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The episcopal city
The episcopal city
This Baroque city is located northward from the capital on the east bank of the River Danube. Its thousand year old history has always been influenced by the Church and the Episcopate of Vác. The buildings of the Catholic city with their eventful past; the promenade at the Danube with numerous art galleries, museums and cultural events can easily charm anyone.
Its location is not only beautiful, but it has great advantages as well, so its territory has been inhabited for thousands of years. There is beautiful scenery surrounding the city. On the opposite bank of the River Danube you can see the Pilis Mountains, and on the Vác side the mountains of Börzsöny link into each other. The base of Naszály, in the Northern Medium Mountains, is northward from the city; and the southern area is occupied by the plain. Before the First World War, when the northern parts of Hungary had not been annexed, Vác was the border of Upper Hungary (‘Felvidék’).
The city was first mentioned in the 11th century in the charter of the Abbey of Garamszentbenedek. The Episcopate of Vác was founded by Stephen I. Géza I built the cathedral, and he was buried here in 1077. From this point on the Church determined the life of the city decisively. Its landowner was the prevailing bishop, who controlled the city both economically and culturally.
In the 14th century Vác was near the capital, albeit it was not Budapest then, but Visegrád. This central location had a good effect on the settlement; but its drawback was that the storms of history could easily reach it. In the Middle Ages the castle of Vác, built next to the Danube, was not able to protect the city from the Tartar invasion. The Mongols set fire to the castle church and the buildings of the episcopacy, where the Hungarian population had hoped to find refuge. After the invasion, Béla IV invited settlers from Southern Germany to the ruined city. They chose the area a bit northward from the centre, around the present Main Square.
During the 14th and 15th centuries the humanist bishop Miklós Báthory called famous architects, sculptors and painters to the city, so Vác started to prosper. This peaceful development was followed by the period of Turkish wars, during which Vác fell into the hands of the Turks after bloody fights. It only regained its freedom in 1686.
The revival of the city was delayed by Rákóczi’s War of Independence, which started in 1703. The great fire of 1731 destroyed much of the city. The present image of the streets is due to the reconstruction of the city in the second half of the 18th century. The most important bishops of the age are Kristóf Migazzi and Mihály Althann, who contributed to the development of the city both with their wealth and good taste.
The birth of the saying ‘rich as the bishop of Vác’ was not by mistake either. Kristóf Migazzi kept the episcopacy of Vác as well as his title of the archbishop and cardinal of Vienna. The interesting fact was that the archiepiscopacy of Vienna yielded less than half of that of the episcopacy of Vác.
This thousand year old cathedral should not be missed if you travel to Vác. The frescos of the dome from the 18th century are the work of Maulbertsch; but the other, later paintings are also masterpieces.
This building is called both a Dominican Church and the Church of the White Monks; this latter name refers to the white clothing of its monks. In the 1990s, during reconstruction works unique findings, even measured by European standards, were unearthed in its crypt. Three hundred coffins, which are 170-270 years old, were found. To the great surprise of the museologists, the coffins did not contain skeletons but intact, naturally mummified bodies. Their mystical origins are still being studied.
Hungary’s only triumphal arch was built by Bishop Migazzi in honour of the visit of Maria Theresa in 1764. But she was so suspicious that she did not dare go under the triumphal arch and made her coachman drive round it. Nevertheless this building still exists and anyone can walk through it.
町(小さな町)
ヨーロッパ(大陸) > ハンガリー(国) > ブダペストとその周辺(観光地域) > Pest megye (county)(県(郡)) > Danube Bend (Dunakanyar)(地理的地域)
GPS座標: の緯度 47°46'31"、の経度 19°8'15" (N47 46.52 - E19 8.25)
旅行ガイドの目的地:
Vác(232の写真 + 2のパノラマ画像)
Danube Bend (Dunakanyar)(1,769の写真 + 6のパノラマ画像)
Pest megye (county)(15,122の写真 + 50のパノラマ画像)
ブダペストとその周辺(15,989の写真 + 52のパノラマ画像)
ハンガリー(27,287の写真 + 163のパノラマ画像)
そしてさらに:
(ここで内側:Pest megyeとDanube Bend)
Pilis Mountains (Pilis hegység)(335の写真)
Buda Hills (Budai-hegység)(8,632の写真 + 21のパノラマ画像)
Gödöllő Hills (Gödöllői-dombság)(4,203の写真 + 21のパノラマ画像)
Visegrád Mountains (Visegrádi-hegység)(116の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Cegléd(125の写真 + 2のパノラマ画像)
Ráckeve(92の写真)
Dunakeszi(259の写真)
Göd(23の写真)
Nagykőrös(250の写真 + 2のパノラマ画像)
Nagymaros(31の写真)
Pilisvörösvár(88の写真)
Szentendre(597の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Visegrád(220の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Esztergom(110の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Dunakeszi(259の写真)
Göd(23の写真)
Nagymaros(31の写真)
Szentendre(597の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Visegrád(220の写真 + 1のパノラマ画像)
Csővár(105の写真)
Kóspallag(53の写真)
Márianosztra(37の写真)
Nagybörzsöny(4の写真)
Pilisszentkereszt(122の写真)
Nógrád(181の写真)
Zsámbék
ここにすべてのパノラマ写真:
Vác(2の写真)
Danube Bend (Dunakanyar)(6の写真)
Pest megye (county)(50の写真)
ブダペストとその周辺(52の写真)
ハンガリー(163の写真)
ヨーロッパ(165の写真)
ここにすべての通常の写真:
Vác(232の写真 / 4のギャラリー)
Danube Bend (Dunakanyar)(1,769の写真 / 31のギャラリー)
Pest megye (county)(15,122の写真 / 221のギャラリー)
ブダペストとその周辺(15,989の写真 / 234のギャラリー)
ハンガリー(27,287の写真 / 462のギャラリー)
ヨーロッパ(30,494の写真 / 523のギャラリー)
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