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Open
every day
of the year
From April to October:
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
From November to March:
10 a.m. - 4.30 p.m. |
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The crane (in french: “grue”) - its heraldic representation
- inspired the name Gruyères. Despite the importance of the
House of Gruyères its beginnings remain quite mysterious.
Nineteen
counts are accounted for in the period between the 11th and 16th century.
The last of them, Michel, had been in financial trouble almost all
his life only to end in bankruptcy in 1554. His creditors the cantons
of Fribourg and Bern shared his earldom between them. From 1555 to
1798 the castle became residence to the bailiffs and then to the prefects
sent by Fribourg. In 1849 the castle was put up for sale and sold to
the Bovy and Balland families, who stayed at the castle during summer
time and restored it with the help of their painter friends.
The castle
was then bought back by the canton of Fribourg in 1938, made into a
museum and opened to the public. Since 1993, a foundation ensures the
conservation as well as the highlighting of the building and the collection |
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