Fishermen's Bastion, Budapest
© 123rf.com / Michal Bednarek
Things to see in Budapest
Budapest Tourism Office
1056 Budapest Március 15 tér 7
Tel: (01) 322 4098.
Website: www.budapestinfo.hu
Opening hours: Daily 0800-2000.
The main information office of the Budapest Tourism Office is located in Liszt Ferenc tér 9-11 (tel: (01) 322 4098). Other offices can be found in the main hall of Nyugati station, at the airport, and the Castle District.
IBUSZ tourist office, XI Dayka G utca 3 (tel: (01) 485 2765; www.ibusz.hu) and Tourinform, Sütö utca 2, (tel: (01) 438 8080; www.tourinform.hu) also provide tourist information.
The Budapest Card (www.budapestinfo.hu/en/budapest_card) is simple to use and excellent value. It provides free travel on public transport, entrance to 60 museums and attractions, and discounts including spas, shops, restaurants and flights. The card is valid for one adult and one child under 14 years for two or three days. You can buy the cards at tourist information offices, hotels and at main underground ticket booths. Budapest Tourism Office provides online details of the discounts available at each location.
Dating from the 13th century, the Royal Palace, on Castle Hill, has survived many wars. Within the palace's partially reconstructed walls lies a vast museum complex that includes the Budapest History Museum (also known as Castle Museum) and the Hungarian National Gallery. The Castle Museum traces the city's history from Buda's liberation from the Turks in 1686 to the 1970s. The Hungarian National Gallery is situated at the core of the palace and its encyclopaedic collection of Hungarian art from the 10th century to the present day provides a valuable insight into the Hungarian national identity.
Europe's largest synagogue (and the world's second largest) was designed by Lajos Föster, in a Byzantine-Moorish style, and completed in 1859. Desecrated by German and Hungarian Nazis, its two Moorish domes gleam afresh after a 10-year restoration project financed by the Hungarian government and Tony Curtis' Emmanuel Foundation. Some 724,000 Hungarian Jews were murdered in the Holocaust and their lives are remembered in the Jewish History Museum, annexed to the synagogue, and at Imre Varga's memorial to the side of the synagogue.
Behind the sanctuary of the Matthias Church, the Fishermen's Bastion offers a splendid view of the Danube and Pest. At the end of the 19th century, Frigyes Schulek designed a graceful system of stairs running from the Danube to the hilltop, and the current structure, which has been embellished with turrets, arcades, curved stairs and statues, was intended to be the end point. Schulek imagined the bastion section defended by the fishermen's guild, hence the name. Many felt his vision was of a more austere, defensible and less decorated piece of architecture, but his original plans were later altered to the delight of today's visitors.
Many regard the thermal baths attached to Hotel Gellért as the finest in the city. A bathhouse has stood on the site since the 1500s, when its waters were valued for their medicinal qualities by the Turks, but the current art nouveau building dates from the turn of last century. Bathing in its soothing waters, surrounded by flower motifs, columns and delicate wall designs, is one of Budapest's highlights, but even if you're not up for a dip, stop by to drink in the glorious foyer. If you’d like a massage or treatment, approach the normally grumpy staff.
Many regard the thermal baths attached to Hotel Gellért as the finest in the city. A bathhouse has stood on the site since the 1500s, when its waters were valued for their medicinal qualities by the Turks, but the current art nouveau building dates from the turn of last century. Bathing in its soothing waters, surrounded by flower motifs, columns and delicate wall designs, is one of Budapest's highlights, but even if you're not up for a dip, stop by to drink in the glorious foyer. A huge array of treatments and massages are offered, so read the display board carefully before approaching the normally grumpy staff.
Wedged in a loop of the River Danube and linked by Árpád híd and Margit híd to Buda and Pest, the 2km (1.5-mile) Margaret Island is one of the calmest and greenest spots in Budapest. No cars are allowed or needed - the island from Margit híd to Árpád híd can be crossed on foot in 20 minutes. The island is named after the devout daughter of King Béla IV, who lived here in a Dominican convent in the 13th century. In summer, Margaret Island is bursting with people heading for a swim at the Hajós Alfréd swimming pool or Palatinus pool.
The Zsolnay pyrogranite tiles of Matthias Church are as colourful and richly patterned as snakeskin. Inside is a melange of styles from the 13th to the 19th centuries. It is thought that a church was first built on this site in 1015, by King István. When the Turks occupied the Castle District in 1541, the church was turned into a mosque and the walls painted with extracts from the Koran. In the 20th century, the church was used as a kitchen by occupying German forces, and later as stables by the Russians.
Imre Steindl's design for Budapest's parliament, inspired by London's Houses of Parliament, won first prize in a competition to celebrate the 1,000th year of the Hungarian nation. Work commenced in 1885 and was finally completed in 1902. The edifice, with its elegant neo-Renaissance dome, topped by a pointy neo-gothic spire, stretches for over 250m (820ft) along the River Danube. It was here that the crowds assembled on 23 October 1989, when Mátyás Szurös declared the Hungarian Republic from the balcony on Kossuth Lajos tér.
Nine bridges link Buda to Pest but the Chain Bridge is the first and most famous, with its solid arches and lion statues. Completed in 1848, the bridge was inaugurated in 1849, allowing for the integration of Buda, Pest and Óbuda in 1872. After suffering considerable damage at the hands of the Nazis, the bridge was repaired and re-inaugurated in 1949.
St Stephen's Basilica, Budapest's largest church, was designed by József Hild and begun in 1851, although not consecrated until 1905. A storm destroyed the original dome in 1868 and much of the building required rebuilding. The Basilica also suffered damage during WWII. The building seats 8,500 and is currently undergoing restoration, which began in 1980 and is set to continue for the foreseeable future. Inside, Gyula Benczúr's painting of Szent István offering the Hungarian crown to the Virgin Mary symbolises the alliance between Hungary and Western Europe. The basilica's tower offers excellent views of the city.
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