THE "BĄKOWIEC" CASTLE
The origins of the castle are not well known. Originally there was a wooden fortress, erected at the beginning of the 14th century and belonged to the family of Toporczyków, who also adopted the name Sea. Probably they had a conspiracy on their conscience, for which Władysław Łokietek took them from the lands, sending the village of Morsko in 1327 a monastery in Mstow. We are not sure that there was a castle here. It is possible that the defensive object was created during the construction of other Eagle Nests - during the time of Casimir the Great - but also the fortress could be the work of Prince Władysław Opolczyk. The first mention of the castle dates back to 1390, when it belonged to the Santa Claus. The lands have often come from hand to hand. Extensive development at the turn of the 16th and 17th centuries, and perhaps even rebuilt, the castle owed to the Włodkow family. However, in the 17th century (after the Swedish invasion) the fortress began to fall into ruin.
The twentieth century brought with it a number of bizarre ideas. Even before the war, the owner of the site, architect Witold Czeczott, using the material obtained from the castle walls built a house here. In the times of the Polish People's Republic, the area was transformed into a holiday resort, ruining new buildings and the construction of a ski lift. The castle "Bąkowiec" was erected on the set of an irregular polygon. The stone gate, which remains to this day, was introduced into a small courtyard surrounded by a wall and quadrangular rooms on the opposite sides. At the corners, there were bastions of observation and defense. The fortifications of the castle were very difficult to reach - they were accessible only by the system of bridges and ladders.