BytÃÂa () is a town in northwestern Slovakia. It is located on the Váh River near the cities of à ½ilina and Povaà ¾ská Bystrica. It belongs to Upper Váh region of tourism.
The name comes from a Slavic personal name Bytek, Bytko â BytÃÂa.
The town arose in 1946 by a merger of the settlements Malá BytÃÂa (including Beà Âov and Mikà ¡ová), Veþká BytÃÂa and HlinÃÂk nad Váhom. The first written reference to the town's main part Veþká BytÃÂa dates from 1234 as terra Bycha. The settlement got its town charter in 1378. It was the seat of a feudal dominion and later a town with many craftsmen. In Hungarian, it was known as Biccse.
The town features a famous castle the Thurzó Castle built as a water castle by Pongrác Szentmiklósi in the 13th century and rebuilt in the 16th century in Renaissance style by Ferenc Thurzó. The town also houses the Wedding Palace (built by György Thurzó for his daughters' wedding) from 1601, which is the only building of this kind in Slovakia, Renaissance, Baroque and Classical bourgeoisie houses, an archive, and a museum (in the Wedding Palace).
It has a population ofÃÂ people (31 December ).
Today, the town is home to machine (Kinex), textile, wood processing (sports equipment), and food (brewery) industries. The brewery closed in the 2010s.
BytÃÂa includes the following former villages: Psurnovice, Hrabove, Horne Hlboke, Dolne Hlboke, Hlboke nad Vahom, Benov, Miksova, Hlinik nad Vahom, Velka Bytca, Mala Bytca.
Current boroughs (year of merger in brackets):
BytÃÂa is twinned with:
The records for genealogical research are available at the state archive "Statny Archiv in Bytca, Slovakia"