Bratislava

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Bratislava
—  City  —
Bratislava Montage
Bratislava Montage
Flag of Bratislava
Flag
Official seal of Bratislava
Seal
Nickname: Beauty on the Danube, Little Big City
Location in Slovakia
Location in Slovakia
Government
 - Type City council
 - Mayor Milan Ftáčnik
Area
 - City 367.584 km² (141.9 sq mi)
 - Urban 853.15 km² (329.4 sq mi)
 - Metro 2,053 km² (792.7 sq mi)
Elevation 126 m (413 ft)
Population
 - City 462,603
 - Urban 586,300
 - Metro 659,578
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Area code(s) 421 2
Website: bratislava.sk

Bratislava is the capital of Slovakia and is its largest city, with a population of 450,000. Before 1920 it went by the German name "Pressburg." The city's position on both banks of the Danube River at the crossroads of ancient trading routes predestined it to become a meeting point of various cultures that shaped its development, including Slovaks, Germans, Hungarians, Czechs, Austrians, Jews, Croatians, and Bulgarians. Celts, Slavs, Romans, and various Germanic tribes left an imprint on its ancient past. There is a saying that a true "Pressburgian" speaks four languages: Slovak, German, Hungarian, and a combination thereof.

Bratislava was a key economic and administrative center of the Kingdom of Hungary. Subsequently as part of the Habsburg Monarchy, under Empress Maria Theresa the city enjoyed its golden era. Due to its location near Vienna, its opera house is still frequented by visitors from the Austrian capital.

In 1919 Bratislava became the capital of the independent Slovak Republic, which bolstered national consciousness and the sense of importance and sovereignty, and with the emergence of an independent republic once again in 1993, it became the seat of the president and highest executive bodies. Divided into five districts, Bratislava is the seat of the Slovak president, National Council of the Slovak Republic, and government institutions.

Bratislava is an old city which has endured the missteps and obstacles of changing times. The city has held fast, retaining her beauty and standing stoic through various trials; enduring both difficulty and glory in different times in her history. Its favorite sons include Slovak historical figures Milan Rastislav Štefánik and Alexander Dubček.

Geography

Bratislava lies on both banks of the Danube River and is the only capital in the world that borders on two neighboring countries, Austria and Hungary. It is only an hour's drive from the border with the Czech Republic. The Little Carpathians (Malé Karpaty) massif of the Carpathian Mountains range begins within its territory. The Austrian capital Vienna is only 50 km away. Two more rivers flow across the city — Morava, which forms the city's northwestern border, and the Little Danube.

Climate: The climate is mild, with frequent winds and marked variations between hot summers and cold, humid winters.

Etymology

In March 1919, Bratislava was adopted as the official name; it is not known on what grounds. One theory is that the name was invented by U.S. president Woodrow Wilson, another ascribes it to the corruption of the old Slavic "Braslava." It is documented though that a variant of this name was incidentally reconstructed by Pavel Josef Šafařík in the 1830s based on the name of the Bohemian ruler Bretislav I. "Braslava" was used subsequently by members of the Slovak National Movement in the 1840s and occasionally afterwards.

Bratislava's names most commonly used before 1920
Preßburg German (before the 19th century occasionally and since the German spelling reform of 1996 regularly spelled Pressburg)
Prešporok Slovak name; stems from the German one (one of the many variants was Pressporek in 1773)
Prešpur(e)k or Presspur(e)k Czech
Pressburg(h) or Pressborough English (Pressburg Street in southwestern London)
Presburgo Spanish
Pressbourg later Presbourg French (rue de Presbourg in Paris)
Presburg Dutch
Pozsony Hungarian (still in use by Hungarians today). Earlier variant Posony (1773)
Posonium Latin
Požun Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian
Pozhoma Romani
Istropolis Greek, meaning the Danube City

Prehistory and Early Middle Ages


Samo's Empire & Great Moravian Empire

Part of the Kingdom of Hungary (907-1918)

Medieval Bratislava Castle


Battle of Mohacs; Capital of the Kingdom of Hungary


Empress Maria Theresa and Slovak National Movement

Joseph II turns back time


Napoleonic wars and beyond

Panorama of Bratislava I (from castle)

Twentieth Century

First Czechoslovak Republic: 1919-1939

World War II: 1939-1945


Czechoslovak Republic: 1945-1992

Communist takeover

Czechoslovakia's divorce

City in Timeline

Slavín memorial honors Soviet Army soldiers who gave their lives during the liberation of Bratislava from Nazi Germany.
Paved street in the Old Town of Bratislava
A street in the Old Town
City Museum
Seat of the Slovak National Theater


Culture

At Esztergom and Štúrovo, the Danube separates Hungary from Slovakia.

Demographics

The 2001 census listed Bratislava's population as 428,672 inhabitants. The ethnic groups represented are Slovaks (91.4 percent), Hungarians (3.8 percent), Czechs (1.9 percent), with small amounts of Moravians, Ruthenes, Ukrainians, Germans, Croats, Roma (gypsy), and Poles.

Religion

The population of Bratislava belongs to the Christian faith, with Roman Catholics making up over half the population at (56.7 percent). Lutherans of the Augsburg Confession make up (6 percent), while Greek Catholics, Reformed Christians, Eastern Orthodox and other Protestant denominations make up the remainder of the faithful.

According to the 2001 census, there were seven hundred Jews, and a high percentage of professed Atheists, 29.3 percent.

Sports

Bratislava has two major sports interests; soccer ("football") and ice hockey, and has several official teams. Football teams: are:

while Ice hockey: teams are:

Education

The first university in Bratislava and also in Slovakia was the Academia Istropolitana, established in 1467.

Today, Bratislava is the seat of several colleges and universities:

Economy

Bratislava enjoys the lowest unemployment rate in the country. The boom in local economy derives from the services, engineering (Volkswagen auto plant), chemical, and electrical industries. Service and high-tech oriented businesses thrive as well. Many multinational corporations, including IBM, Dell, Accenture, AT&T, Lenovo, and SAP choose to place their outsourcing and service centers here.

The GDP per capita, which was valued at €25,351 in 2002, reaches 120 percent of the EU average, trailing Prague among the recently joined countries (Eurostat). Regional GDP per Inhabitant in the EU 27, February 19, 2007, Eurostat News Release. Retrieved March 19, 2007

Transportation

Motorway D1 in Bratislava-Petržalka
Trolleybuses of Bratislava

Road

Rail

Air

River

Public transit

Images


Sources and further reading

External links

All links retrieved February 11, 2022.


Credits

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