A fortress on the Neisse at Muskau was first mentioned as early as the 13th century under the rule of Margrave
Henry III of Meissen. The founder of the adjacent park was
Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau (1785–1871), the author of the influential
Remarks on Landscape Gardening and owner of the
state country of Muskau from 1811. After prolonged studies in
England, in 1815 during the time when the northeastern part of Upper Lusatia fell to
Prussia, he laid out the Park. As time went by, he established an international school of landscape management in Bad Muskau and outlined the construction of an extensive landscape park which would envelop the town "in a way not done before on such a grand scale". His wife
Lucie von Hardenberg also contributed to the park. The works involved remodelling the
Baroque "Old Castle" - actually a former castle gate - and the construction of a
Gothic Revival chapel, an English cottage, several bridges, and an
orangery designed by
Friedrich Ludwig Persius. Pückler reconstructed the medieval fortress as the "New Castle", the compositional centre of the park, with a network of paths radiating from it and a pleasure ground influenced by the ideas of
Humphry Repton, whose son
John Adey Repton worked at Muskau from 1822 on. The extensions went on until 1845, when Pückler because of his enormous debts was constrained to sell the patrimony. The next year it was acquired by
Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, who employed
Eduard Petzold, Pückler's disciple and a well-known landscape gardener, to complete his design. Upon his death in 1881, he was succeeded by his daughter
Princess Marie, who sold the estates to the
Arnim family. During the
Battle of Berlin, both castles were levelled and all four bridges across the Neisse were razed. Count von Arnim-Muskau was dispossessed by the
Soviet Military Administration in Germany and since the implementation of the
Oder-Neisse line in 1945, the park has been divided by the state border between Poland and Germany, with two thirds of it on the Polish side. Not until the 1960s did the authorities gradually accept the legacy of the "
Junker" Prince Pückler. The Old Castle was rebuilt by the
East German administration in 1965–1972, while the New Castle and the bridges are still being restored. The
Englische Brücke ("English Bridge") across the River Neisse has been repaired and rededicated on 17 October 2011, after having been demolished with explosives in 1945. After the
Revolutions of 1989 the German and Polish administrations joined forces in the redevelopment of the park ensemble. Since Poland entered the
Schengen Area in 2007, visitors may freely explore both parts of the park without border checks. ==Gallery==