Majestic Rundales Palace and the Ghosts that Reside There

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By Gypsy Rose Lee

Rundales Palace and gardens
See all 18 photos
Rundales Palace and gardens

This is a beautiful and magnificent Baroque style palace located in Latvia in the Rundales district Pilsrundale. It was designed by a Russian architect of Italian descent Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli. It took from 1736 to 1768 to build this castle and it became the summer residence of the Kurzeme (this region was also known as Courland, so Biron was called the Duke of Courland) region Duke Ernst Johann von Biron. Within Rundales Palace territory there are also many additional buildings and a large park. Since 1972 the Rundales Palace Museum can be visited and there have been many restorations done on this castle to make it look as it did in the 18th century.
Actually at one time there had been a Middle Age castle which stood in the place where Rundales Palace now stands. The palace took 32 years to build because when Russia took over the rule of the Kurzemes and Zemgales regions in 1740 Duke Biron was arrested and deported to Siberia. Upon his return in1762 the work on the castle was continued. During the time that Kurzeme and Zemgale once again became part of the Russian Empire in 1795 Rundales Palace went to Catherine II of Russia who was also known as Catherine the Great and she in turn gave it as a gift to Prince Platon Zubov’s younger brother who was a Russian general who led the Persian Expedition of 1796 Count Valerian Zubov. After Russian Emperor Paul I came to rule Count Zubov was dishonored and he spent a great deal of his time at Rundales Palace. When Emperor Paul I was killed in 1801 Count Zubov began holding a lot of great balls at the palace. At the Harvest Ball in 1802 there were known to be 1200 guests. After Count Zubov’s death in 1804 the castle went to his brother Platon Zubov. During the Russian-French War in 1812 Rundales Palace became an army hospital for the army of Napoleon I and in the castle’s park there are many soldiers buried for whom now there is a monument built to honor them in a corner of the garden. While Platon Zubov lived in Rundales Palace in 1814 he married a Lithuanian landowner's daughter Tekla and after Zubov died in 1822 Tekla remarried. Her new husband was Count Andrei Shuvalov and they lived in the castle until the end of the 19th century. During WW I Rundales Palace was used by the German Army and the Bermont Army. After the war the palace was in the hands of the Ministry of Agriculture and in the castle a school was established and a part of it was also the residence of veteran soldiers. In 1924 it was included in the list of National Monuments and in 1932 it passed into the hands of the Ministry of Education and was rebuilt for use as a school. After WW II the palace was used for grain warehouses and after the war the school took over the warehouses and it remained as a school until 1978. Other changes that Rundale went through was that in 1963 a part of it was taken over by the Museum of Regional Studies and Art of Bauska which opened one of their branches there. In 1972 it became a museum and the castle park was designed. To become a worthy tourist attraction in 2006 the European Union gave 1,342,346 Lats for its total reconstruction.
Rundales Palace has two stories with a total of 138 rooms. It consists of three wings and in the middle is an interior court. In the central and main part of the castle were the apartments of the Duke and his family who at one time lived in the castle. The Duchesses apartments were in the west wing. The parade rooms where court was held are in the east wing which include the Gold Hall (Throne Room), the White Hall (Ball room), the Grand Gallery (Banqueting room), and five small rooms where collections of Chinese and Japanese porcelain are displayed. Italian masters from St. Petersburg Francesco Martini and Carlo Zucchi created paintings on the castle ceilings and walls and sculptor Johann Michael Graff from Berlin made stucco decorations on the background of artificial marble. On the property are also stalls for horses and a carriage court. The park spreads out to the south of the palace. In part of the palace garden is a French garden in which part in 2005 a rose garden was planted. In front of the palace are water basins – the central pool is enclosed by four ornamental parterres and the surfaces are covered with chips of black and white marble and the lawn has boxwood hedging. Around the park runs an artificial canal and beyond the canal is a hunting park which consists of a forest.

Catherine the Great
Catherine the Great
Prince Paton Zubov
Prince Paton Zubov
Count Valerian Zubov
Count Valerian Zubov
Count Andrei Shuvalov
Count Andrei Shuvalov
Emperor Paul I
Emperor Paul I
The White Room
The White Room
Fountain in the courtyard
Fountain in the courtyard
A room in the Duke's apartments
A room in the Duke's apartments
An aerial view of Rundale
An aerial view of Rundale
Decorations near the ceiling
Decorations near the ceiling
The Lion Gates at the front of the palace
The Lion Gates at the front of the palace
Love the color of this room
Love the color of this room
Part of a ceiling painting
Part of a ceiling painting
Rundales Palace in the winter
Rundales Palace in the winter
When flowers bloom in May
When flowers bloom in May
Rundales roses
Rundales roses

Various tours are available for tourists. They may see the staterooms and the Duke’s former living quarters and his staterooms this is known as the short route. If they wish to take the long route they may see the staterooms, the Duke’s living quarters and staterooms, the Dushess’ apartments and the exhibition ”Seventeenth to Nineteenth Century Fashion in Latvia”. They may tour the gardens free of charge. This year there is the exhibition of sarcophagi ”Pompa funebris” for which there is a charge. Free exhibition ”Stone and Metal Carvings in Latvia” in the basement of the palace.


The Ghosts of Rundales Palace


The daughter of Count Shuvalov’s family doctor died. There was no funeral and the doctor died without having had the time to look into his daughter’s death. There was an unusual problem about burying the daughter. While the doctor was still alive he told everyone that his daughter had gone on a trip but he actually had hid her in the palace’s basement. Since this time supposedly her spirit walks about Rundales Palace in a white gown and asks passer-by to bury her so her soul can rest in peace.
Among the happenings that have been witnessed – a worker who was helping to restore the palace suddenly felt an unseen hand remove his glasses and saw the glasses floating away. He ran from the palace never to return. When the palace still had a school there a woman was cleaning the floors when she heard a sound against the window pane. She paid no attention. Then she felt someone tug at her skirt and a voice whispered for her to go away. She figured she was imagining things and continued cleaning. Her skirt was tugged a second time and again she heard someone whisper go away only a bit louder. Suddenly the woman couldn’t move and then there came a stronger tug and a very loud voice shouted telling her to go away. That got the woman moving she ran from the classroom and in the hallway a woman dressed in white passed her by. The ghostly woman quietly drifted to the end of the hall and lifted the lid from the student’s water bucket and spit in it. Afterwards the cleaning woman doesn’t recall how she got home.
Rundales Palace tour guide Benita Spale tells her story. Since restoration was going on some rooms were missing their doors. One doorway had a frame incased in a plastic sheet so that the doorway could be closed. The frame had brackets which connected them to the palace alarm system . Benita was making the rounds one evening checking out the palace’s signalization system. She came to this doorway and carefully closed the frame, it swung open again she swung the doorway closed again and again it swung open. Then she felt a tug on her skirt. This time the unseen holder didn’t let go of her skirt and with difficulty she pulled her skirt out of the unseen grasp. Down the steps Benita ran. Guards downstairs seeing how frightened she was inquired what had happened. Of course when they went upstairs there was no one there.
Now most of these stories have to be taken with a grain of salt. However being a believer of the paranormal perfectly natural happenings in such an old palace and quite fascinating. I haven’t been to Rundales Palace for ages but just writing this piece I do believe I will go visit the palace this spring especially to look at those lovely gardens when the flowers are in bloom in May and who knows who I might bump into. Just look at that ghost picture if it’s real there is definitely somebody on the stairs.


A ghost on the stairs at Rundale Palace
A ghost on the stairs at Rundale Palace
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Comments

dinkan53 profile image

dinkan53 Level 6 Commenter 3 months ago

Very interesting. Enjoyed reading your hub. Excellent pictures too. Voted as Interesting.

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Hub Author 3 months ago

Thanks for reading and voting dinkan53. Glad you liked it.

thelyricwriter profile image

thelyricwriter Level 8 Commenter 3 months ago

Up and all across but funny. Wow, 32 years to complete this palace! Such a beautiful picture of the palace Gypsy. I love your paranormal stories. This is a great documentary my friend with a detailed history. I always agree with the experts, with so much history in one place, paranormal activities is likely. You did a great job researching this Gypsy and very well written. Is it just me or does it look like there could possibly be two ghost on the stairway? Looks like a small one on the right bottom of the staircase. Could be the light though. Anyway, great job! These are some beautiful pics. I would love to have a tour myself. Maybe one day after I hit the lotto.lol Hope your doing great and have a great day. See you soon.

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Hub Author 3 months ago

Thanks for stopping by thelyricwriter your comments are always appreciated. Looked at that ghost pic again. Yep could be either the light or someone else wanted to get in the pic. This is the palace they most take all visiting dignitaries to.

epigramman profile image

epigramman 3 months ago

...love your ghost stories - Alastar Packer, a hub buddy of mine would like this; and this is such a world class presentation .....I must promote you and your work on my FACEBOOK page with a direct link back here - and sending you warm wishes and good energy from lake erie time ontario canada 6:09am

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Hub Author 3 months ago

Thank you for commenting epigramman and I'm glad you passed this along. This is a truly fascinating palace and because of its age and size I'm not really surprised that there must be a few ghosts in there. In the wintertime however it is rather dismal and appears isolated from everything so the best time to visit it is spring and summer.Best wishes to you too and your gorgeous feline. Love that face of hers.

freelanceauthor profile image

freelanceauthor 3 months ago

You've done a great job on research about the facts and history of the palace, including its ghost stories. Interesting hub,voted up

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Hub Author 3 months ago

Thanks so much for commenting and voting freelanceauthor. It is truly a lovely castle especially when everything begins to bloom in the spring.

carolinemd21 profile image

carolinemd21 Level 7 Commenter 2 months ago

This article is really interesting. Loved the part about the ghost and the photos are gorgeous! I've been meaning to compliment you on your hair color too. Love that red! Had that color before. Always loved it. Looks great on you! Voted up. :)

Gypsy Rose Lee profile image

Gypsy Rose Lee Hub Author 2 months ago

Thank you Caroline. Appreciate your comment. This is a very wonderful and fantastic palace. I've always liked red hair.

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