Nalà ¾ovské Hory is a town in Klatovy District in the Plzeà  Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,200 inhabitants.
Nalà ¾ovské Hory consists of 13 municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
Nalà ¾ovské Hory is located about east of Klatovy and south of Plzeà Â. Most of the municipal territory lies in the Blatná Uplands. A small part in the southwest extends into the Bohemian Forest Foothills and includes the highest point of Nalà ¾ovské Hory, the hill Vidhoà ¡à ¥ at above sea level. The municipal territory is rich in small streams and fishponds.
The first written mention of Nalà ¾ovy is from 1379. Stà ÂÃÂbrné Hory was founded in 1521 as a mining settlement and it became a market town in 1530. The mining of silver, lead and tin ended in 1585.
In 1769 the Nalà ¾ovy estate was acquired by Nicholas Taaffe, 6th Viscount Taaffe, however, the family memoirs identify his son Francis as the first owner. The Viscounts Taaffe were the most significant owners of the estate. They owned Nalà ¾ovy until 1937, when Richard Taaffe sold it to brothers Frantià ¡ek and Karel Müller.
The Müller brothers were entrepreneurs who reconstructed farm buildings, produced cheese here and cultivated improved varieties of rye and oats. After World War II, their properties were confiscated and the brothers had to emigrate. The castle was returned to the Müller family in 1993, but in 2008 they sold it to a private company.
The municipality was established in 1952 by the merger of Stà ÂÃÂbrné Hory () with Nalà ¾ovy (). It regained the town status in 2008.
The I/22 road (the section from Klatovy to Strakonice) passes through the town.
On the site of a former fortress documented in 1380, the Renaissance Nalà ¾ovy Castle was built in 1618âÂÂ1620. In 1745 it was modified in the Baroque style. The castle is surrounded by an English park from the early 17th century with romantic modifications from around 1840. Today the castle and the park are privately owned and inaccessible to the public.
The Viscounts Taaffe had artificial ruins resembling their former Irish family home, Ballymote Castle, built in the nearby forest on the Praà ¡ivice hill around 1840. A forest park with stone statues of a dragon and a turtle was created around the ruins.
The Church of Saint Catherine in Stà ÂÃÂbrné Hory was built in the Baroque style in 1721âÂÂ1723. Stations of the Cross next to the church dates from the 19th century.