Budaörs

Coordinates: 47°27′39″N 18°57′29″E / 47.46072°N 18.95798°E / 47.46072; 18.95798
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Budaörs
Wudersch
Budaörs
Budaörs
UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
2040
Area code(+36) 23
MotorwaysM1
Distance from Budapest9.2 km (5.7 mi) Northeast
Websitewww.budaors.hu

Budaörs (Hungarian:

Latin: Vicus Teuto) is a town in Pest County, Budapest metropolitan area, Hungary
.

Location

A suburb of Budapest, the town lies among the Buda and Csiki hills and the Tétény plateau in the Budaörs-basin. The dramatic Törökugrató [ˈtørøkuɡrɒtoː] hill (Türkensprung in German) rises above the town.

History

The first settlements of the area date from 3500 BC. Excavations near the

Celtic Eraviscus tribe occupied the area for about 100 years. Several villas have been recovered from the Roman times around Kamaraerdő [ˈkɒmɒrɒɛrdøː]
.

Little is known of the early history of the settlement after the Hungarian conquest. The name originates from the name of one of the Kabar tribes that joined the Hungarians.

The first written mention of Örs dates from 1236 when

Béla IV, king of Hungary donated a church together with the St. Martin chapel to the Cistercians. Under the Turkish occupation during Ottoman rule the area was uninhabited and was resettled by Schwab
peasants in the early 18th century by the countess Zsuzsanna Bercsényi.

Since then the town developed rapidly. While at the end of the 18th century only 1143 peasants lived here, in 40 years the number tripled.

Communist government
begun forcing ethnic Germans to leave their homes.

As of 2009[update], Budaörs had a population of 26,400.[2]

Visitor attractions

  • Jakob Bleyer Museum of Local History, a museum which chronicles the history of the German settlers in Budaörs.
  • Roman Catholic Church, a baroque church built between 1801 and 1810.

Notable residents

See also

Twin towns – sister cities

Budaörs is twinned with:[3]

References

  1. ^ "Gazetteer of Hungary, 1st January" (PDF). www.ksh.hu. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  2. ^ Official website (in Hungarian)
  3. ^ "Testvértelepüléseink". budaors.hu (in Hungarian). Budaörs. Retrieved 6 April 2021.

External links