The fate of Banská Štiavnica has been closely linked to the exploitation of its abundant resources of
silver ore. According to evidence from excavations, the site was settled during the
Neolithic period. The first mining settlement was founded by
Celts in the 3rd century BC. It was probably occupied by the Celtic
Cotini tribe.
Roman authors mentioned mining activities of the Cotini, who had lived in present-day central Slovakia until they were deported to
Pannonia within the
Marcomannic Wars by Rome. The site was also settled by early Hungarians, and an old Hungarian fortified settlement was situated here in the 10th and 11th centuries. The site was called “terra banensium” (the land of miners) as early as 1156. The local Slavic population gave the name „Štiavnica“ (acidic stream) to the settlement in the valley, and the settlement on the hill above (Ligotavá hora, or Glanzenberg – the shiny mountain) came to be called „Bánya“ (the mine). The single common name „Schebnyzbana“ was documented for the first time in 1255. The local Slavic population was joined by skilled
German settlers who started arriving in the 13th century. They adapted the local name to the German "Schemnitz". Banská Štiavnica gained the status of a royal town in 1238, as one of the first towns in the Kingdom of Hungary. In the High and Late
Middle Ages, the town was the main producer of silver and gold in the
Kingdom of Hungary. During the
Ottoman Wars, the Turks made concerted efforts to conquer rich mining towns in
Upper Hungary (Banská Štiavnica,
Banská Bystrica, and
Kremnica). This new threat led Banská Štiavnica to build powerful fortifications, including two castles, in the 16th century. As one of the most important centers of the
Protestant Reformation in the country, the town belonged to the Protestant "League of Seven Mining Towns" together with
Banská Belá,
Banská Bystrica,
Kremnica,
Ľubietová,
Nová Baňa, and
Pukanec. The town was also a leading center of innovation in the mining industry. In 1627,
gunpowder was used there in a mine for one of the first times in the world (After
Le Thillot, France). To drain water from the flooded mines, a sophisticated system of water reservoirs and channels, known as
tajchy, was designed and built by the local scientists
Jozef Karol Hell,
Maximilian Hell, and
Samuel Mikovíny in the 18th century. Tajchy not only saved the mines from being closed but also provided energy for the early phase of industrialization. Its
Mining Academy, founded there in 1735 by
Samuel Mikovíny, was the first mining school in the
Kingdom of Hungary. Beginning in 1763, the Hofkammer in
Vienna, with support from Queen
Maria Theresa, transformed the school into the Academy of Mining. In 1807, a Forestry Institute was "established under the decision of
Emperor Franz I"; in 1848, the school was renamed the
Academy of Mining and Forestry, 'the first technical university in the world'. In 1919, after the creation of
Czechoslovakia, the Academy was moved to
Sopron in
Hungary. The student traditions of the Academy (
School traditions of Selmec) are still living in its successors, the University of
Miskolc and
Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, and colleges in Sopron,
Székesfehérvár, and
Dunaújváros. In 1782, Banská Štiavnica was the third biggest town in the Kingdom of Hungary (with 23,192 or incl. suburbs 40,000 inhabitants), after
Pozsony (today
Bratislava) and
Debrecen. But the town's development was too closely linked to the mining activity, which had been progressively declining since the second half of the 19th century. Nowadays, Banská Štiavnica is an important center of recreation and tourism, benefiting from its rich historical heritage. During
World War II, Banská Štiavnica was taken by
Soviet troops of the 53rd Army on 7 March 1945. ==Landmarks==