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Pécs

Pécs (/p/ PAYTCH, Hungarian: [peːt͡ʃ] (listen); Croatian: Pečuh; German: Fünfkirchen, pronounced [fʏnfˈkɪʁçn̩] (listen); also known by other alternative names) is the fifth largest city in Hungary, on the slopes of the Mecsek mountains in the country's southwest, close to its border with Croatia. It is the administrative and economic centre of Baranya County, and the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pécs.

Pécs
Pečuh
Fünfkirchen
Pécs Megyei Jogú Város
Clockwise from top left: Cathedral, Széchenyi Square, Barbican, Yakovalı Hasan Paşa Mosque, Kossuth Square
Nickname: 
"The City of Culture" (A kultúra városa)
Pécs
Location of Pécs
Pécs
Pécs (Hungary)
Coordinates: 46°04′17″N 18°13′59″E / 46.07125°N 18.23311°E / 46.07125; 18.23311
Country Hungary
RegionSouthern Transdanubia
CountyBaranya
DistrictPécs
Established2nd century BC
City status1777 (renewed)
Government
 • MayorAttila Péterffy (Pécs Jövője, Öt Torony)
 • Deputy mayorLajos Nyőgéri (Pécs Jövője, Hungarian Socialist Party)
Csaba Ruzsa (Independent)
Gábor Zag (Pécs Jövője, Democratic Coalition)
 • Town NotaryDr István Lovász
Area
 • City with county rights162.61 km2 (62.78 sq mi)
 • Rank32nd in Hungary
Elevation
153 m (502 ft)
Population
 (1 January 2016)
 • City with county rights145,347
 • Rank5th in Hungary
 • Density963.43/km2 (2,495.3/sq mi)
 • Urban
251,412 (4th)[1]
Demonympécsi
Population by ethnicity
 • Hungarians84.0%
 • Germans4.2%
 • Romani2.0%
 • Croats1.2%
 • Romanians0.2%
 • Serbs0.2%
 • Slovaks0.1%
 • Greeks0.1%
 • Turks0.1%
Population by religion
 • Roman Catholic39.7%
 • Greek Catholic0.3%
 • Calvinists5.2%
 • Lutherans1.3%
 • Jews0.1%
 • Islam2.4%
 • Non-religious27.8%
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal code
7600 to 7636
Area code(+36) 72
MotorwaysM60 Motorway
NUTS 3 codeHU231
Distance from Budapest238 km (148 mi) Northeast
AirportPécs (PEV)
MPs
List
Websitewww.pecs.hu
Official nameEarly Christian Necropolis of Pécs (Sopianae)
Criteriaiii, iv
Designated2000

A city dating back to ancient times, settled by the Celts and the Romans, it was made an episcopal see in early medieval Hungary. It has the oldest university in the country, and is one of its major cultural centers. It has a rich cultural heritage from the age of a 150-year Ottoman occupation. It is historically a multi-ethnic city where many cultures have interacted through 2000 years of history. In recent times, it has been recognized for its cultural heritage, including being named as one of the European Capital of Culture cities.

Name

The earliest name for the territory was its Roman name of Sopianæ. The name possibly comes from the plural of the Celtic sop meaning "marsh". Contrary to the popular belief, the name did not signify a single city,[citation needed] and there are no traces of an encircling wall from the early Roman era, only from the 4th century.

The medieval city was first mentioned in 871 under the name Quinque Basilicae ("five cathedrals".) The name refers to the fact that when constructing the churches of the city, the builders used material from five old Christian chapels. In later Latin documents the city was mentioned as Quinque Ecclesiae ("five churches", a name identical in meaning to the German name Fünfkirchen and the Slovak name Päťkostolie[3]).

The name Pécs appears in documents in 1235 in the word Pechyut (with modern spelling: pécsi út, meaning "road to/from Pécs") most likely derives from the Proto-Slavic *pęčь or from the Illyrian *penče, both meaning five.[4] In other languages: in Latin, Quinque Ecclesiae; in Italian, Cinquechiese; in Croatian, Pečuh; in Serbian, Печуј (Pečuj); in Slovak, Päťkostolie; in Czech, Pětikostelí; in Dutch, Vijfkerken; in German, Fünfkirchen; and in Turkish, Peçuy.

Geography

Pécs is located in the Carpathian Basin of Central Europe, in the center of the southern Hungarian county of Baranya. It is bordered by the Mecsek hills to the north, and by a rolling plain to the south. Pécs has a significant mining past. Mecsek dolomitic water is famous for its high density of minerals at constant poise.

The city of Pécs is located near to the border of Croatia. Its southern part is rather flat whereas its northern part clings to the slope of the Mecsek mountains. It has a very favorable climate, and is bordered by a flourishing woody area. During hot summer nights a cooling air streams down from Mecsek to clean the air of the city.[5]

Pécs is bordered by plains to the south (elevation 120–130 m), while the Mecsek mountains rise up to elevations of 400–600 meters behind the city. Jakab-hill, located in the western Mecsek, is 592 m (1942 ft) tall, Tubes, straight above Pécs, is 612 m (2008 ft) tall, and Misina is 535 m (1755 ft) tall.[6] Higher parts of the city climb up to 200–250 m (656 to 820 ft), mainly Pécsbánya, Szabolcsfalu, Vasas and Somogy. Woody areas generally start from elevations of about 300 m (984 ft). The Mecsek hills are marked by numerous valleys which play a key role in ameliorating the climate of the city in the absence of lakes and rivers. Waters coming down from the Mecsek hills flow into the Pécsi stream under the east–west rail road leading them eventually to the Danube.

History

Early Christian Necropolis of Pécs (Sopianae)
UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
Remnants of a Paleochristian Church, 4th century AD
CriteriaCultural: iii, iv
Reference853
Inscription2000 (24th Session)
Area3.76 ha
Buffer zone4.87 ha

Ancient Roman city

 
Early Christian Necropolis of Pécs (Sopianae)

The area has been inhabited since ancient times, with the oldest archaeological findings being 6,000 years old. Before the Roman era the place was inhabited by Celts.

The city of Sopianae was founded by Romans at the beginning of the 2nd century, in an area peopled by Celts and Pannoni tribes. By the 4th century, it became the capital of Valeria province and a significant early Christian center. The early Christian necropolis from that era became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in December 2000.[7][8]

When Western Hungary was a province of the Roman Empire (named Pannonia), the Romans founded several wine-producing colonies under the collective name of Sopianae where Pécs now stands, in the early 2nd century.

The centre of Sopianae was where the Bishop's Palace now stands. Some parts of the Roman aqueduct are still visible. When Pannonia province was divided into four administrative divisions, Sopianae was the capital of the division named Valeria.

In the first half of the 4th century, Sopianae became an important Christian city. The first Christian cemeteries, dating back to this age, are inscribed on the World Heritage List. By the end of the century, Roman rule weakened in the area, mostly due to attacks by Barbarians and Huns.

Early medieval city

When Charlemagne arrived in the area in 791, it was ruled by the Avars. Charlemagne, after conquering the area, annexed it to the Holy Roman Empire.[9] It belonged to the Diocese of Salzburg.[10]

A document written in Salzburg in 871 is the first document mentioning the early medieval city under the name Quinque Basilicae (see above).[3]) During the 9th century, the city was inhabited by Slavic and Avar peoples and was part of the Balaton Principality, a Frankish vassal state.[9]

The Hungarian city in the Middle Ages

 
The Barbakán
 
Crypt of the cathedral from the Middle Ages
 
Stone shield pattern of Pécs with Old Hungarian script (circa 1250 AD)

According to György Györffy's theory of place names, after the Hungarians conquered the Carpathian Basin, they retained a semi-nomadic lifestyle, changing pastures between winter and summer. Árpád's winter quarters – clearly after his occupation of Pannonia in 900 – were perhaps in Pécs.[9] Later, when the Comitatus of Baranya was established, the capital of the comitatus was not Pécs but a nearby castle, Baranyavár ('Baranya Castle'). Pécs, however, became an important religious centre and episcopal seat. In Latin documents, the city was mentioned as Quinque Ecclesiae. Around 1000, the area was inhabited by the Black Magyars. The Deed of Foundation of the Diocese of Pécs was issued in 1009.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Pécs was founded in 1009 by Stephen I, and the first university in Hungary was founded in Pécs in 1367 by Louis I the Great. (The largest university still resides in Pécs with about 34,000 students.)[11]

Peter Orseolo, the second king of Hungary, was buried in the cathedral in 1046. The location of his grave is unknown. This is because in 1064, when King Solomon made peace with his cousin, the later King Géza I, they celebrated Easter in Pécs. Shortly after the cathedral burnt down. The cathedral that stands today was built after this, in the second half of the 11th century.

Several religious orders settled down in Pécs. The Benedictine order was the first in 1076. In 1181, there was already a hospital in the city. The first Dominican monastery of the country was built in Pécs in 1238.

King Louis the Great founded a university in Pécs in 1367 following the advice of William, the bishop of Pécs, who was also the king's chancellor. It was the first university in Hungary. The founding document is almost word for word identical with that of the University of Vienna, stating that the university has the right to teach all arts and sciences, with the exception of theology.

In 1459, Janus Pannonius, the most important medieval poet of Hungary became the bishop of Pécs. He strengthened the cultural importance of the city.

Pécs was formed into one of the cultural and arts center of the country by bishop Janus Pannonius, great humanist poet.[12]

Pécs under Ottoman rule

 
The mosque of Gázi Kászim pasa (pasha Qasim the Victorious)

After the Battle of Mohács (1526) in which the invading Ottoman army defeated the armies of King Louis II, the armies of Suleiman occupied Pécs. Not only was a large part of the country occupied by Ottomans, the public opinion of who should be the king of Hungary was divided, too. One party supported Ferdinand of Habsburg, the other party crowned John Zápolya in Székesfehérvár. The citizens of Pécs supported Emperor Ferdinand, but the rest of Baranya county supported King John. In the summer of 1527 Ferdinand defeated the armies of Szapolyai and was crowned king on November 3. Ferdinand favoured the city because of their support, and exempted Pécs from paying taxes. Pécs was rebuilt and fortified.

In 1529, the Ottomans captured Pécs again, and went on a campaign against Vienna. The Ottomans forced Pécs to accept King John (who was allied with them) as their ruler. John died in 1540. In 1541, the Ottomans occupied the castle of Buda, and ordered Isabella, the widow of John to give Pécs to them, since the city was of strategic importance. The citizens of Pécs defended the city against the Ottomans, and swore loyalty to Ferdinand. The emperor helped the city and defended it from further Ottoman attacks, but his advisers persuaded him into focusing more on the cities of Székesfehérvár and Esztergom instead of Pécs. Pécs was preparing for the siege, but a day before, Flemish and Walloon mercenaries fled from the city, and raided the nearby lands. The next day in June 1543 the Bishop himself went to the Ottomans with the keys of the city.

After occupying the city, the Ottomans fortified it and turned it into a real Ottoman city. The Christian churches were turned into mosques; Turkish baths and minarets were built, Qur'an schools were founded, there was a bazaar in place of the market. For a hundred years the city was an island of peace in a land of war. It was a sanjak centre in Budin Eyalet at first and Kanije Eyalet later as "Peçuy".

The Ottoman era resulted in numerous landmarks, such as the mosque of Pasha Qasim the Victorious on Széchenyi square, the Tomb of İdris Baba, and the Yakovalı Hasan Paşa Mosque.

The Ottoman chronicler İbrahim Peçevi (Ibrahim of Pécs), whose work forms the main body of reference for Ottoman history between 1520 and 1640, was a native of the city.

In 1664, Croat-Hungarian nobleman Nicholas Zrínyi arrived in Pécs, with his army. Since the city was well into the Ottoman territories, they knew that even if they occupy it, they could not keep it for long, so they planned only to pillage it. They ravaged and burned the city but could not occupy the castle. Mediaeval Pécs was destroyed forever, except the wall encircling the historical city, a single bastion (Barbakán), the network of tunnels and catacombs beneath the city, parts of which are closed down, other parts are in possession of the famous Litke champagne factory, and can be visited today.[citation needed] Several Turkish artifacts also survived, namely three mosques, two minarets, remnants of a bath over the ancient Christian tombs near the cathedral, and several houses, one even with a stone cannonball embedded in the wall.

After the castle of Buda was wrested from Ottoman rule in 1686, the armies went to capture the rest of Pécs. The advance guards could break into the city and pillaged it. The Ottomans saw that they could not hold the city, and burnt it, and withdrew into the castle. The army led by Louis of Baden occupied the city on 14 October and destroyed the aqueduct leading to the castle. The Ottomans had no other choice but to surrender, which they did on 22 October (see Siege of Pécs).

The city was under martial law under the command of Karl von Thüngen. The Viennese court wanted to destroy the city first, but later they decided to keep it to counterbalance the importance of Szigetvár, which was still under Ottoman rule. Slowly the city started to prosper again, but in the 1690s two plague epidemics claimed many lives. In 1688 German settlers arrived. Only about one-quarter of the city's population was Hungarian, the others were Germans or Southern Slavs. Census of taxpayers from 1698 lists 637 families for which Janja Živković Mandić concludes that 308 were of Croatian nationality (Catholics Croats, Racs, Šokci, Bunjevci, Illyrians, Slavs, Bosniaks) and the remaining 329 were Hungarians, Germans, Serbs or Greeks. According to same census István Tabo mentions 171 Hungarian, 349 Slavs and 79 Germans while Đuro Šarošac mentions that at that time in the city lived 325 Croats, 139 Hungarians, 92 Germans, 53 Vlachs and 28 Serbs.[13] According to 1698 data, South Slavs comprised more than half of the population of the town. Because Hungarians were only a minority of the population, Pécs did not support the revolution against Habsburg rule led by Francis II Rákóczi, and his armies pillaged the city in 1704.

Pécs in early-modern times

 
Pécs Main Square before 2009
 
County Hall of Baranya
 
Vasváry-House
 
Széchenyi Square

A more peaceful era started after 1710. Industry, trade and viticulture prospered, manufactures were founded, a new city hall was built. The feudal lord of the city was the Bishop of Pécs, but the city wanted to free itself from episcopal control. Bishop George Klimó, an enlightened man (who founded the first public library of the country) would have agreed to cede his rights to the city, but the Holy See forbade him to do so. When Klimó died in 1777, Queen Maria Theresa quickly elevated Pécs to free royal town status before the new bishop was elected. This cost the city 83,315 forints.

According to the first census (held in 1787 by the order of Joseph II), there were 1,474 houses and 1,834 families in Pécs, a total of 8,853 residents, of which 133 were priests and 117 were noblemen.

In 1785, the Academy of Győr was moved to Pécs. This academy eventually evolved into a law school. The first stonework theatre of the city was built in 1839. At that time or Maria Theresia and her son Josef II, the Danube Swabians from Germany was settled in the City.

Pécs during the 19th century and later

The industry developed a lot in the second half of the 19th century. By 1848, there were 1,739 industrial workers. Some of the manufactures were nationally famous. The iron and paper factories were among the most modern ones of the age. Coal mining was relevant. A sugar factory and beer manufactures were built, too. The city had 14,616 residents.

During the revolution in 1848–49, Pécs was occupied by Croatian armies for a short time, but it was freed from them by Habsburg armies in January 1849.

After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 Pécs developed, like all the other cities and towns of the country. From 1867, Pécs is connected to the nearby town Barcs by railway, and since 1882 it is also connected to Budapest. In 1913, a tram system has been founded, but it was extinguished in 1960.

At the end of World War I, Baranya county was occupied by Serbian troops, and it was not until August 1921 that Pécs could be sure that it remains part of Hungary. The University of Pressburg (modern-day Bratislava, Slovakia) was moved to Pécs after Hungary lost Pressburg according to the Treaty of Trianon.

During World War II, Pécs was captured by Soviet troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front on 29 November 1944 in the course of the Budapest Offensive. The city suffered only minor damages, even though a large tank-battle took place 20–25 kilometres (12–16 miles) south of the city, close to the Villány area late in the war, when the advancing Red Army fought its way towards Austria. Until the end of World War II, the majority Inhabitants was Danube Swabians. Some of the former German Settlers was expelled to Germany and Austria in 1945-1948, about the Potsdam Agreement.[14] Germans of Hungary are still a minority in the City.

A history of Hungary from 1945-1990, "under Soviet domination" can be found in A Concise History of Hungary.[15] After the war, development became fast again, and the city grew, absorbing several nearby towns. In the 1980s, Pécs already had 180,000 inhabitants.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1870 30,821—    
1890 43,869+42.3%
1900 53,721+22.5%
1910 60,237+12.1%
1920 58,808−2.4%
1930 74,395+26.5%
1941 88,473+18.9%
1949 88,302−0.2%
1960 114,655+29.8%
1970 149,253+30.2%
1980 168,715+13.0%
1990 170,039+0.8%
2001 162,489−4.4%
2011 156,049−4.0%
2020 141,843−9.1%

After the end of Socialist era (1989–1990), Pécs and its county, like many other areas, were hit hard by the changes, the unemployment rate was high, the mines and several factories were closed, and the war in neighboring Yugoslavia in the 1990s affected the tourism.

Pécs was also the centre of the Nordic Support Group (NSG) consisting of units from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Poland, as part of the IFOR and later SFOR NATO deployments, after the Dayton Agreement and following peace in former Yugoslavia; the first units were deployed to Pécs in late 1995 and early 1996. The NSG handled the relaying of supply, personnel and other logistical tasks between the participating countries and their deployed forces in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

In 1998 Pécs was given the UNESCO prize "Cities for Peace" for maintaining its cultural minorities, and also for its tolerant and helping attitude toward refugees of the Yugoslav Wars.[16]

In 2007 Pécs was third, and in 2008 it was second "Livable City" (The LivCom Awards)[17] in the category of cities between 75,000 and 200,000 inhabitants.[18]

In 2010, Pécs was selected to be the European Capital of Culture alongside Essen and Istanbul. The city motto is "The Borderless City". After receiving the title major renewal started in the city.[19][20] Renewed public places, streets, squares and neighbourhoods, new cultural centers, a concert hall, a new library and center and a cultural quarter were designed.[21][22]

Main sights

 
Cella Septichora
 
The Barbakán
 
The cross at Tettye
 
Zsolnay Museum. The House from the 13th Century.
 
National Theatre in Pécs.
 
Csontváry Museum
 
Lyceum Church in Király Street

A good example of the city's history and interesting past can be seen in the main square, where the Gazi Kasim Mosque still stands, and, although consecrated as a church following the retreat of the Ottoman Turks centuries ago, the crescent moon of Islam is still visible on the cupola, surmounted by a cross. Indeed, Pécs is the richest town in Hungary in terms of Turkish architecture, with the ruins of Memi Pasa's Baths and the mausoleum of miracle worker Idris Baba, just two other notable remains. The Yakovalı Hasan Paşa Mosque, dating from the mid-1500s, still functions as an active mosque today. It is open to the public except during Friday services from 2.30 to 3.30 pm.

Demographics

The majority of the citizens with 84.0% are Hungarians according to the 2011 census. The city's Germans are the largest minority with 4.2%. Followed by the Roma (2.0%), the Croats (1.2%) and the Romanians (0.2%).[2]

The largest religious group is the Catholics with 39.7% Roman Catholic and 0.3% Greek Catholic. The second largest denomination is the Calvinists (5.2%), the third the Lutherans (1.3%). 27.8% of the population is non-religious.[2]

Due to the number of international students studying and living in Pécs, a notable diversity of non-permanent citizens could be obviously seen around the city.

Climate

Climate data for Pécs
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 1.6
(34.9)
4.8
(40.6)
10.3
(50.5)
16.0
(60.8)
20.9
(69.6)
24.0
(75.2)
26.3
(79.3)
25.9
(78.6)
22.3
(72.1)
16.6
(61.9)
8.8
(47.8)
3.4
(38.1)
15.1
(59.1)
Daily mean °C (°F) −1.4
(29.5)
1.3
(34.3)
5.6
(42.1)
10.7
(51.3)
15.5
(59.9)
18.6
(65.5)
20.5
(68.9)
20.1
(68.2)
16.6
(61.9)
11.3
(52.3)
5.1
(41.2)
0.6
(33.1)
10.4
(50.7)
Average low °C (°F) −4.0
(24.8)
−1.7
(28.9)
1.6
(34.9)
6.0
(42.8)
10.5
(50.9)
13.6
(56.5)
15.0
(59.0)
14.7
(58.5)
11.7
(53.1)
7.0
(44.6)
2.2
(36.0)
−1.7
(28.9)
6.2
(43.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 39
(1.5)
32
(1.3)
38
(1.5)
55
(2.2)
63
(2.5)
84
(3.3)
61
(2.4)
63
(2.5)
47
(1.9)
37
(1.5)
56
(2.2)
44
(1.7)
619
(24.5)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 7 6 7 8 9 10 7 7 6 6 8 8 89
Average relative humidity (%) 90 85 70 65 65 70 70 70 75 80 85 90 76.3
Mean monthly sunshine hours 68.2 92.4 145.7 186.0 235.6 258.0 294.5 266.6 207.0 164.3 81.0 58.9 2,058.2
Source: Hong Kong Observatory.[23]

Economy

 
The most known product of Pécs is the Zsolnay Porcelain - Alhambra vase by Tádé Sikorski (1884)

Historically Pécs was well known in Hungary for its industry with several factories, but after the fall of the Iron Curtain many have not managed the economic transition well and went bankrupt (e.g. Pécsi Kesztyűgyár, Pécsi Bőrgyár, Littke Pezsgőgyár etc.).[24] Until some years ago, it had a coal and uranium mine, now only its sand mine exists and is operated by the Hungarian-owned Quartz[25] mining company.

The nationally (and to a limited extent internationally) famous porcelain factory, the Zsolnay Porcelain is the greatest pride of Pécs. The walls and roofs of several public and private buildings in the city are decorated with the company's porcelains contributing to Pécs's unique cityscape.

The Pécsi Sörfőzde (Pécs Brewery) is one of the four main Hungarian breweries (the others being Dreher Breweries, Borsod Brewery, Heineken Hungária), but the only one of them owned fully by Hungarians. It produces a special beer, that is known for not being strained before bottling.[26]

The Hungarian textilmanufacturer Rovitex Hungária,[27] the American crane manufacturer Terex,[28] the Hungarian scale manufacturer Pécsi Mérlegstúdió,[29] the Hungarian furniture manufacturer Megyeri Bútor,[30] the Hungarian cutting-tool manufacturer FORSZ,[31] the German switchboard manufacturer HB-Kapcsolószekrénygyártó (part of the Bader Gruppe),[32] the Hungarian recycling company Alcufer,[33] the Hungarian agricultural vehiclemanufacturer HIDROT,[34] the Hungarian animal husbandry tool manufacturer Önitató,[35] the tobacco factory Pécsi Dohánygyár (owned by British American Tobacco), the Hungarian automotive spare parts manufacturer Matro,[36] the Hungarian safe manufacturer Strauss Metal,[37] the Hungarian packaging machine manufacturer SOMAPAK,[38] the Hungarian plastics producer Termoplast,[39] the Bocz Printing House,[40] the Hungarian pickles manufacturer Babina,[41] the Hungarian plastic product manufacturer Karsai Pécs,[42] the Hungarian metal manufacturer Riner Metal[43] based there and have their production facilities in the city.

There is a gradual development of modern high-tech industry, with Finnish electronics manufacturing company Elcoteq the largest industrial employer in the city, the Hungarian Z Elektronika[44] electronics manufacturer and the Hungarian TG Netcom[45] IT network manufacturer.

The German transportation company, Dachser has a logistics centre in Pécs.[46]

The Biokom[47] waste management and recycling company (owned by the city) is responsible for the transport and recycling of waste in the whole territory of Pécs and the surrounding areas. The energy used in the settlement is produced mainly by the two biomass power plants of Pannonpower (part of Veolia) which consists of a 49,9 MW woodchip-fired and a 35 MW agricultural by-product-fired powerplants.[48] The country's largest solar cell field is also in Pécs, thanks to the city's southern location and longer sunny hours, which can produce about 10 MW energy a year. The solar power plant is operated by MVM Hungarowind (part of the MVM Group).[49]

The Expo Center Pécs Exhibition and Conference Centre provides place for international exhibitions and conferences.[50]

Education

The University of Pécs was founded by Louis I of Hungary in 1367. It is the oldest university in Hungary, and is among the first European universities. In the recent past it used to be divided in two universities, one for Medicine and Orthodontics (POTE)[51] and a larger one for other studies: JPTE (Janus Pannonius Tudományegyetem). The POTE (Pécs University Medical School, now known as the Medical School) has a large English program for general medicine and dentistry (with students from America, Asia, Africa, and European countries - including many Scandinavians) and a new German program. On 1 January 2000 these universities were combined under the name University of Pécs (acronym: PTE - Pécsi Tudományegyetem - University of Pécs). Nowadays, the University of Pécs has become the most internationalized university in Hungary with around 5000 international students out of the total of approximately 20000 students (around 25%).[52]

Politics

The current mayor of Pécs is Attila Péterffy (Pécs Jövője, Öt Torony).

The local Municipal Assembly, elected at the 2019 local government elections, is made up of 26 members (1 Mayor, 18 Individual constituencies MEPs and 7 Compensation List MEPs) divided into this political parties and alliances:[53] Fidesz policies in Pécs have included a law making homelessness illegal (2014)[54] and an official call to property owners not to make space available for an NGO supported by OSF (2017).[55]

Party Seats Current Municipal Assembly
  Pécs Jövője[a] 18 M                                  
  Fidesz-KDNP-ÖPE 7                                    
  Politics Can Be Different 1                                    

List of mayors

List of City Mayors from 1990:

Member Party Term of office
Zoltán Krippl SZDSZ 1990–1994
Zsolt Páva Fidesz 1994–1998
László Toller MSZP 1998–2006
Péter Tasnádi MSZP 2006–2009
Zsolt Páva Fidesz 2009–2019
Attila Péterffy Independent[a] 2019–

Transport

 
Trains at Pécs Central Station
 
Volvo 7900A bus on Line 2A in downtown
 
International airport.

Vehicular traffic

  • The M6/M60 motorway connects Pécs and Budapest with the driving time between the two cities taking about 1+12 hours now. The entire route opened on 31 March 2010. Route 6 crosses the city giving it an east–west axle and leaves it towards Barcs by the Croatian border. Secondary routes are:
  • Route 57: Pécs - Mohács,
  • Route 58: Pécs - Drávaszabolcs,
  • Route 66: Pécs - Kaposvár.

Railway

Pécs is connected to Budapest through Pusztaszabolcs, and has direct connections to Mohács, Nagykanizsa.

Designed by Ferenc Pfaff,[56] the main railway station was built in 1900 and became a listed building in 2008.[57] The building itself was built in the style of Renaissance Eclecticism, and it features reliefs depicting James Watt and George Stephenson designed by Klein Ármin and made by Zsolnay factory[58] A mass transit hub -including a bus terminal, a bus stop and a cab rank zone- is situated on the square in front of the railway station.

Mass transport

Volvo and Kravtex-Credo buses provide the only form of public transport in Pécs, though a tram line did operate from 1913 to 1960, when it was shut down due to changing transportation policy. Most of the remnants of this older system have been removed, though a few rails may still be seen around the city.

Airport

A new airport opened in Pécs Pécs-Pogány International Airport in March 2006. Its main traffic is supplied by smaller charter planes.

Sport

Notable people born in Pécs

 
László Sólyom, Hungarian President 2005-2010

Twin towns – sister cities

Pécs is twinned with:[59][60]

The city also has an informal friendship link with Peterborough, England.

Gallery

See also

References

  • (in Hungarian)
  1. ^ "OECD - FUNCTIONAL URBAN AREAS IN OECD COUNTRIES: HUNGARY" (PDF).
  2. ^ a b c d "Detailed Gazetteer of Hungary". www.ksh.hu.
  3. ^ a b Slovenská reč: časopis pre výskum a kultúru slovenského jazyka - Google Knihy. 1998. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
  4. ^ Kniezsa, István (1962). Beke, Ödön (ed.). "Pécs város neve" [The name of the city of Pécs]. Magyar Nyelvőr: 326–329.
  5. ^ Pécs klímája 2008-06-09 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Kft., BioDigit. "Mecsek-hegység - Lexikon ::". www.kislexikon.hu.
  7. ^ "Pécs, a kultúra városa". Pécs, a kultúra városa.
  8. ^ "Early Christian Necropolis of Pécs (Sopianae)". UNESCO. UNESCO. 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2015-03-03.
  9. ^ a b c Lajos Gubcsi, Hungary in the Carpathian Basin, MoD Zrínyi Media Ltd, 2011
  10. ^ Kleindel: Österreich, Zahlen – Daten - Fakten, Sonderausgabe A&M 2004, ISBN 3-902397-49-7
  11. ^ www.okm.gov.hu, Oktatási és Kulturális Minisztérium oldala, Az Oktatási Évkönyv 2008/2009 letölthető PDF-formátumban. 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Pécs kulturális központ 2009-03-15 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Ladislav Heka, 2016, The Borders Of Baranja Since The Middle Ages Until Today, http://baza.gskos.hr/Graniceidentiteti.pdf #page=29
  14. ^ "Die Vertreibung – Landsmannschaft der Deutschen aus Ungarn".
  15. ^ Molnar, Miklos. (2001). A Concise History of Hungary. English translation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  16. ^ "Pécs, a toleráns város - Hetek Közéleti Hetilap". Hetek Közéleti Hetilap.
  17. ^ www.livcomawards.com, Official site of LivCom awards 2010-03-12 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ www.ddrkh.hu, 2008. november 12. - Pécs második lett az Élhető Települések döntőjében 2009-03-05 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "BETA – Pécs-Baranyai Kereskedelmi és Iparkamara". www.pbkik.hu.
  20. ^ "Már építik a pécsi Búza téren a Corsót - BAMA".
  21. ^ "www.peh.hu, Elindult a Sopianae-terv, épül a Déli Ipari Park".[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ [Pécsre áramlik a tőke www.origo.hu, 2008. 07. 17. - Pécsre áramlik a tőke]
  23. ^ Climatological Information for Pecs, Hungary, accessed 6 April 2012.
  24. ^ Viktor, Gyimesi (26 July 2016). "Tele van Pécs az iparoscsaládok örökségeivel". www.pecsma.hu.
  25. ^ "Quartz Kft - Bemutatkozás". quartzkft.hu.
  26. ^ "A stílusod egyedi, kívül, belül - Pécsi Sör". pecsisor.hu.
  27. ^ "Új gyártócsarnokot kap a pécsi Rovitex Hungária Kft. - BEOL".
  28. ^ "Locations - Terex Cranes". www.terex.com.
  29. ^ "Cégünkről". merlegstudio.hu.
  30. ^ butorlapszabaszat.hu. "Megyeri Bútor Kft. – bútorlapszabászat – Pécs - Országos Bútorlapszabászat és Lapszabászat kereső". butorlapszabaszat.hu.
  31. ^ "FORSZ Ltd. -". forszkft.hu.
  32. ^ "Kontakt".
  33. ^ "Bemutatkozás — Alcufer Kft". www.alcufer.hu.
  34. ^ Kft., Markcon Informatikai. "HIDROT Kft. » Cégbemutató". hidrot.hu.
  35. ^ "Önitató".
  36. ^ "Rólunk – Matro". matro.hu.
  37. ^ "Rólunk - Strauss Metal Kft. Biztonságtechnika kis és nagyker, Páncélszekrény, széf, lemezszekrény gyártás, Lemezvágás, Lemezmegmunkálás, lézervágás, élhajlítás". www.straussmetal.hu.
  38. ^ "Somapak - History". somapak.hu.
  39. ^ "Company review - TERMOPLAST Műanyagfeloldgozó Kkt". www.termoplast.hu.
  40. ^ "Bocz nyomdaipari Kft. – Ofszet- és digitális nyomda Pécsen". bocznyomda.hu.
  41. ^ Kft., Markcon Informatikai. . pannonflavours.org. Archived from the original on 2018-10-11. Retrieved 2018-05-08.
  42. ^ "Karsai Pecs Kft. Company Profile - EMIS". www.emis.com.
  43. ^ Web-E. "Riner-Metal Kft". riner.hu.
  44. ^ "Z Elektronika Kft". zelektronika.eu.
  45. ^ "TG Netcom Kft. - Our company". www.tgnetcom.hu.
  46. ^ "Dachser Telephelyek".
  47. ^ "CÉGBEMUTATÁS - Biokom".
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-05-09. Retrieved 2018-05-08.
  49. ^ Zrt., REGON Média. "Óriási naperőmű épült a pécsi hőerőmű helyére".
  50. ^ "Expo Center Pécs". www.expocenterpecs.hu.
  51. ^ "PTE Általános Orvostudományi Kar". PTE Általános Orvostudományi Kar.
  52. ^ "International Relations in a Nutshell". international.pte.hu. Retrieved 2022-01-29.
  53. ^ "Városi közgyűlés tagjai 2019-2024 - Pécs (Baranya megye)". valasztas.hu. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  54. ^ "Pécs bans homeless from public areas". The Budapest Beacon. 2014-09-26. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  55. ^ "Pécs adopts declaration calling on property owners to refrain from renting property to OSF grantee". The Budapest Beacon. 2017-12-14. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  56. ^ www.idokep.hu, Pécs[permanent dead link]
  57. ^ napilapcsoport.hu. "Pécsi Napilap". www.pecsinapilap.hu.
  58. ^ "Expired Redirects". sketchup.google.com.
  59. ^ "Twin cities of Pécs". pecseconomy.eu. Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Pécs-Baranya. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
  60. ^ "Binjakëzim mes Shkodrës dhe qytetit Pec në Hungari". ata.gov.al (in Albanian). Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare. 2018-10-12. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
Notes
  1. ^ a b Supported by Opposition coalition.

External links

  • Aerial photography: Pécs
  • Hrvatska nazočnost u "gradu s pet crkava", Oct 7, 2007 (page about Croats in Pécs)
  • Mecsek-1956-History
  • Pécs szállás (accommodation)
  • Pécs at funiq.hu (in English)
  • Csakis itt Pécsen! – videoclip

Coordinates: 46°04′16″N 18°13′59″E / 46.07111°N 18.23306°E / 46.07111; 18.23306

pécs, paytch, hungarian, peːt, listen, croatian, pečuh, german, fünfkirchen, pronounced, fʏnfˈkɪʁçn, listen, also, known, other, alternative, names, fifth, largest, city, hungary, slopes, mecsek, mountains, country, southwest, close, border, with, croatia, adm. Pecs p eɪ tʃ PAYTCH Hungarian peːt ʃ listen Croatian Pecuh German Funfkirchen pronounced fʏnfˈkɪʁcn listen also known by other alternative names is the fifth largest city in Hungary on the slopes of the Mecsek mountains in the country s southwest close to its border with Croatia It is the administrative and economic centre of Baranya County and the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pecs Pecs PecuhFunfkirchenCity with county rightsPecs Megyei Jogu VarosClockwise from top left Cathedral Szechenyi Square Barbican Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque Kossuth SquareFlagCoat of armsNickname The City of Culture A kultura varosa PecsLocation of PecsShow map of Baranya CountyPecsPecs Hungary Show map of HungaryCoordinates 46 04 17 N 18 13 59 E 46 07125 N 18 23311 E 46 07125 18 23311Country HungaryRegionSouthern TransdanubiaCountyBaranyaDistrictPecsEstablished2nd century BCCity status1777 renewed Government MayorAttila Peterffy Pecs Jovoje Ot Torony Deputy mayorLajos Nyogeri Pecs Jovoje Hungarian Socialist Party Csaba Ruzsa Independent Gabor Zag Pecs Jovoje Democratic Coalition Town NotaryDr Istvan LovaszArea City with county rights162 61 km2 62 78 sq mi Rank32nd in HungaryElevation153 m 502 ft Population 1 January 2016 City with county rights145 347 Rank5th in Hungary Density963 43 km2 2 495 3 sq mi Urban251 412 4th 1 DemonympecsiPopulation by ethnicity 2 Hungarians84 0 Germans4 2 Romani2 0 Croats1 2 Romanians0 2 Serbs0 2 Slovaks0 1 Greeks0 1 Turks0 1 Population by religion 2 Roman Catholic39 7 Greek Catholic0 3 Calvinists5 2 Lutherans1 3 Jews0 1 Islam2 4 Non religious27 8 Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal code7600 to 7636Area code 36 72MotorwaysM60 MotorwayNUTS 3 codeHU231Distance from Budapest238 km 148 mi NortheastAirportPecs PEV MPsList Tamas Mellar Independent Peter Hoppal Fidesz Websitewww wbr pecs wbr huUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameEarly Christian Necropolis of Pecs Sopianae Criteriaiii ivDesignated2000A city dating back to ancient times settled by the Celts and the Romans it was made an episcopal see in early medieval Hungary It has the oldest university in the country and is one of its major cultural centers It has a rich cultural heritage from the age of a 150 year Ottoman occupation It is historically a multi ethnic city where many cultures have interacted through 2000 years of history In recent times it has been recognized for its cultural heritage including being named as one of the European Capital of Culture cities Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Ancient Roman city 3 2 Early medieval city 3 3 The Hungarian city in the Middle Ages 3 4 Pecs under Ottoman rule 3 5 Pecs in early modern times 3 6 Pecs during the 19th century and later 4 Main sights 5 Demographics 6 Climate 7 Economy 8 Education 9 Politics 9 1 List of mayors 10 Transport 10 1 Vehicular traffic 10 2 Railway 10 3 Mass transport 10 4 Airport 11 Sport 12 Notable people born in Pecs 13 Twin towns sister cities 14 Gallery 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksName EditThe earliest name for the territory was its Roman name of Sopianae The name possibly comes from the plural of the Celtic sop meaning marsh Contrary to the popular belief the name did not signify a single city citation needed and there are no traces of an encircling wall from the early Roman era only from the 4th century The medieval city was first mentioned in 871 under the name Quinque Basilicae five cathedrals The name refers to the fact that when constructing the churches of the city the builders used material from five old Christian chapels In later Latin documents the city was mentioned as Quinque Ecclesiae five churches a name identical in meaning to the German name Funfkirchen and the Slovak name Patkostolie 3 The name Pecs appears in documents in 1235 in the word Pechyut with modern spelling pecsi ut meaning road to from Pecs most likely derives from the Proto Slavic pec or from the Illyrian pence both meaning five 4 In other languages in Latin Quinque Ecclesiae in Italian Cinquechiese in Croatian Pecuh in Serbian Pechuј Pecuj in Slovak Patkostolie in Czech Petikosteli in Dutch Vijfkerken in German Funfkirchen and in Turkish Pecuy Geography EditPecs is located in the Carpathian Basin of Central Europe in the center of the southern Hungarian county of Baranya It is bordered by the Mecsek hills to the north and by a rolling plain to the south Pecs has a significant mining past Mecsek dolomitic water is famous for its high density of minerals at constant poise The city of Pecs is located near to the border of Croatia Its southern part is rather flat whereas its northern part clings to the slope of the Mecsek mountains It has a very favorable climate and is bordered by a flourishing woody area During hot summer nights a cooling air streams down from Mecsek to clean the air of the city 5 Pecs is bordered by plains to the south elevation 120 130 m while the Mecsek mountains rise up to elevations of 400 600 meters behind the city Jakab hill located in the western Mecsek is 592 m 1942 ft tall Tubes straight above Pecs is 612 m 2008 ft tall and Misina is 535 m 1755 ft tall 6 Higher parts of the city climb up to 200 250 m 656 to 820 ft mainly Pecsbanya Szabolcsfalu Vasas and Somogy Woody areas generally start from elevations of about 300 m 984 ft The Mecsek hills are marked by numerous valleys which play a key role in ameliorating the climate of the city in the absence of lakes and rivers Waters coming down from the Mecsek hills flow into the Pecsi stream under the east west rail road leading them eventually to the Danube History EditEarly Christian Necropolis of Pecs Sopianae UNESCO World Heritage Site Remnants of a Paleochristian Church 4th century ADCriteriaCultural iii ivReference853Inscription2000 24th Session Area3 76 haBuffer zone4 87 haAncient Roman city Edit Early Christian Necropolis of Pecs Sopianae The area has been inhabited since ancient times with the oldest archaeological findings being 6 000 years old Before the Roman era the place was inhabited by Celts The city of Sopianae was founded by Romans at the beginning of the 2nd century in an area peopled by Celts and Pannoni tribes By the 4th century it became the capital of Valeria province and a significant early Christian center The early Christian necropolis from that era became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in December 2000 7 8 When Western Hungary was a province of the Roman Empire named Pannonia the Romans founded several wine producing colonies under the collective name of Sopianae where Pecs now stands in the early 2nd century The centre of Sopianae was where the Bishop s Palace now stands Some parts of the Roman aqueduct are still visible When Pannonia province was divided into four administrative divisions Sopianae was the capital of the division named Valeria In the first half of the 4th century Sopianae became an important Christian city The first Christian cemeteries dating back to this age are inscribed on the World Heritage List By the end of the century Roman rule weakened in the area mostly due to attacks by Barbarians and Huns Early medieval city Edit When Charlemagne arrived in the area in 791 it was ruled by the Avars Charlemagne after conquering the area annexed it to the Holy Roman Empire 9 It belonged to the Diocese of Salzburg 10 A document written in Salzburg in 871 is the first document mentioning the early medieval city under the name Quinque Basilicae see above 3 During the 9th century the city was inhabited by Slavic and Avar peoples and was part of the Balaton Principality a Frankish vassal state 9 The Hungarian city in the Middle Ages Edit The Barbakan Crypt of the cathedral from the Middle Ages Stone shield pattern of Pecs with Old Hungarian script circa 1250 AD According to Gyorgy Gyorffy s theory of place names after the Hungarians conquered the Carpathian Basin they retained a semi nomadic lifestyle changing pastures between winter and summer Arpad s winter quarters clearly after his occupation of Pannonia in 900 were perhaps in Pecs 9 Later when the Comitatus of Baranya was established the capital of the comitatus was not Pecs but a nearby castle Baranyavar Baranya Castle Pecs however became an important religious centre and episcopal seat In Latin documents the city was mentioned as Quinque Ecclesiae Around 1000 the area was inhabited by the Black Magyars The Deed of Foundation of the Diocese of Pecs was issued in 1009 The Roman Catholic Diocese of Pecs was founded in 1009 by Stephen I and the first university in Hungary was founded in Pecs in 1367 by Louis I the Great The largest university still resides in Pecs with about 34 000 students 11 Peter Orseolo the second king of Hungary was buried in the cathedral in 1046 The location of his grave is unknown This is because in 1064 when King Solomon made peace with his cousin the later King Geza I they celebrated Easter in Pecs Shortly after the cathedral burnt down The cathedral that stands today was built after this in the second half of the 11th century Several religious orders settled down in Pecs The Benedictine order was the first in 1076 In 1181 there was already a hospital in the city The first Dominican monastery of the country was built in Pecs in 1238 King Louis the Great founded a university in Pecs in 1367 following the advice of William the bishop of Pecs who was also the king s chancellor It was the first university in Hungary The founding document is almost word for word identical with that of the University of Vienna stating that the university has the right to teach all arts and sciences with the exception of theology In 1459 Janus Pannonius the most important medieval poet of Hungary became the bishop of Pecs He strengthened the cultural importance of the city Pecs was formed into one of the cultural and arts center of the country by bishop Janus Pannonius great humanist poet 12 Pecs under Ottoman rule Edit See also Ottoman Hungary The mosque of Gazi Kaszim pasa pasha Qasim the Victorious Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque After the Battle of Mohacs 1526 in which the invading Ottoman army defeated the armies of King Louis II the armies of Suleiman occupied Pecs Not only was a large part of the country occupied by Ottomans the public opinion of who should be the king of Hungary was divided too One party supported Ferdinand of Habsburg the other party crowned John Zapolya in Szekesfehervar The citizens of Pecs supported Emperor Ferdinand but the rest of Baranya county supported King John In the summer of 1527 Ferdinand defeated the armies of Szapolyai and was crowned king on November 3 Ferdinand favoured the city because of their support and exempted Pecs from paying taxes Pecs was rebuilt and fortified In 1529 the Ottomans captured Pecs again and went on a campaign against Vienna The Ottomans forced Pecs to accept King John who was allied with them as their ruler John died in 1540 In 1541 the Ottomans occupied the castle of Buda and ordered Isabella the widow of John to give Pecs to them since the city was of strategic importance The citizens of Pecs defended the city against the Ottomans and swore loyalty to Ferdinand The emperor helped the city and defended it from further Ottoman attacks but his advisers persuaded him into focusing more on the cities of Szekesfehervar and Esztergom instead of Pecs Pecs was preparing for the siege but a day before Flemish and Walloon mercenaries fled from the city and raided the nearby lands The next day in June 1543 the Bishop himself went to the Ottomans with the keys of the city After occupying the city the Ottomans fortified it and turned it into a real Ottoman city The Christian churches were turned into mosques Turkish baths and minarets were built Qur an schools were founded there was a bazaar in place of the market For a hundred years the city was an island of peace in a land of war It was a sanjak centre in Budin Eyalet at first and Kanije Eyalet later as Pecuy The Ottoman era resulted in numerous landmarks such as the mosque of Pasha Qasim the Victorious on Szechenyi square the Tomb of Idris Baba and the Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque The Ottoman chronicler Ibrahim Pecevi Ibrahim of Pecs whose work forms the main body of reference for Ottoman history between 1520 and 1640 was a native of the city In 1664 Croat Hungarian nobleman Nicholas Zrinyi arrived in Pecs with his army Since the city was well into the Ottoman territories they knew that even if they occupy it they could not keep it for long so they planned only to pillage it They ravaged and burned the city but could not occupy the castle Mediaeval Pecs was destroyed forever except the wall encircling the historical city a single bastion Barbakan the network of tunnels and catacombs beneath the city parts of which are closed down other parts are in possession of the famous Litke champagne factory and can be visited today citation needed Several Turkish artifacts also survived namely three mosques two minarets remnants of a bath over the ancient Christian tombs near the cathedral and several houses one even with a stone cannonball embedded in the wall After the castle of Buda was wrested from Ottoman rule in 1686 the armies went to capture the rest of Pecs The advance guards could break into the city and pillaged it The Ottomans saw that they could not hold the city and burnt it and withdrew into the castle The army led by Louis of Baden occupied the city on 14 October and destroyed the aqueduct leading to the castle The Ottomans had no other choice but to surrender which they did on 22 October see Siege of Pecs The city was under martial law under the command of Karl von Thungen The Viennese court wanted to destroy the city first but later they decided to keep it to counterbalance the importance of Szigetvar which was still under Ottoman rule Slowly the city started to prosper again but in the 1690s two plague epidemics claimed many lives In 1688 German settlers arrived Only about one quarter of the city s population was Hungarian the others were Germans or Southern Slavs Census of taxpayers from 1698 lists 637 families for which Janja Zivkovic Mandic concludes that 308 were of Croatian nationality Catholics Croats Racs Sokci Bunjevci Illyrians Slavs Bosniaks and the remaining 329 were Hungarians Germans Serbs or Greeks According to same census Istvan Tabo mentions 171 Hungarian 349 Slavs and 79 Germans while Đuro Sarosac mentions that at that time in the city lived 325 Croats 139 Hungarians 92 Germans 53 Vlachs and 28 Serbs 13 According to 1698 data South Slavs comprised more than half of the population of the town Because Hungarians were only a minority of the population Pecs did not support the revolution against Habsburg rule led by Francis II Rakoczi and his armies pillaged the city in 1704 Pecs in early modern times Edit Pecs Main Square before 2009 County Hall of Baranya Vasvary House Szechenyi Square A more peaceful era started after 1710 Industry trade and viticulture prospered manufactures were founded a new city hall was built The feudal lord of the city was the Bishop of Pecs but the city wanted to free itself from episcopal control Bishop George Klimo an enlightened man who founded the first public library of the country would have agreed to cede his rights to the city but the Holy See forbade him to do so When Klimo died in 1777 Queen Maria Theresa quickly elevated Pecs to free royal town status before the new bishop was elected This cost the city 83 315 forints According to the first census held in 1787 by the order of Joseph II there were 1 474 houses and 1 834 families in Pecs a total of 8 853 residents of which 133 were priests and 117 were noblemen In 1785 the Academy of Gyor was moved to Pecs This academy eventually evolved into a law school The first stonework theatre of the city was built in 1839 At that time or Maria Theresia and her son Josef II the Danube Swabians from Germany was settled in the City Pecs during the 19th century and later Edit The industry developed a lot in the second half of the 19th century By 1848 there were 1 739 industrial workers Some of the manufactures were nationally famous The iron and paper factories were among the most modern ones of the age Coal mining was relevant A sugar factory and beer manufactures were built too The city had 14 616 residents During the revolution in 1848 49 Pecs was occupied by Croatian armies for a short time but it was freed from them by Habsburg armies in January 1849 After the Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 Pecs developed like all the other cities and towns of the country From 1867 Pecs is connected to the nearby town Barcs by railway and since 1882 it is also connected to Budapest In 1913 a tram system has been founded but it was extinguished in 1960 At the end of World War I Baranya county was occupied by Serbian troops and it was not until August 1921 that Pecs could be sure that it remains part of Hungary The University of Pressburg modern day Bratislava Slovakia was moved to Pecs after Hungary lost Pressburg according to the Treaty of Trianon During World War II Pecs was captured by Soviet troops of the 3rd Ukrainian Front on 29 November 1944 in the course of the Budapest Offensive The city suffered only minor damages even though a large tank battle took place 20 25 kilometres 12 16 miles south of the city close to the Villany area late in the war when the advancing Red Army fought its way towards Austria Until the end of World War II the majority Inhabitants was Danube Swabians Some of the former German Settlers was expelled to Germany and Austria in 1945 1948 about the Potsdam Agreement 14 Germans of Hungary are still a minority in the City A history of Hungary from 1945 1990 under Soviet domination can be found in A Concise History of Hungary 15 After the war development became fast again and the city grew absorbing several nearby towns In the 1980s Pecs already had 180 000 inhabitants Historical populationYearPop 187030 821 189043 869 42 3 190053 721 22 5 191060 237 12 1 192058 808 2 4 193074 395 26 5 194188 473 18 9 194988 302 0 2 1960114 655 29 8 1970149 253 30 2 1980168 715 13 0 1990170 039 0 8 2001162 489 4 4 2011156 049 4 0 2020141 843 9 1 After the end of Socialist era 1989 1990 Pecs and its county like many other areas were hit hard by the changes the unemployment rate was high the mines and several factories were closed and the war in neighboring Yugoslavia in the 1990s affected the tourism Pecs was also the centre of the Nordic Support Group NSG consisting of units from Denmark Norway Sweden Finland and Poland as part of the IFOR and later SFOR NATO deployments after the Dayton Agreement and following peace in former Yugoslavia the first units were deployed to Pecs in late 1995 and early 1996 The NSG handled the relaying of supply personnel and other logistical tasks between the participating countries and their deployed forces in Bosnia Herzegovina In 1998 Pecs was given the UNESCO prize Cities for Peace for maintaining its cultural minorities and also for its tolerant and helping attitude toward refugees of the Yugoslav Wars 16 In 2007 Pecs was third and in 2008 it was second Livable City The LivCom Awards 17 in the category of cities between 75 000 and 200 000 inhabitants 18 In 2010 Pecs was selected to be the European Capital of Culture alongside Essen and Istanbul The city motto is The Borderless City After receiving the title major renewal started in the city 19 20 Renewed public places streets squares and neighbourhoods new cultural centers a concert hall a new library and center and a cultural quarter were designed 21 22 Main sights Edit Cella Septichora The Barbakan The cross at Tettye Zsolnay Museum The House from the 13th Century National Theatre in Pecs Csontvary Museum Lyceum Church in Kiraly Street A good example of the city s history and interesting past can be seen in the main square where the Gazi Kasim Mosque still stands and although consecrated as a church following the retreat of the Ottoman Turks centuries ago the crescent moon of Islam is still visible on the cupola surmounted by a cross Indeed Pecs is the richest town in Hungary in terms of Turkish architecture with the ruins of Memi Pasa s Baths and the mausoleum of miracle worker Idris Baba just two other notable remains The Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque dating from the mid 1500s still functions as an active mosque today It is open to the public except during Friday services from 2 30 to 3 30 pm Necropolis of Sopianae UNESCO World Heritage Site Cella Septichora 4th century The Cathedral 11th century renovated in the 19th century Hungarian Bishop s Palace 12th century University of Pecs 1367 building of the Faculty of Science and Faculty of Humanities in Ifjusag street It includes a Botanical Garden Klimo Library 1774 The first public library in Hungary which was founded by bishop George Klimo Barbakan Tower 15th century Ruins in Tettye 1505 1521 Szechenyi square main square The mosque of pasha Qasim 1543 1546 Originally gothic Church St Bertalan Cathedral from the 13th century Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque 16th century Downtown Houses from the Middle Ages Baroque Classicism Rococo Art Nouveau Houses Nador Hotel 1846 in Szechenyi Square County House in Szechenyi Square City Hall in Szechenyi Square Synagogue 1869 Building of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 1884 National Theatre of Pecs Nemzeti Szinhaz inaugurated in 1895 Eosin glaze of Zsolnay fountain Posta Post Palace Hungaricum House Janus Pannonius Museum Renaissance Museum Csontvary Museum Zsolnay Museum Victor Vasarely Museum Amerigo Tot Museum Ethnographic Museum in Pecs Natural History Museum in Pecs Szerecsen Chemist s Museum Gallery of Pecs Museum Street Zsolnay Mausoleum Bobita punch and judy show Janus Pannonius Theatre Croatian Theatre in Pecs Third Theatre Zoological Garden in Pecs Love padlocks Magashaz formerly was deconstructed in 2016 TV Tower in Mecsek Mountain 1960 Demographics EditThe majority of the citizens with 84 0 are Hungarians according to the 2011 census The city s Germans are the largest minority with 4 2 Followed by the Roma 2 0 the Croats 1 2 and the Romanians 0 2 2 The largest religious group is the Catholics with 39 7 Roman Catholic and 0 3 Greek Catholic The second largest denomination is the Calvinists 5 2 the third the Lutherans 1 3 27 8 of the population is non religious 2 Due to the number of international students studying and living in Pecs a notable diversity of non permanent citizens could be obviously seen around the city Climate EditClimate data for PecsMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 1 6 34 9 4 8 40 6 10 3 50 5 16 0 60 8 20 9 69 6 24 0 75 2 26 3 79 3 25 9 78 6 22 3 72 1 16 6 61 9 8 8 47 8 3 4 38 1 15 1 59 1 Daily mean C F 1 4 29 5 1 3 34 3 5 6 42 1 10 7 51 3 15 5 59 9 18 6 65 5 20 5 68 9 20 1 68 2 16 6 61 9 11 3 52 3 5 1 41 2 0 6 33 1 10 4 50 7 Average low C F 4 0 24 8 1 7 28 9 1 6 34 9 6 0 42 8 10 5 50 9 13 6 56 5 15 0 59 0 14 7 58 5 11 7 53 1 7 0 44 6 2 2 36 0 1 7 28 9 6 2 43 2 Average precipitation mm inches 39 1 5 32 1 3 38 1 5 55 2 2 63 2 5 84 3 3 61 2 4 63 2 5 47 1 9 37 1 5 56 2 2 44 1 7 619 24 5 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 7 6 7 8 9 10 7 7 6 6 8 8 89Average relative humidity 90 85 70 65 65 70 70 70 75 80 85 90 76 3Mean monthly sunshine hours 68 2 92 4 145 7 186 0 235 6 258 0 294 5 266 6 207 0 164 3 81 0 58 9 2 058 2Source Hong Kong Observatory 23 Economy Edit The most known product of Pecs is the Zsolnay Porcelain Alhambra vase by Tade Sikorski 1884 Historically Pecs was well known in Hungary for its industry with several factories but after the fall of the Iron Curtain many have not managed the economic transition well and went bankrupt e g Pecsi Kesztyugyar Pecsi Borgyar Littke Pezsgogyar etc 24 Until some years ago it had a coal and uranium mine now only its sand mine exists and is operated by the Hungarian owned Quartz 25 mining company The nationally and to a limited extent internationally famous porcelain factory the Zsolnay Porcelain is the greatest pride of Pecs The walls and roofs of several public and private buildings in the city are decorated with the company s porcelains contributing to Pecs s unique cityscape The Pecsi Sorfozde Pecs Brewery is one of the four main Hungarian breweries the others being Dreher Breweries Borsod Brewery Heineken Hungaria but the only one of them owned fully by Hungarians It produces a special beer that is known for not being strained before bottling 26 The Hungarian textilmanufacturer Rovitex Hungaria 27 the American crane manufacturer Terex 28 the Hungarian scale manufacturer Pecsi Merlegstudio 29 the Hungarian furniture manufacturer Megyeri Butor 30 the Hungarian cutting tool manufacturer FORSZ 31 the German switchboard manufacturer HB Kapcsoloszekrenygyarto part of the Bader Gruppe 32 the Hungarian recycling company Alcufer 33 the Hungarian agricultural vehiclemanufacturer HIDROT 34 the Hungarian animal husbandry tool manufacturer Onitato 35 the tobacco factory Pecsi Dohanygyar owned by British American Tobacco the Hungarian automotive spare parts manufacturer Matro 36 the Hungarian safe manufacturer Strauss Metal 37 the Hungarian packaging machine manufacturer SOMAPAK 38 the Hungarian plastics producer Termoplast 39 the Bocz Printing House 40 the Hungarian pickles manufacturer Babina 41 the Hungarian plastic product manufacturer Karsai Pecs 42 the Hungarian metal manufacturer Riner Metal 43 based there and have their production facilities in the city There is a gradual development of modern high tech industry with Finnish electronics manufacturing company Elcoteq the largest industrial employer in the city the Hungarian Z Elektronika 44 electronics manufacturer and the Hungarian TG Netcom 45 IT network manufacturer The German transportation company Dachser has a logistics centre in Pecs 46 The Biokom 47 waste management and recycling company owned by the city is responsible for the transport and recycling of waste in the whole territory of Pecs and the surrounding areas The energy used in the settlement is produced mainly by the two biomass power plants of Pannonpower part of Veolia which consists of a 49 9 MW woodchip fired and a 35 MW agricultural by product fired powerplants 48 The country s largest solar cell field is also in Pecs thanks to the city s southern location and longer sunny hours which can produce about 10 MW energy a year The solar power plant is operated by MVM Hungarowind part of the MVM Group 49 The Expo Center Pecs Exhibition and Conference Centre provides place for international exhibitions and conferences 50 Education EditThe University of Pecs was founded by Louis I of Hungary in 1367 It is the oldest university in Hungary and is among the first European universities In the recent past it used to be divided in two universities one for Medicine and Orthodontics POTE 51 and a larger one for other studies JPTE Janus Pannonius Tudomanyegyetem The POTE Pecs University Medical School now known as the Medical School has a large English program for general medicine and dentistry with students from America Asia Africa and European countries including many Scandinavians and a new German program On 1 January 2000 these universities were combined under the name University of Pecs acronym PTE Pecsi Tudomanyegyetem University of Pecs Nowadays the University of Pecs has become the most internationalized university in Hungary with around 5000 international students out of the total of approximately 20000 students around 25 52 Politics EditThe current mayor of Pecs is Attila Peterffy Pecs Jovoje Ot Torony The local Municipal Assembly elected at the 2019 local government elections is made up of 26 members 1 Mayor 18 Individual constituencies MEPs and 7 Compensation List MEPs divided into this political parties and alliances 53 Fidesz policies in Pecs have included a law making homelessness illegal 2014 54 and an official call to property owners not to make space available for an NGO supported by OSF 2017 55 Party Seats Current Municipal Assembly Pecs Jovoje a 18 M Fidesz KDNP OPE 7 Politics Can Be Different 1 List of mayors Edit List of City Mayors from 1990 Member Party Term of officeZoltan Krippl SZDSZ 1990 1994Zsolt Pava Fidesz 1994 1998Laszlo Toller MSZP 1998 2006Peter Tasnadi MSZP 2006 2009Zsolt Pava Fidesz 2009 2019Attila Peterffy Independent a 2019 Transport Edit Trains at Pecs Central Station Volvo 7900A bus on Line 2A in downtown International airport Vehicular traffic Edit The M6 M60 motorway connects Pecs and Budapest with the driving time between the two cities taking about 1 1 2 hours now The entire route opened on 31 March 2010 Route 6 crosses the city giving it an east west axle and leaves it towards Barcs by the Croatian border Secondary routes are Route 57 Pecs Mohacs Route 58 Pecs Dravaszabolcs Route 66 Pecs Kaposvar Railway Edit Pecs is connected to Budapest through Pusztaszabolcs and has direct connections to Mohacs Nagykanizsa Designed by Ferenc Pfaff 56 the main railway station was built in 1900 and became a listed building in 2008 57 The building itself was built in the style of Renaissance Eclecticism and it features reliefs depicting James Watt and George Stephenson designed by Klein Armin and made by Zsolnay factory 58 A mass transit hub including a bus terminal a bus stop and a cab rank zone is situated on the square in front of the railway station Mass transport Edit Volvo and Kravtex Credo buses provide the only form of public transport in Pecs though a tram line did operate from 1913 to 1960 when it was shut down due to changing transportation policy Most of the remnants of this older system have been removed though a few rails may still be seen around the city Airport Edit A new airport opened in Pecs Pecs Pogany International Airport in March 2006 Its main traffic is supplied by smaller charter planes Sport EditPecsi MFC football club playing in the Nemzeti Bajnoksag II Pecsi Vasutas SK football club playing in the Baranya megye regional league PEAC Pecs first class women s professional basketball team Pecsi VSK men s water polo team Pecsi Indianok SK rugby clubNotable people born in Pecs Edit Zoltan Gera Laszlo Solyom Hungarian President 2005 2010 Karoly Balogh Mankobuki president of the Royal Court of Pecs Marcel Breuer architect and furniture designer Pal Dardai football player Petar Dobrovic Serb painter and president of the short lived Baranya Baja Republic Jozsef Eotvos musician guitarist Dezso Ernster Metropolitan Opera bass Sigismund Ernuszt bishop of Pecs Lipot Fejer mathematician Alfred Fred Forbat Bauhaus architect Zoltan Gera football player Leopold Hirschfeld brewer founder of the Pecsi Sorfozde Janos Horvay sculptor Katinka Hosszu swimmer 3 x gold medallist at the 2016 Olympic Games Zsuzsanna Jakabos swimmer Jeno Jando pianist Gyorgy Klimo bishop of Pecs founder of press and public library Dezso Lauber sportsman and architect Laszlo Lenard neuroscientist physician Kato Lomb interpreter language master Maximinus Praetorian Prefect Farkas Molnar 1897 1945 was a Hungarian architect painter essayist and graphic artist Janus Pannonius bishop of Pecs Ibrahim Pecevi Ibrahim of Pecs Ottoman historian and chronicler Karl Freiherr von Pflanzer Baltin Anton von Rosas ophthalmologist Joe Rudan singer Laszlo Solyom president of Hungary Bela Tarr film director Olga Tass Olympic gymnast Victor Vasarely artist Balazs Zamostny born in 1992 Hungarian footballerTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Hungary Pecs is twinned with 59 60 Arad Romania Beyoglu Turkey Cluj Napoca Romania Fellbach Germany Graz Austria Krakow Poland Kutahya Turkey Lahti Finland Novi Sad Serbia Olomouc Czech Republic Osijek Croatia Seattle United States Shiraz Iran Shkoder Albania Sliven Bulgaria Terracina Italy Tucson United States Tuzla Bosnia and Herzegovina Zagreb Croatia The city also has an informal friendship link with Peterborough England Gallery Edit Cathedral Archives of Pecs Inner city Mosque of Pasha Qasim Kiraly Street University of Pecs Kiraly Street Posta Palace Eosin glaze of Zsolnay fountain Jokai Square City Centre Nador Hotel Chapel Havihegy Chapel Ruins in Tettye Synagogue Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Pecs University of Pecs Faculty of Humanity and Natural Sciences Lajos Kossuth statue Kossuth square and Great Synagogue French Napoleonic War monument Tettye Aerial view Panorama Pannonpower Energy Station Logo of the 2010 European Capital of CultureSee also EditLove padlocks Music of Pecs Pecs Brewery Lake PecsReferences EditHistory of Pecs in Hungarian OECD FUNCTIONAL URBAN AREAS IN OECD COUNTRIES HUNGARY PDF a b c d Detailed Gazetteer of Hungary www ksh hu a b Slovenska rec casopis pre vyskum a kulturu slovenskeho jazyka Google Knihy 1998 Retrieved 2013 03 12 Kniezsa Istvan 1962 Beke Odon ed Pecs varos neve The name of the city of Pecs Magyar Nyelvor 326 329 Pecs klimaja Archived 2008 06 09 at the Wayback Machine Kft BioDigit Mecsek hegyseg Lexikon www kislexikon hu Pecs a kultura varosa Pecs a kultura varosa Early Christian Necropolis of Pecs Sopianae UNESCO UNESCO 2015 03 03 Retrieved 2015 03 03 a b c Lajos Gubcsi Hungary in the Carpathian Basin MoD Zrinyi Media Ltd 2011 Kleindel Osterreich Zahlen Daten Fakten Sonderausgabe A amp M 2004 ISBN 3 902397 49 7 www okm gov hu Oktatasi es Kulturalis Miniszterium oldala Az Oktatasi Evkonyv 2008 2009 letoltheto PDF formatumban Archived 2007 06 25 at the Wayback Machine Pecs kulturalis kozpont Archived 2009 03 15 at the Wayback Machine Ladislav Heka 2016 The Borders Of Baranja Since The Middle Ages Until Today http baza gskos hr Graniceidentiteti pdf page 29 Die Vertreibung Landsmannschaft der Deutschen aus Ungarn Molnar Miklos 2001 A Concise History of Hungary English translation Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Pecs a tolerans varos Hetek Kozeleti Hetilap Hetek Kozeleti Hetilap www livcomawards com Official site of LivCom awards Archived 2010 03 12 at the Wayback Machine www ddrkh hu 2008 november 12 Pecs masodik lett az Elheto Telepulesek dontojeben Archived 2009 03 05 at the Wayback Machine BETA Pecs Baranyai Kereskedelmi es Iparkamara www pbkik hu Mar epitik a pecsi Buza teren a Corsot BAMA www peh hu Elindult a Sopianae terv epul a Deli Ipari Park permanent dead link Pecsre aramlik a toke www origo hu 2008 07 17 Pecsre aramlik a toke Climatological Information for Pecs Hungary accessed 6 April 2012 Viktor Gyimesi 26 July 2016 Tele van Pecs az iparoscsaladok oroksegeivel www pecsma hu Quartz Kft Bemutatkozas quartzkft hu A stilusod egyedi kivul belul Pecsi Sor pecsisor hu Uj gyartocsarnokot kap a pecsi Rovitex Hungaria Kft BEOL Locations Terex Cranes www terex com Cegunkrol merlegstudio hu butorlapszabaszat hu Megyeri Butor Kft butorlapszabaszat Pecs Orszagos Butorlapszabaszat es Lapszabaszat kereso butorlapszabaszat hu FORSZ Ltd forszkft hu Kontakt Bemutatkozas Alcufer Kft www alcufer hu Kft Markcon Informatikai HIDROT Kft Cegbemutato hidrot hu Onitato Rolunk Matro matro hu Rolunk Strauss Metal Kft Biztonsagtechnika kis es nagyker Pancelszekreny szef lemezszekreny gyartas Lemezvagas Lemezmegmunkalas lezervagas elhajlitas www straussmetal hu Somapak History somapak hu Company review TERMOPLAST Muanyagfeloldgozo Kkt www termoplast hu Bocz nyomdaipari Kft Ofszet es digitalis nyomda Pecsen bocznyomda hu Kft Markcon Informatikai Pannon Flavour pannonflavours org Archived from the original on 2018 10 11 Retrieved 2018 05 08 Karsai Pecs Kft Company Profile EMIS www emis com Web E Riner Metal Kft riner hu Z Elektronika Kft zelektronika eu TG Netcom Kft Our company www tgnetcom hu Dachser Telephelyek CEGBEMUTATAS Biokom Pannonpower Tevekenysegunk Archived from the original on 2018 05 09 Retrieved 2018 05 08 Zrt REGON Media oriasi naperomu epult a pecsi hoeromu helyere Expo Center Pecs www expocenterpecs hu PTE Altalanos Orvostudomanyi Kar PTE Altalanos Orvostudomanyi Kar International Relations in a Nutshell international pte hu Retrieved 2022 01 29 Varosi kozgyules tagjai 2019 2024 Pecs Baranya megye valasztas hu Retrieved 2019 10 29 Pecs bans homeless from public areas The Budapest Beacon 2014 09 26 Retrieved 2018 02 28 Pecs adopts declaration calling on property owners to refrain from renting property to OSF grantee The Budapest Beacon 2017 12 14 Retrieved 2018 02 28 www idokep hu Pecs permanent dead link napilapcsoport hu Pecsi Napilap www pecsinapilap hu Expired Redirects sketchup google com Twin cities of Pecs pecseconomy eu Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Pecs Baranya Retrieved 2021 09 13 Binjakezim mes Shkodres dhe qytetit Pec ne Hungari ata gov al in Albanian Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 2018 10 12 Retrieved 2020 11 08 Notes a b Supported by Opposition coalition External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pecs Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Pecs Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Pecs Official homepage Baranya County Museums Directorate Pecs in 360 panoramic images Aerial photography Pecs Glas Koncila Hrvatska nazocnost u gradu s pet crkava Oct 7 2007 page about Croats in Pecs Mecsek 1956 History Pecs szallas accommodation Pecs at funiq hu in English Csakis itt Pecsen videoclipCoordinates 46 04 16 N 18 13 59 E 46 07111 N 18 23306 E 46 07111 18 23306 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pecs amp oldid 1134329258, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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