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Hódmezővásárhely

Hódmezővásárhely (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈhoːdmɛzøːvaːʃaːrhɛj] (listen); also known by other alternative names) is a city with county rights in southeast Hungary, on the Great Hungarian Plain, at the meeting point of the Békés-Csanádi Ridge and the clay grassland surrounding the river Tisza. In 2017, it had a population of 44,009.

Hódmezővásárhely
Hódmezővásárhely Megyei Jogú Város
Hotel Black Eagle
Nickname: 
Peasant Paris
Hódmezővásárhely
Location of Hódmezővásárhely
Hódmezővásárhely
Hódmezővásárhely (Hungary)
Coordinates: 46°25′49″N 20°19′08″E / 46.43039°N 20.31881°E / 46.43039; 20.31881Coordinates: 46°25′49″N 20°19′08″E / 46.43039°N 20.31881°E / 46.43039; 20.31881
Country Hungary
CountyCsongrád
DistrictHódmezővásárhely
Government
 • MayorPéter Márki-Zay (Independent)
Area
 • Total487.98 km2 (188.41 sq mi)
Population
 (2017)
 • Total44,009[1]
 • Density97.87/km2 (253.5/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
6800
Area code(+36) 62
Websitehodmezovasarhely.hu

Etymology and names

The city's name, which literally translates to Beavers' Field Marketplace, was first mentioned after the unification of two Árpád-era villages, Hód and Vásárhely, the former getting its name after Beaver's lake, an apocope of Hód-tó (now one of the city's districts and the canal Hód-tavi-csatorna) and the latter coming from the mediaeval legal term marking settlements with the right of hosting markets and literally meaning market town. The middle term mező, which also refers to the city's state as an oppidum, a city with certain rights that are given by its feudal ruler, was later added to the town and to its name.[2]

The city is also known by alternative names in other languages: Croatian: Vašrelj; Romanian: Ionești; and Serbian: Вашархељ, romanizedVašarhelj.

History

Prehistory

There is evidence of human habitation close to the modern town dating back 6,000 years, and archaeological evidence suggests that the area has been continuously inhabited since then by a variety of different cultures. Neolithic dwellings recessed into the ground stored domestic items such as plates, as well as the Kökénydombi Vénusz fertility symbol. Remains have also been found from the Copper Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age and the great migrations period. The town's archaeological treasures can now be seen at the permanent archaeological exhibition of the Tornyai János Museum.

Medieval period

At the end of the 8th century, the Avars found mostly remnants of the nomadic population and of the agrarian and animal-breeding Slavs.

 
Hódmezővásárhely Magyar bank

Before the Mongol invasion of Hungary, at least seven villages with churches existed in the area. After the devastation caused by the Mongols, more villages were established, but these later became victims of the Turkish invasion. The territories of these villages were later absorbed by Hódmezővásárhely as the town grew. Evidence of more than twenty villages and churches from the Middle Ages have been found.

The present town of Hódmezővásárhely developed in the 15th century when Hód, Vásárhely, Tarján, and Ábrány, once small villages, became joined and the market town was established. The town is known to have been called Hódvásárhely in 1437. The town's location next to the road leading from Csongrád to Csanád was advantageous for the development of trade. In the Middle Ages markets, and particularly the trade in livestock, fuelled its growth.

Hódmezővásárhely was part of Csongrád comitatus. Part of that county was under Turkish control after 1542. The region between the Tisza and the Danube belonged to the Ottoman Empire, while the area to the east of the Tisza, including Hódmezővásárhely, belonged to Transylvania. After the military expedition of 1552, the whole of Csongrád county was taken by the Turks. The entire area was devastated by the Turkish offensive in 1566. The region was occupied by the Turks for the next 150 years.

Independence

At the time of the Rákóczi war of independence (1703–1711), the town was under the control of Count Miklós Bercsényi. The royal court confiscated the estate and gave it to imperial general Leopold Schlick. During the war of independence, Miklós Bercsényi seized the town back and gave it to the Kuruts general Sándor Károlyi for leasehold. The royal court in Vienna did not accept Károlyi's claim to the territory after the peace of Szatmár and he was only able to retrieve it by buying it back years later. From 1722 to 1818, when landowner jurisdiction was abolished, the Károlyi family possessed the town.

In the 1848–49 fights for freedom, Hódmezővásárhely played a significant part in national events. Lajos Kossuth reached the town on 3 October 1848 on his second recruiting trip. While there, he received the news that the Hungarian Army had been engaged in battle at Pákozd, and patriotic fervour gripped the town. Troops from Hódmezővásárhely took part in beating off the southern Serbian attacks.

After the control of the Theiss in the 1860s, the surrounding lakes and brooks dried up. The inner areas were progressively filled and the town's population increased.

Hódmezővásárhely seceded from the county in 1873 and received the independent municipals rights. The first signs of industrialisation were apparent from that time. In 1890 Hódmezővásárhely was the fourth largest Hungarian town with 55,475 inhabitants.

20th century

 
The town hall
 
Hódmezővásárhelyi Népkert railway station's main building was built in 1930 with folk Art-Nouveau elements

The modern picture of the town was established at the turn of the century. These decades were characterised by the construction of wells, dynamic building operations, and the construction of canals. 70 per cent of the population, however, was engaged in farming and animal breeding.

A typical system of settlement was established with a huge system of detached farms. Animal breeding still dominated the livelihood of the inhabitants. Rural animal breeding was characterised by economic efficiency. Quality horse breeding, which was partly an export product and partly demanded by the needs of agriculture, was profitable. Poultry and egg production for the markets also flourished. Animal breeding was gradually replaced by extensive growing of corn, which became the basis of the town's economy and employed large numbers of workers.

The First World War hindered the development of the town and its people suffered losses. The human costs of the war contributed to the social tension around this time which led to demonstrations in Vásárhely.

In the first decade of the Horthy era, there was a fairly good market for the town's agricultural products. Although the war and the occupation debilitated the economy of the town, the possibilities for the sale of the high-quality corn increased. Pork breeding grew, as did the export of poultry. Dozens of medium-scale factories sprung up, but the great world economic crisis demolished this new-found prosperity. Unemployment increased, until a new economic boom in the late 1930s.

The Second World War interrupted the development again. Soviet troops reached the town on 25 September 1944. Most of the powerful and well-off citizens escaped from Vásárhely. The war surged through the town on 8 October. The damage in human lives and buildings was not so huge as the damage to industrial equipment and infrastructure.

At the end of the 1960s giant factories were established. Full employment was realised but the town's industry proved inefficient. Political and economic bankruptcy, however, only emerged at the end of the 1980s.

After the transition in 1990, Hódmezővásárhely became a municipal town of county rank. After the municipal elections, its government was established.

The town is now a destination for foreign and domestic tourism. Museums, churches, triumphal wells, statues, parks, and a thermal swimming hall are notable attractions.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1850 33,325—    
1870 41,018+23.1%
1890 47,891+16.8%
1900 50,673+5.8%
1910 51,920+2.5%
1920 50,949−1.9%
1930 50,583−0.7%
1941 51,159+1.1%
1949 48,982−4.3%
1960 53,492+9.2%
1970 53,715+0.4%
1980 54,486+1.4%
1990 51,180−6.1%
2001 49,382−3.5%
2011 46,047−6.8%

Politics

The most recent mayor of Hódmezővásárhely was István Almási (Fidesz-KDNP), but he died on 20 November 2017, leaving the position vacant. The independent candidate Péter Márki-Zay won the mayoral by-election on 25 February 2018. His unexpected victory against the Fidesz candidate received international attention and was seen as a possible indicator for a change in the Hungarian parliamentary election on 8 April 2018.[3] The swing was not replicated in the parliamentary election.

The current mayor of Hódmezővásárhely is Péter Márki-Zay (Mindenki Magyarországa).

The local Municipal Assembly, elected at the 2019 local government elections, is made up of 15 members (1 Mayor, 10 Individual constituencies MEPs and 4 Compensation List MEPs) divided into this political parties and alliances:[4]

Party Seats Current Municipal Assembly
  Mindenki Magyarországa-For a clean Vásárhely 10 M                  
  Love Vásárhely-Fidesz-KDNP 5                    

List of mayors

List of City Mayors from 1990:

Member Party Term of office
András Rapcsák Independent 1990–2002
KDNP
Fidesz
János Lázár Fidesz (-KDNP) 2002–2012
István Almási Fidesz-KDNP 2012–2017
Péter Márki-Zay Independent 2018–

People

Sport

The association football club, Hódmezővásárhelyi FC, is based in Hódmezővásárhely.

Twin towns – sister cities

Hódmezővásárhely is twinned with:[5]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Hódmezővásárhely, KSH
  2. ^ Kiss Lajos: Földrajzi nevek etimológiai szótára I. (A–K). 4. bőv., jav. kiadás. Budapest: Akadémiai. 1988. 599. o. ISBN 963-05-4568-3
  3. ^ "Fidesz bastion Hódmezővásárhely falls". The Budapest Beacon. 26 February 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Városi közgyűlés tagjai 2019–2024 – Hódmezővárárhely (Csongrád megye)". valasztas.hu. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  5. ^ "Testvérvárosok". hodmezovasarhely.hu (in Hungarian). Hódmezővásárhely. Retrieved 28 March 2021.

External links

  • Official website in Hungarian and English
  • Hódmezővásárhely Blog
  • Aerial photography: Hódmezővásárhely
  • Hódmezővásárhely at Google Earth Community 14 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Picture Gallery
  • Hódmezővásárhely at funiq.hu

hódmezővásárhely, hungarian, pronunciation, ˈhoːdmɛzøːvaːʃaːrhɛj, listen, also, known, other, alternative, names, city, with, county, rights, southeast, hungary, great, hungarian, plain, meeting, point, békés, csanádi, ridge, clay, grassland, surrounding, rive. Hodmezovasarhely Hungarian pronunciation ˈhoːdmɛzoːvaːʃaːrhɛj listen also known by other alternative names is a city with county rights in southeast Hungary on the Great Hungarian Plain at the meeting point of the Bekes Csanadi Ridge and the clay grassland surrounding the river Tisza In 2017 it had a population of 44 009 HodmezovasarhelyCity with county rightsHodmezovasarhely Megyei Jogu VarosHotel Black EagleFlagCoat of armsNickname Peasant ParisHodmezovasarhelyLocation of HodmezovasarhelyShow map of Csongrad CountyHodmezovasarhelyHodmezovasarhely Hungary Show map of HungaryCoordinates 46 25 49 N 20 19 08 E 46 43039 N 20 31881 E 46 43039 20 31881 Coordinates 46 25 49 N 20 19 08 E 46 43039 N 20 31881 E 46 43039 20 31881Country HungaryCountyCsongradDistrictHodmezovasarhelyGovernment MayorPeter Marki Zay Independent Area Total487 98 km2 188 41 sq mi Population 2017 Total44 009 1 Density97 87 km2 253 5 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code6800Area code 36 62Websitehodmezovasarhely wbr hu Contents 1 Etymology and names 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Medieval period 2 3 Independence 2 4 20th century 3 Demographics 4 Politics 4 1 List of mayors 5 People 6 Sport 7 Twin towns sister cities 8 Gallery 9 References 10 External linksEtymology and names EditThe city s name which literally translates to Beavers Field Marketplace was first mentioned after the unification of two Arpad era villages Hod and Vasarhely the former getting its name after Beaver s lake an apocope of Hod to now one of the city s districts and the canal Hod tavi csatorna and the latter coming from the mediaeval legal term marking settlements with the right of hosting markets and literally meaning market town The middle term mezo which also refers to the city s state as an oppidum a city with certain rights that are given by its feudal ruler was later added to the town and to its name 2 The city is also known by alternative names in other languages Croatian Vasrelj Romanian Ionești and Serbian Vasharheљ romanized Vasarhelj History EditPrehistory Edit There is evidence of human habitation close to the modern town dating back 6 000 years and archaeological evidence suggests that the area has been continuously inhabited since then by a variety of different cultures Neolithic dwellings recessed into the ground stored domestic items such as plates as well as the Kokenydombi Venusz fertility symbol Remains have also been found from the Copper Age Bronze Age Iron Age and the great migrations period The town s archaeological treasures can now be seen at the permanent archaeological exhibition of the Tornyai Janos Museum Medieval period Edit At the end of the 8th century the Avars found mostly remnants of the nomadic population and of the agrarian and animal breeding Slavs Hodmezovasarhely Magyar bank Before the Mongol invasion of Hungary at least seven villages with churches existed in the area After the devastation caused by the Mongols more villages were established but these later became victims of the Turkish invasion The territories of these villages were later absorbed by Hodmezovasarhely as the town grew Evidence of more than twenty villages and churches from the Middle Ages have been found The present town of Hodmezovasarhely developed in the 15th century when Hod Vasarhely Tarjan and Abrany once small villages became joined and the market town was established The town is known to have been called Hodvasarhely in 1437 The town s location next to the road leading from Csongrad to Csanad was advantageous for the development of trade In the Middle Ages markets and particularly the trade in livestock fuelled its growth Hodmezovasarhely was part of Csongrad comitatus Part of that county was under Turkish control after 1542 The region between the Tisza and the Danube belonged to the Ottoman Empire while the area to the east of the Tisza including Hodmezovasarhely belonged to Transylvania After the military expedition of 1552 the whole of Csongrad county was taken by the Turks The entire area was devastated by the Turkish offensive in 1566 The region was occupied by the Turks for the next 150 years Independence Edit At the time of the Rakoczi war of independence 1703 1711 the town was under the control of Count Miklos Bercsenyi The royal court confiscated the estate and gave it to imperial general Leopold Schlick During the war of independence Miklos Bercsenyi seized the town back and gave it to the Kuruts general Sandor Karolyi for leasehold The royal court in Vienna did not accept Karolyi s claim to the territory after the peace of Szatmar and he was only able to retrieve it by buying it back years later From 1722 to 1818 when landowner jurisdiction was abolished the Karolyi family possessed the town In the 1848 49 fights for freedom Hodmezovasarhely played a significant part in national events Lajos Kossuth reached the town on 3 October 1848 on his second recruiting trip While there he received the news that the Hungarian Army had been engaged in battle at Pakozd and patriotic fervour gripped the town Troops from Hodmezovasarhely took part in beating off the southern Serbian attacks After the control of the Theiss in the 1860s the surrounding lakes and brooks dried up The inner areas were progressively filled and the town s population increased Hodmezovasarhely seceded from the county in 1873 and received the independent municipals rights The first signs of industrialisation were apparent from that time In 1890 Hodmezovasarhely was the fourth largest Hungarian town with 55 475 inhabitants 20th century Edit The town hall Hodmezovasarhelyi Nepkert railway station s main building was built in 1930 with folk Art Nouveau elements The modern picture of the town was established at the turn of the century These decades were characterised by the construction of wells dynamic building operations and the construction of canals 70 per cent of the population however was engaged in farming and animal breeding A typical system of settlement was established with a huge system of detached farms Animal breeding still dominated the livelihood of the inhabitants Rural animal breeding was characterised by economic efficiency Quality horse breeding which was partly an export product and partly demanded by the needs of agriculture was profitable Poultry and egg production for the markets also flourished Animal breeding was gradually replaced by extensive growing of corn which became the basis of the town s economy and employed large numbers of workers The First World War hindered the development of the town and its people suffered losses The human costs of the war contributed to the social tension around this time which led to demonstrations in Vasarhely In the first decade of the Horthy era there was a fairly good market for the town s agricultural products Although the war and the occupation debilitated the economy of the town the possibilities for the sale of the high quality corn increased Pork breeding grew as did the export of poultry Dozens of medium scale factories sprung up but the great world economic crisis demolished this new found prosperity Unemployment increased until a new economic boom in the late 1930s The Second World War interrupted the development again Soviet troops reached the town on 25 September 1944 Most of the powerful and well off citizens escaped from Vasarhely The war surged through the town on 8 October The damage in human lives and buildings was not so huge as the damage to industrial equipment and infrastructure At the end of the 1960s giant factories were established Full employment was realised but the town s industry proved inefficient Political and economic bankruptcy however only emerged at the end of the 1980s After the transition in 1990 Hodmezovasarhely became a municipal town of county rank After the municipal elections its government was established The town is now a destination for foreign and domestic tourism Museums churches triumphal wells statues parks and a thermal swimming hall are notable attractions Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 185033 325 187041 018 23 1 189047 891 16 8 190050 673 5 8 191051 920 2 5 192050 949 1 9 193050 583 0 7 194151 159 1 1 194948 982 4 3 196053 492 9 2 197053 715 0 4 198054 486 1 4 199051 180 6 1 200149 382 3 5 201146 047 6 8 Politics EditThe most recent mayor of Hodmezovasarhely was Istvan Almasi Fidesz KDNP but he died on 20 November 2017 leaving the position vacant The independent candidate Peter Marki Zay won the mayoral by election on 25 February 2018 His unexpected victory against the Fidesz candidate received international attention and was seen as a possible indicator for a change in the Hungarian parliamentary election on 8 April 2018 3 The swing was not replicated in the parliamentary election The current mayor of Hodmezovasarhely is Peter Marki Zay Mindenki Magyarorszaga The local Municipal Assembly elected at the 2019 local government elections is made up of 15 members 1 Mayor 10 Individual constituencies MEPs and 4 Compensation List MEPs divided into this political parties and alliances 4 Party Seats Current Municipal Assembly Mindenki Magyarorszaga For a clean Vasarhely 10 M Love Vasarhely Fidesz KDNP 5 List of mayors Edit List of City Mayors from 1990 Member Party Term of officeAndras Rapcsak Independent 1990 2002KDNPFideszJanos Lazar Fidesz KDNP 2002 2012Istvan Almasi Fidesz KDNP 2012 2017Peter Marki Zay Independent 2018 People EditPal Csokan chemistry professor Lucien Herve photographer Robert Ilosfalvy operatic tenor Ede Kallos sculptor Akos Kecskes footballer Ladislaus IV of Hungary Emil Lindenfeld painter Janos Pasztor Eva Risztov swimmer Janos Tornyai painter Franz WittmannSport EditThe association football club Hodmezovasarhelyi FC is based in Hodmezovasarhely Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Hungary Hodmezovasarhely is twinned with 5 Arad Romania Baia Mare Romania Baja Hungary Brețcu Romania Bruckneudorf Austria Debeljaca Kovacica Serbia Hechingen Germany Kelme Lithuania Kiskunhalas Hungary Senta Serbia Sokobanja Serbia Solotvyno Ukraine Tamar Israel Turda Romania Vallauris France Vidin Bulgaria Zgierz Poland Hoofddorp The NetherlandsGallery Edit Aerial photography of Hodmezovasarhely Town hall Rovas city limit sign celebration 2011 Old flood protection wall in the city centre Old Synagogue Snow storm on 9 January 2022 References Edit Hodmezovasarhely KSH Kiss Lajos Foldrajzi nevek etimologiai szotara I A K 4 bov jav kiadas Budapest Akademiai 1988 599 o ISBN 963 05 4568 3 Fidesz bastion Hodmezovasarhely falls The Budapest Beacon 26 February 2018 Retrieved 28 February 2018 Varosi kozgyules tagjai 2019 2024 Hodmezovararhely Csongrad megye valasztas hu Retrieved 27 November 2019 Testvervarosok hodmezovasarhely hu in Hungarian Hodmezovasarhely Retrieved 28 March 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hodmezovasarhely Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Hodmezovasarhely Official website in Hungarian and English Hodmezovasarhely Blog Aerial photography Hodmezovasarhely Hodmezovasarhely at Google Earth Community Archived 14 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Picture Gallery Hodmezovasarhely at funiq hu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hodmezovasarhely amp oldid 1141384612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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