BANSKÁ STIAVNICA, Slovakia — In a small medieval Slovak town, couples are getting ready on Valentine’s Day to make a “deposit” about their romance in a place dedicated to love stories.
The “Love Bank” is the main attraction of an exhibition commemorating the world’s longest love poem, “Marina,” by Slovak poet Andrej Sladkovic.
Written in 1844, the 2,900-line poem tells the tale of the doomed love between the poet and Maria Pischlova.
They were star-crossed lovers, but unlike Romeo and Juliet, their tragic romance is a true story.
Marina’s parents shunned the poor poet and forced her to marry a wealthy gingerbread maker.
Love-o-meter
The house where Marina lived in the former silver mining town of Banska Stiavnica is now known as the “Epicenter of Love” and features an interactive exhibition inspired by the poem, including a “love-o-meter” measuring the strength of a couple’s affection.
“Our visitors say they are amazed by how a part of history and a poem that was on their elementary school compulsory reading list has been turned into a hands-on experience,” said Katarina Javorska, spokesperson for the NGO running the exhibition.
For many couples, it’s the “Love Bank” that attracts them to the site where they can store and preserve mementos of their romance.
A long tunnel in the basement of the house has been turned into a vault with exactly 100,000 tiny drawers, one for each letter, gap and punctuation mark of the original, 174-year-old manuscript of “Marina.”
Lovers can only make “deposits” a few times a year—the next date is Valentine’s Day.
“My fiancée and I will come back in a couple of days and hide the cinema tickets from our first date here,” 24-year-old Dominika Hrabusova told Agence France-Presse.
Another couple, Jan and Anna have brought their 7-month-old baby son along. “This is our fourth or fifth visit to Banska Stiavnica. Before we got married we used to come more often,” said 38-year-old Jan.
“The town is a jewel box itself. I am impressed by how clever and inventive this exhibition is,” he adds, lauding the charm of Banska Stiavnica, listed as a Unesco World Heritage site in 1993.
‘Register of Love’
As visitors to the exhibition pass through rooms combining modern design and 500-year-old rafters, a truly Potteresque experience awaits them: four “paintings”—large flat-screen TVs—on the wall suddenly come alive and act out scenes from the life of the poet and Marina.
In another room, one can flip through the pages of the “Register of Love,” weighing 53 kilograms and consisting of 3,200 pages that will be gradually filled with notes from lovers who visit the former dwelling of the poet’s muse.
The designers of the exhibition eye turning the “Epicenter of Love” into a major attraction, a sort of place of pilgrimage for lovers from across the globe.
“Some say it’s a bold and ambitious plan. But if millions are willing to make the trip to Verona to see the balcony of the imaginary couple of Romeo and Juliet, I believe many will come to the Epicenter of Love to relive a real love story,” Javorska said.