Kámen Castle har en stor utstilling av gamle motorsykler. In the region where South Bohemia meets Vysočina, you will find Kámen Castle. The originally Gothic castle was built in mid-13th century on a large rock, from which it got its name. This originally Gothic castle from the 13th century was named after a large rock (in Czech kámen) that overlooks the surrounding area. For almost two hundred years, it was a royal feud castle and then for another two hundred years, it was occupied by one of the branches of the Bohemian Malovec family. The first written evidence of the castle comes from 1316. Its owner at that time was Nimír von Kamen. In 1328 Johann von Luxemburg enfeoffed Bušek Tluksa with the castle. His son Přibík Tluksa, who had inherited Kámen together with his brothers, sold the rule to Heinrich von Ziegelheim in 1356. He had the palace rebuilt between 1356 and 1366. Gold mining began in the Stein rule under Heinrich von Ziegelheim. After Ziegelheim surrendered the Stein rule, it returned to the Lords of Tluksa. They supported King Wenceslas in the power struggles for the Bohemian crown. After Jan Tluksa's death in 1418, his cousin Přibík Tluksa inherited the property. During the Hussite Wars he made Kámen an important base for the insurgents between the Hussite centers of Tábor and Pelhřimov . His son Hynek Tluksa sold the rule of Kámen in 1437 with all accessories to Purkart Kamarét of Žirovnice. During the renewed power struggles in Bohemia, he was one of the supporters of the provincial administrator Georg von Podiebrad . On August 4, 1450, a meeting between Georg von Podiebrad and the leader of the Strakonitz Alliance, Heinrich IV von Rosenberg , took place at the castle . In 1456 Purkart Kamarét sold the Kámen estate to the Trčka brothers from Lípa on Pelhřimov. The subsequent owner of the castle, including the town of Kámen and the villages of Eš , Důl , Vysoká Lhota and Dobrá Voda , was Jan Sádlo von Smilkov in 1460. His
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