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WESTERN TRANSDANUBIA - SZEKESFEHERVAR, TAC- GORSIUM

 

Székesfehérvár

Alba Regia, an ancient Hungarian city, with white, the colour of princes, in its name, was founded in 972 and was the first seat of the Hungarian monarchs. The country's main church, where 37 kings and 39 queens were crowned and 15 monarchs were buried, stood here for 500 years. The Holy Crown and the Archives were kept here and the Hungarian Diets were also held here. The outstanding role that the city played in the Middle Ages is witnessed by the main sights of Városház tér, including the orb and the Franciscan church built on the site of King St. Stephen's palace, where frescoes evoke the life of his son, St. Imre, who passed away at a young age. The Turks destroyed the coronation church in 1602.

Today only its foundations can be seen in the national memorial place, one of the most important groups of monuments in the country (Medieval Garden of Ruins, Koronázó tér), including the stone coffin of King St. Stephen (970?-1038) in a mausoleum decorated with frescoes depicting historical events. The ossuary keeps the remains of the Hungarian kings buried here. On what is today Géza fejedelem tér, a castle stood as early as 970 A.D., along with a small arched chapel, the floor plan of which, made of white stones, can be seen on the road. King Béla, who was king of Hungary at the time of the Mongol invasion in the 13th century, built the subsequent Episcopal cathedral as a royal palace before he moved his household to Buda. The cranium relic of St. Stephen is kept in the Baroque cathedral. The only surviving medieval building in the city is the net-vaulted St. Anna chapel from the 15th century. By prior arrangement, the Carmelite church and monastery, one of the city's most splendid monuments, can also be visited. The walls of the church with a superb interior are decorated with frescoes painted by F. A. Maulbertsch.

Baroque is the dominant style of the exquisite mansions of the landed aristocracy and the houses that once belonged to the middle classes in the city, which became a bishopric in 1777. The first Hungarian-language theatre operated here in the Győri House. The Baroque-Rococo splendour of the 18th-century Hiemer House with its closed balcony on the corner is magnificent. The Romantic residences at the Classicistic Vörösmarty tér show the workmanship of the architect Miklós Ybl (1814-1891), the city's famous son. The flower clock, always decorated with flowers of the season, is a rare sight. The skanzen in Palotaváros, winner of the Europa Nostra Award for saving folk architecture, contains 12 cottages and a Serbian church with a splendid iconostasis. The sculptor Jenő Bory (1879-1959) spent decades building a romantic Gothic (concrete) castle with his own hands. Blending various architectural styles, the Bory Castle houses his own works and those of contemporary sculptors.

Tác-Gorsium

The Hungarian Pompei, a religious centre at Gorsium-Herculia, Lower Pannonia and the scene of the cult of emperors, had its best days in the 2nd to 4th centuries. Today it is the largest archaeological park in the country. In the course of excavations, ongoing since 1958, the walls, gates, forums, temples and sanctuaries of this former Roman city have been uncovered and explored. In 260 A.D. the town perished during an attack of Barbarians. In 290 a new city, Herculia was founded on the old ruins. Surviving memorabilia from this age include a large palace, a row of shops, two early-Christian basilicas, a public bath and the ruins of a cemetery outside the city walls. The ruins are in a large park creating a Mediterranean atmosphere. A few pieces of Roman burial memorials and tomb stones were relocated here. The park also provides premises for an exhibition displaying the most splendid findings and a Greco-Roman theatre seating 1,200 persons. The ancient festival of Floralia is held in late April and early May. The performances of the Ludi Romani, i.e. the Gorsium Summer Theatre are organised in August.

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Székesfehérvár
Székesfehérvár

The stone coffin of King St. StephenThe stone coffin of King St. Stephen

Székesfehérvár, Park of the Ruins
Székesfehérvár, Park of the Ruins

Székesfehérvár in winter
Székesfehérvár in winter