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Cheaper than
OPODO !
Cheaper than TOTALSTAY !
Cheaper than EXPEDIA !
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| Any visit to Budapest reveals a city that is going places. Communism is well and truly history – the young are eager to adopt Western European values, while remaining in an obsessive relationship with Hungary’s fascinating past. The traditions and history of the Magyar people are still vitally important, as is the ubiquitous mobile phone. |
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The key to Budapest lies in its history, marked by alternate periods of great wealth and prosperity and devastating eras of political and social upheaval. Repeated warfare was inevitable due to the strategic location of Budapest, spreading out on either side of the River Danube (Duna) in the heart of Europe, offering a defensive position and potential control of Central Europe’s main waterway. The Magyars view their history not in black and white but in gold and silver. The first Golden Age coincided with the reign of Renaissance King Matyás (1458-90). The second Golden Age was symbolised by the 1896 Millennium celebration in Városliget (City Park) and the Silver Age was the 20th-century inter-war period, when the likes of Evelyn Waugh and the Prince of Wales frequented Budapest’s spas and casinos. Balanced against the good times, however, there is the Turkish victory over the Hungarians in 1526 – with the ensuing rebuilding of Buda as a Turkish capital – the Hapsburg rule that continued to deprive Hungary of its autonomy until 1867, the devastation caused by World War II and Russian control, only lifted in 1989. These significant events have turned the Hungarians into a flexible and resilient race, proud of their national heroes – Count István Széchenyi (1791-1860), responsible for the first bridge across the River Danube, and the poet Sándor Petofi, remembered for his revolutionary Nemzeti dal (National Song), read on the steps of the National Museum on 15 March 1848. |
The key to Budapest lies in its history, marked by alternate periods of great
wealth and prosperity and devastating eras of political and social upheaval.
Repeated warfare was inevitable due to the strategic location of Budapest,
spreading out on either side of the River Danube (Duna) in the heart of
Europe, offering a defensive position and potential control of Central
Europe’s main waterway. The Magyars view their history not in black and white
but in gold and silver. The first Golden Age coincided with the reign of
Renaissance King Matyás (1458-90). The second Golden Age was symbolised by the
1896 Millennium celebration in Városliget (City Park) and the Silver Age
was the 20th-century inter-war period, when the likes of Evelyn Waugh and the
Prince of Wales frequented Budapest’s spas and casinos. Balanced against the
good times, however, there is the Turkish victory over the Hungarians in 1526
– with the ensuing rebuilding of Buda as a Turkish capital – the Hapsburg
rule that continued to deprive Hungary of its autonomy until 1867, the
devastation caused by World War II and Russian control, only lifted in 1989.
These significant events have turned the Hungarians into a flexible and
resilient race, proud of their national heroes – Count István Széchenyi
(1791-1860), responsible for the first bridge across the River Danube, and the
poet Sándor Petofi, remembered for his revolutionary Nemzeti dal
(National Song), read on the steps of the National Museum on 15 March 1848.
The modern Budapest was born in 1873, when Buda, Óbuda and Pest were
officially joined. Today, the city is composed of 23 districts (kerületek),
each designated on maps, street signs and addresses by Roman numerals (I. to
XXIII.). Buda and Pest still remain distinct, however, creating an interesting
west bank/east bank contrast. Hilly Buda is situated in the west, with its
narrow cobbled streets and mixture of medieval and neo-classical buildings
almost totally reconstructed after World War II. Flat Pest lies to the east,
with its wide boulevards and Art Deco styles. The city is a mixture of Turkish,
Venetian, Empire and Art Nouveau in a crazy mosaic of mismatching styles.
Perhaps the Hilton Hotel combines the oddest example, with its 13th-century
Gothic church, 17th-century façade and gleaming modern glass and concrete.
Budapest has a continental climate, with extreme differences in temperature
between the winter and summer months. Snowfall is frequent in winter and rain is
fairly common all year round. Two and a half million people – roughly
one-fifth of the country’s population – live in this cosmopolitan city,
making Budapest the political, intellectual, commercial and cultural capital of
Hungary.
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