
Fekete-kastély
In Fekete-kastély, on the outskirt of Balatonederics, a once-private Nedeczky estate became the stage for a chain of violent deaths and espionage—so the name “Fekete” grew darker with each new owner. The castle had been built by the Nedeczky family, taking its name from a former black colour on its roof—though others linked it to black-painted doors and windows. The story turns sharply in 1864, when Nedeczky István was arrested for preparing an armed uprising, sentenced to death, and then—through the intervention of Deák Ferenc, his nephew—had the punishment reduced to 20 years in fortress imprisonment. He was finally freed with the amnesty granted during the 1867 Compromise. After a murder in 1912—an edericsi gulyás killed his lover, the castle’s cook—the deaths escalated. In spring 1914, Nedeczky Jenő ended his own life on his 74th birthday. …
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