Middle Ages up to Siege of Buda In the
Middle Ages, two houses stood on the site where now the Archduke Joseph palace is. On the northern side stood the palace of László Pálóczi, who held the office of regional judge between 1446 and 1470. After Pálóczi's death, in 1471, King
Matthias gave the building to Nicholas Csupor,
Voivode of Transylvania. In 1474, it was transferred to the chapter house opposite it and became the residence of canons. Benedict Heym's house built in 1362 stood on the southern half of the plot, which was acquired in the 1380s by Cardinal Demeter,
Archbishop of Esztergom, and after 1514 by the Bánffy family. During the
Ottoman–Habsburg wars, both houses became ruins. After the
siege of Buda and the expulsion of the Turks, it became the property of the German Gassl brothers, but in 1714 the property was expropriated by the
Austrian War Council for military purposes (to establish a battery position).
Teleki Palace It was auctioned off by the army in 1787, at which time József Teleki (1738–1796), archbishop and crown guard of Ugoccia, bought it at the suggestion of his secretary, Dániel Cornides, a professor at the
University of Pest. Teleki had a U-shaped, two-story, 12-apartment palace built here, based on the plans of the Bratislava architect Anton Fisches, in the so-called ‘Zopfstil’ style. It was completed in 1789, at which time it received its long-used name, the Teleki Palace. It was not used as the primary residence for the Teleki family. In 1857, it was bought by the imperial treasury and assigned to
Archduke Albrecht, who was military governor-general of Hungary between 1851 and 1859. After the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, the Ministry of the Interior was temporarily housed in the Teleki Palace. In 1869–70, it was rebuilt and expanded in accordance with the needs of the General Staff, based on the plans of Lajos Frey (1829–1877) and Lipót Kauser (1818–1877).
Archduke Joseph of Austria, prince of Hungary Palatine Joseph's son,
Archduke Joseph Karl (1833–1905), cavalry general, commander-in-chief of the
Hungarian Armed Forces, moved the offices of the new High Command of the Hungarian Armed Forces here in 1873. Between Szent György tér (‘St. George Square’) and Dísz tér, the new Royal Hungarian Ministry of Defense was built in 1889, the offices were moved, Archduke Joseph Karl bought the Teleki Palace for himself from the Treasury. In 1902, the archduke rebuilt and expanded the palace, in a
historicizing style, based on the designs of
Flóris Korb and
Kálmán Giergl. It was then that it got its corner towers and the eastern decorations of the western (
Krisztinaváros) facade.
Destruction of Archduke Joseph's Palace During the
First and
Second World Wars, the palace was inhabited by the son of Archduke Joseph Karl, Archduke
Joseph August and his family. During the
siege of Budapest, the Archduke's family fled to the West. The western (Kristinaváros) facade of the building was hit by several shots. According to contemporary experts, the injuries could have been repaired. At the time of the debris removal work, it was a dormitory for industrial students and a workers' canteen. It was evacuated in 1953. It stood empty for a long time and was set on fire in the 1960s for filming purposes. In June 1968, the dilapidated palace was blown up and the ruins along with the foundations were demolished and cleaned. In the 1990s, the palace and the so-called In place of the Josephs Gardens, the state administration had a medieval ruin field built, and later a basement museum was also created below ground level. ==Archduke Joseph's Palace Garden==