Szentendre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Szentendre | |||
| Szentendre | |||
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| Location of Szentendre | |||
| Coordinates: 47°42′16″N 19°04′07″E / 47.70440°N 19.06858°E | |||
| Country | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| County | Pest | ||
| Area | |||
| - Total | 43.83 km2 (16.9 sq mi) | ||
| Population (2004) | |||
| - Total | 23,554 | ||
| - Density | 537.39/km2 (1,391.8/sq mi) | ||
| Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | ||
| - Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | ||
| Postal code | 2000 | ||
| Area code(s) | 26 | ||
Szentendre (Medieval Latin: Sankt Andrae; Serbian: Сентандреја, Sentandreja) is a riverside town in Pest county, Hungary, near the capital city of Budapest. Szentendre is known for its museums (most notably the Open-Air Ethnographic Museum), galleries, and artists. Due to its picturesque appearance and easy rail and river access, it has become a popular destination for tourists staying in Budapest and there are many shops and restaurants catering for these visitors.
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[edit] History
Populated for well over a millennium, under the Romans it was called Ulcisia Castra, meaning Wolf Castle. Since the 1500s it was considered the center of the Hungarian Serb community. At one point it had as many as eight Serbian Orthodox church buildings and 3 chapels, and only one each Roman-Catholic and Evangelical. It is still the see of the Buda Diocese of the Serb Orthodox Church. Szentendre and the surrounding villages were also inhabited by Bulgarians ever since the Middle Ages. In 1690, the Serbian teacher and hegumen Stevan notes that Szentendre was even called Bolgarija by some. It had a Bulgarian neighbourhood of settlers from Chiprovtsi (ćiprovačka) and a "Chiprovtsi church". The names of locals clearly hint at a Bulgarian population.[1]
In the 1700s, after liberation from the Turks, Szentendre enjoyed a rebirth with Mediterranean leanings, as Serbian, Croatian, Slovak, German and Greek newcomers moved in and lived alongside the Magyar inhabitants. According to the 1720 data, 88% of the population of the town were South Slavs (mostly Serbs, but also some South Slavic Catholics).[2] The town to this day is characterised by a south European atmosphere with much baroque architecture, churches of various faiths, narrow sidestreets, and cobblestone roads.
[edit] The arts
Szentendre has been the home of many generations of Hungarian artists since early 20th century. There are many museums and contemporary galleries representing the rich traditions of the visual art.
List of art museums:
Margit Anna - Imre Ámos Collection
Jenő Barcsay Collection
Béla Czóbel Museum
Károly Ferenczy Museum
János Kmetty Museum
Margit Kovács Ceramic Collection
Lajos Vajda Museum
Szentendre Gallery
Gallery of the Artists' Colony
ArtMill [1]
List of contemporary galleries:
Aktív Art Gallery
Gallery Erdész
Mûhely Gallery
Palmetta Design Gallery
ArtUnio Gallery [2]
Vajda Lajos Studio
[edit] People from Szentendre
- Jakov Ignjatović, famous Serbian 19th century novelist and prose writer
- Gavril Stefanović Venclović, early 18th century Serbian poet, writer, enlightener, orator and painter of church icons
- Evgen Dumča
- Jelena Bozda
- Avakum Avakumović
- Sima Ignjatović
- Pavle Sofrić
[edit] Population
Nationalities:
- Magyars - 92.3%
- Germans - 1%
- Slovaks - 0.6%
- Roma - 0.5%
- Serbs - 0.4%
- Others - 1%
- No answer, unknown - 4.2%
Religions:
- Roman Catholic - 49.3%
- Calvinist - 13.5%
- Lutheran - 2%
- Greek Catholic - 1.4%
- Others (Christian) - 1.2%
- Others (non-Christian) - 0.3%
- Atheist - 16.9%
- No answer, unknown - 15.4%
Today there are active Serbian, Croat, German and Polish municipal minority self-governments in Szentendre.
[edit] International relations
[edit] Twin towns - Sister cities
Kamianets-Podilskyi is twinned with:
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Szentendre |
- Homepage of the City of Szentendre (Hungarian Only)
- Szentendre in Olden Times and Today
- Szentendre Homepage (English, German, French, Hungarian)
- Jewel of the Danube (Hungarian Only)
- Travel Information (rec.org)
- Hungarian Open Air Museum
- Museums of Szentendre
- Link Collection (Hungarian Only)
- Business Link Collection (Hungarian Only)
- Szentendre travel guide from Wikitravel
[edit] Notes
- ^ Király, Péter (2002) (in German). Die Čiprovecer in Ungarn. Budapest: ELTE Szláv Intézet.
- ^ Dr. Dušan J. Popović, Srbi u Vojvodini, knjiga 2, Novi Sad, 1990.
- ^ "Kalisz Official Website - Twin Towns".
(in English and Polish) © 2005-2008 Urząd Miejski Kalisz. http://www.kalisz.pl/_portal/118951340446e688bcd9fee/Miasta_partnerskie.html. Retrieved on 2008-11-29.

