Eastern and Central Europe (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(Ben Green) #1
CENTRAL EASTERN EUROPE 333

Hungary has a varied landscape, with
forests and moun tains dominating the
north and a vast plain covering the
rest of the country. The Tisza river
and its tributaries shape the eastern
regions, while the west has Lake
Balaton, one of the largest lakes in
Europe. The mighty Danube flows
through the heart of the coun try,
bisecting the capital, Budapest, where
one-fifth of the population lives.

HISTORY
In AD 100 the Romans established
the town of Aquincum near modern-
day Budapest, and ruled the area,
then called Pannonia, for three cen-
turies. They withdrew completely
following the arrival of the Huns in

the early 5th century. After the death
of Attila the Hun in 453, the area was
ruled by the Goths, the Lombards
and the Avars. The ances tors of the
modern Hungarians, the Magyars,
migrated from the Urals in 896,
under the leadership of Prince Árpád,
whose dynasty lasted until 1301,
when King András III died with out
leaving an heir. The throne then
passed to a series of foreign kings,
but the country flourished, and dur-
ing the reign of Mátyás Corvinus
(r. 1458–90) it became the greatest
monar chy in Central Europe. The
Ottomans won a major victory at the
Battle of Mohács in 1526. They
returned to capture Buda in 1541,
which became the capital of

View from Castle Hill across the Danube, with the Parliament visible beyond Elizabeth Bridge, Budapest

The grand Széchenyi Baths in Városliget, Budapest


HUNGARY


U


niquely in Central Europe, Hungary is peopled by


descen dants of Magyars, a race from Central Asia who


set tled here in the 9th century. In recent times, the coun try


has fought against Ottoman, German, Austrian and Soviet occu piers,


yet its indigenous culture remains intact. In 1989 Hungary became


the first Eastern Bloc country to embrace Western-style democracy.

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