft waste heap is also recorded as a surviving feature of the site. The strojovňa (engine house) of Žigmund šachta was relocated to the Banské múzeum v prírode (Open-Air Mining Museum) at the Ondrej shaft site, which was opened to visitors in 1974 and has since received more than 1.3 million visitors.

The site forms part of the Banská Štiavnica and Technical Monuments of its Surroundings UNESCO World Heritage Site, inscribed on 11 December 1993. The complex of mining operational buildings at Žigmund šachta is listed as one of the significant components of the heritage district.

Timeline

1631–1633
Construction

Shaft first sunk and re-started

An initial sinking attempt was begun in 1631 but abandoned after two years due to extreme ground pressures and hydrothermal alteration that deflected the shaft lining. A new shaft was commenced in 1633, approximately 40 metres higher at 583.28 metres altitude.
1633–1699
Construction

Connection to Svätotrojičná dedičná štôlňa

During the seventeenth century the shaft was connected underground to the Holy Trinity drainage adit (Svätotrojičná dedičná štôlňa), integrating it into the broader drainage system of the Banská Štiavnica mining district.
1759
Construction

Water-column pumping engines installed by Jozef Karol Hell

Jozef Karol Hell installed two water-column pumping machines (vodostĺpcové čerpacie stroje) at the shaft, each lifting 494 cubic metres of mine water per day to the level of the Holy Trinity adit, a lift of 137.76 metres. The baroque engine house built to shelter these machines survives on site.
1826–1836
Construction

Final deepening to 359.715 metres

The last programme of shaft deepening began in 1826 with the aim of reaching the level of the drainage adit of Emperor Joseph II. This was achieved in 1836, when the shaft attained its final depth of 359.715 metres.
1865
Construction

Steam pump installed

A new steam-powered pump manufactured by J. Sigla of Vienna was installed to address increased drainage demands, with pumps supplied by the ironworks at Hronec.
1970
Heritage

Engine house declared Národná kultúrna pamiatka

The baroque pump engine house (strojovňa) of 1759, situated on Na Žigmund šachtu street, was declared a National Cultural Monument (Národná kultúrna pamiatka) in 1970.
1993
Heritage

UNESCO World Heritage Site inscription

Banská Štiavnica and its Technical Monuments, including the Žigmund šachta complex, were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List on 11 December 1993.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article (English): Banská Štiavnica
Montanistika.eu multimedia mining heritage guide: Šachta Zigmund
Slovak heritage register: Krížom-krážom, výrobné stavby v okrese Banská Štiavnica
UNESCO Slovakia association: Banská Štiavnica a technické pamiatky okolia
Regional heritage guide: Banícke potulky, Región Hont
Prvý banícky spolok: historia (development of science and technology) and UNESCO listing
Slovak Mining Museum (Slovenské banské múzeum), Banská Štiavnica: Banské šachty
Banská Štiavnica municipal website: technické pamiatky
TASR news agency report: Banské múzeum v prírode, July 2016
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