Budapest
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World / Hungary / Budapest
city, draw only border, capital city of country
Budapest (pronounced /ˈbuːdəpest/ (AE), also /ˈbju-/ (BE) or /ˈbʊ-/; Hungarian IPA: ['budɒpɛʃt]) is the capital city of Hungary and the country's principal political, cultural, commercial, industrial and transportation centre. The official language spoken is Hungarian. Budapest had 1,696,128 [1] inhabitants in 2007 (with official agglomeration 2,421,831 [2]), down from a mid-1980s peak of 2.1 million. Budapest became a single city occupying both banks of the river Danube with the amalgamation on 17 November 1873 of right-bank (west) Buda (Ofen in German) and Óbuda (Old Buda or Alt-Ofen) together with Pest on the left (east) bank.
That Budapest - one of the most beautiful cities in the world – has developed where it is, is not down to some historical accident. Take a look at Gellért Hill, right next to the River Danube as it flows majestically through the centre of the modern city. It was precisely the combination of the relative ease of crossing the River here and the natural protection the hill offered against invasion that decided the earliest settlers it was the ideal place to build a town. The Eravisci, a tribe of highly cultured Celts, had already settled at Gellért Hill in the third and fourth centuries B.C. They worked with iron, decorated their earthenware pots and even minted their own coins. Later, the Romans built a settlement at today’s Óbuda. They called it Aquincum and it was an important station along the limes which ran alongside the River Danube.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=34tox4z8AVM
Google panorama: goo.gl/maps/on2QN2UPRw9fxgPdA
That Budapest - one of the most beautiful cities in the world – has developed where it is, is not down to some historical accident. Take a look at Gellért Hill, right next to the River Danube as it flows majestically through the centre of the modern city. It was precisely the combination of the relative ease of crossing the River here and the natural protection the hill offered against invasion that decided the earliest settlers it was the ideal place to build a town. The Eravisci, a tribe of highly cultured Celts, had already settled at Gellért Hill in the third and fourth centuries B.C. They worked with iron, decorated their earthenware pots and even minted their own coins. Later, the Romans built a settlement at today’s Óbuda. They called it Aquincum and it was an important station along the limes which ran alongside the River Danube.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=34tox4z8AVM
Google panorama: goo.gl/maps/on2QN2UPRw9fxgPdA
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 47°28'53"N 19°7'48"E
- Érd 23 km
- Szazhalombatta 25 km
- Dabas 30 km
- Tatabánya 63 km
- Székesfehérvár 65 km
- Győr 118 km
- Nitra 126 km
- Banská Bystrica 145 km
- Trenčín 181 km
- Bratislava 185 km
- Népliget 1.6 km
- Kút-tó erdő 2 km
- Dew Old Street landfill 2.1 km
- József Attila housing estate 2.2 km
- Kőbánya 2.3 km
- Wekerle estate 2.9 km
- Kispesti lakótelep 3 km
- 9th district, Ferencváros (Budapest) 3.5 km
- Kispest, XIX. kerület 3.7 km
- Pestszentlőrinc-Pestszentimre, the 18th district of Budapest 8.5 km
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