Difference between revisions of "Bratislava" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Infobox Slovak town |
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{{Infobox Settlement
 +
|name =Bratislava
 +
|native_name=
 +
|settlement_type          = City
 +
|etymology=
 +
|official_name=
 +
|motto =
 +
|nickname=Beauty on the Danube, Little Big City
 +
|image_skyline            = Bratislava Montage.jpg
 +
|imagesize                =
 +
|image_caption            =
 +
|image_flag              = Flag of Bratislava.png
 +
|image_seal              = Coat of Arms of Bratislava.png
 +
|image_caption=Bratislava Montage
 +
|symbol_type=Coat of arms
 +
|country=Slovakia
 +
|country_flag=true
 +
|state =
 +
|region=[[Bratislava Region|Bratislava]]
 +
|district=
 +
|municipality=
 +
|part_type=Districts
 +
|part_fold=
 +
|part=Bratislava I
 +
|part1=[[Bratislava II|II]]
 +
|part2=[[Bratislava III|III]]
 +
|part3=[[Bratislava IV|IV]]
 +
|part4=[[Bratislava V|V]]
 +
|landmark=
 +
|river=[[Danube]]
 +
|river1=[[Morava (river)|Morava]]
 +
|river2=[[Little Danube]]
 +
|location=
 +
|elevation=134
 +
|prominence=
 +
|lat_d=48 |lat_m=08 |lat_s=38 |lat_NS=N
 +
|long_d=17 |long_m=06 |long_s=35 |long_EW=E
 +
|highest =Devínska Kobyla
 +
|highest_location=
 +
|highest_region=
 +
|highest_state=
 +
|highest_elevation=514
 +
|highest_lat_d=|highest_lat_m=|highest_lat_s=|highest_lat_NS=
 +
|highest_long_d=|highest_long_m=|highest_long_s=|highest_long_EW=
 +
|lowest =Danube River
 +
|lowest_location=
 +
|lowest_region=
 +
|lowest_state=
 +
|lowest_elevation=126
 +
|lowest_lat_d=|lowest_lat_m=|lowest_lat_s=|lowest_lat_NS=
 +
|lowest_long_d=|lowest_long_m=|lowest_long_s=|lowest_long_EW=
 +
|length=
 +
|length_orientation=
 +
|width=
 +
|width_orientation=
  
image_coat_of_arms = Flag of Bratislava.png |  
+
|area_magnitude          =  
subject_name = Bratislava |
+
|area_total_sq_mi        =
slovak_region = [[Bratislava Region]] |
+
|area_total_km2          = 367.584
slovak_district = Bratislava I-V|
+
|area_land_sq_mi          =
 +
|area_land_km2            =
 +
|area_water_sq_mi        =
 +
|area_water_km2          =
 +
|area_urban_sq_mi        =  
 +
|area_urban_km2          = 853.15
 +
|area_metro_sq_mi        =  
 +
|area_metro_km2          = 2053
 +
|area_blank1_title        =  
 +
|area_blank1_sq_mi        =
 +
|area_blank1_km2          =
 +
|elevation_ft            = 413
  
coordinates = {{coor dms|48|08|41|N|17|06|46|E|type:city_scale:30000}} |
+
|area=367.584
altitude = 126-514 |
+
|area_land=
population = 446,819 <small>(as of 2005)</small> |
+
|area_water=
area = 367.59 |
+
|area_urban=853.15
prefix = 2 |
+
|area_metro=2053
psc = 8XXXX |
+
|population_total =462603
car_plate = BA |
+
|population_date=2012-01-02
  image_location = Map_slovakia_bratislava.png
+
|population_urban=586300
 +
|population_metro=659578
 +
|population_density=1258
 +
|population_density_urban=auto
 +
|population_density_metro=auto
 +
|established =907
 +
|established_type=First mentioned
 +
|government_type =City council
 +
|government_location=
 +
|government_region=
 +
|government_state=
 +
|government_elevation=
 +
|government_lat_d=|government_lat_m=|government_lat_s=|government_lat_NS=
 +
|government_long_d=|government_long_m=|government_long_s=|government_long_EW=
 +
|leader_title            = Mayor
 +
|leader_name              = [[Milan Ftáčnik]]
 +
|timezone=[[Central European Time|CET]]
 +
|utc_offset=+1
 +
|timezone_DST=[[Central European Summer Time|CEST]]
 +
|utc_offset_DST=+2
 +
|postal_code=8XX XX
 +
|area_code=421 2
 +
|area_code_type=Phone prefix
 +
|code =BA, BL
 +
|code_type=[[Vehicle registration plates of Slovakia|Car plate]]
 +
|whs_name =
 +
|whs_year =
 +
|whs_number=
 +
|whs_region=
 +
|whs_criteria=
 +
|iucn_category=
 +
|image_map =Map_slovakia_bratislava.png
 +
|map_caption=Location in Slovakia
 +
|map_background=Slovakia - background map.png
 +
|map_locator=Slovakia
 +
|map1 =Bratislava Region - outline map.svg
 +
|map1_caption=Location in the Bratislava Region
 +
|map1_background=Bratislava Region - background map.png
 +
|map1_locator=Bratislava Region
 +
|map1_size=128
 +
|commons =Bratislava
 +
|statistics=[http://www.statistics.sk/mosmis/eng/prvav2.jsp?txtUroven&#61;410190&lstObec&#61;582000&Okruh&#61;sodb MOŠ/MIS]
 +
|website =[http://www.bratislava.sk/en bratislava.sk]
 +
|footnotes=
 
}}
 
}}
<!--//END OF INFOBOX—>
 
'''Bratislava''' (see below for other [[Bratislava#Etymology|names]]) is the capital of [[Slovakia]] and the country's largest city, with a population of some 450,000. Bratislava is the political, cultural and economic center of Slovakia. It is the seat of the Slovak presidency, [[National Council of the Slovak Republic|parliament]] and government as well as home to several universities, museums, theaters, galleries and other national economic, cultural and educational institutions. Most of Slovakia's large businesses and financial institutions have their headquarters in Bratislava. The city's past has been characterized by the strong influence of various peoples, including [[Slovaks]], [[Germans]], [[Magyars|Hungarians]], [[Czechs]], [[Austrians]] and [[Jew]]s. Bratislava still retains its cosmopolitan spirit. It hosts many festivals and trade shows and it is famous for its night life and leisure facilities.
 
Bratislava leží na Dunaji v jihozápadní části Slovenska. Má přibližně 450 000 obyvatel. Město se dělí na 5 okresů a ty se dále člení na 17 městských částí.
 
Historie Bratislavy
 
Bratislava vznikla na místě, kde se v minulosti střetávaly nejdůležitější obchodní cesty. Bylo zde významné sídlo Keltů, od 6. století pak bylo město osídleno Slovany. Do roku 1918 byla Bratislava součástí Uherska, později Habsburské monarchie. Roku 1919 se stává hlavním městem Slovenské republiky. Po vzniku samostatné Slovenské republiky (1993) se město stalo také sídlem prezidenta a nejvyšších státních institucí.
 
Bratislava – středisko kultury
 
Bratislava je střediskem slovenského školství, vědy a kultury. Pravidelně se tu konají známé festivaly jako např. Bratislavské hudební slavnosti, Bratislavská lyra nebo výstava květů Flóra. Je zde více než 20 muzeí a 80 galerií. Do Opery jezdí každý den návštěvníci z Vídně.
 
  
Základní údaje o Bratislavě
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'''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, [[Germany|Germans]], [[Hungary|Hungarians]], [[Czech Republic|Czechs]], [[Austria|Austrians]], [[Jew]]s, [[Croatia|Croatians]], and [[Bulgaria|Bulgarians]]. Celts, Slavs, [[Roman Empire|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|Habsburg Monarchy]], under Empress [[Maria Theresa of Austria|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.
  
Bratislava je známa ako mesto na Dunaji, križovatka európskych ciest, tradičné kultúrne a správne centrum, sem prichádzali, tu žili, pracovali a vytvárali hodnoty mnohé národy. Tu zanechali svoje kultúrne stopy Keltovia, Rímani, Germáni, starí Slovania. Od 13. storočia, keď získala veľké mestské privilégia sa na jej duchovnom profile podieľa celý rad význačných osobností slovenskej, nemeckej, maďarskej , ale i chorvátskej, bulharskej, českej, židovskej národnosti. Nezastupiteľný je podiel kresťanskej kultúry na duchovnom a kultúrnom obraze mesta, významný je však aj príspevok židovskej náboženskej obce. V nedávnom období, najmä v 2. polovici 20. storočia pestrú mozaiku kultúrneho obrazu mesta výrazne obohatili obyvatelia z blízkych i vzdialených regiónov Slovenska.  
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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.  
 +
{{toc}}
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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]].
  
Bratislava bola aj mestom pestovania a prezentácie kultúry z ďalších európskych regiónov. Najvýraznejším príkladom je zanietenie predstaviteľov šľachtického rodu Erdody pre francúzsku kultúru. V salónoch  Erdödyovského paláca v nároží ulíc Ventúrska a Panská sa takmer 150 rokov pestovala francúzska kultúra a jaj posolstvo sa z Bratislavy šírilo aj do tradičných stredoeurópskych kultúrnych centier. V prvej polovici 20. storočia logicky a kontinuálne na túto tradíciu nadviazala „Maison Francaise“, ktorá v tomto objekte pôsobila až do 50-tych rokov.
+
==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 &mdash; Morava, which forms the city's northwestern border, and the Little Danube.
  
Bratislava si vyslúžila i ďalšie označenia a prívlastky ako komorné veľkomesto, mesto vzdelania, mesto hudby, mesto mieru a zaslúžene. Bohatá a pestrá štruktúra a vysoká kvalita kultúrneho a spoločenského života sa premietla na začiatku 20. storočia do široko rozvetvenej sústavy kultúrnych a spoločenských združení, exkluzívnych klubov i záujmových a profesných spolkov, ktoré ďalej rozvíjali kultúrny odkaz. Kontinuálny obraz kultúrneho, spoločenského a duchovného života mesta Bratislavy po dočasnom prerušení opäť získava svoje hlavné obrysy i silu a kvalitu bohatého obsahu.
+
'''Climate:'''
http://www.unia-miest.sk/Aktivity/BA-Mesto%20tolerancie/2002/index.htm
+
The climate is mild, with frequent winds and marked variations between hot summers and cold, humid winters.
 
+
*annual average temperature: 9.9 °C
 
+
*annual sunshine hours: 1976.4 (5.4 hours/day)
 
+
*annual average rainfall: 527.4 mm <small>(according to 1993 data)</small>
Bratislava is one of the youngest capitals in Europe and few people know that during the time it was called Pressburg or Pozsony it was one of the most important cities in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was a mixing pot of various nations and nationalities who lived together in peace and harmony. There is a saying that a true ‘Pressburgian’ speaks four languages: Slovak, German, Hungarian and Mishmash. Even as recently as the 1980s you might hear how older Pressburgians in the street would say two words in German, two in Hungarian and two in Slovak all in the space of one sentence. That is what we mean by “mishmash”.
 
Bratislava’s location on the banks of the River Danube and at the crossroads of ancient trading routes right at the heart of Europe predestined it to become a meeting point of various cultures. It was the home of the Celts, the Romans, and the Slavs ... The reign of Maria Theresa is regarded as a golden era in the city’s history. She was crowned Queen of Hungary in St. Martin’s cathedral in Pressburg, just like the 10 other kings and 8 royal partners over the course of 300 years when Pressburg was in fact the capital of the Kingdom of Hungary.
 
The rich mix of cultures and nations not only left its mark in the language spoken here, but also in the customs, cuisine and lifestyle. Just like the Viennese, the people of Bratislava also enjoy promenading through the streets of the city centre, taking time out for a coffee in any of the many cafes. This part of the city is referred to as the Korzo and combines elegance with charm. Visitors say that the city has a relaxed Mediterranean type atmosphere. Bratislava is a seaside city without the sea.
 
Nowadays Bratislava is experiencing a boom once more. Buildings are popping up, deals being made, people studying, and everything is on the move. Experts regard it as one of the most dynamically developing and most prospective regions in Europe. It welcomes tourists, business people, and investors, who are attracted to this blooming city and its lively atmosphere.
 
There are many cities in Europe that can boast their own special unique charm, and Bratislava is definitely one of them.
 
  
 
==Etymology==
 
==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 [[United States of America|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 [[Bohemia]]n ruler Bretislav I. "Braslava" was used subsequently by members of the Slovak National Movement in the 1840s and occasionally afterwards.
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 US president [[Woodrow Wilson|Wilson]], another that it might be a corruption of the old Slavic ''Braslava''. However, we know for sure that a variant of this name was reconstructed by [[Pavel Jozef Šafárik]] (by mistake) from old names in the 1830s based on the name of the [[Bohemia]]n ruler [[Bretislav I|Bretislav]]. It was used subsequently by members of the Slovak movement in the 1840s and occasionally also afterwards.
 
 
 
''A more detailed list can be found in the [[History of Bratislava#City name history|History of Bratislava]] article''.
 
  
 
{| border=1 cellspacing=0  cellpadding=4 width=300 style="float:right; border:1px solid grey; border-collapse:collapse; font-size:90%; margin:0 0 .5em 1em;"
 
{| border=1 cellspacing=0  cellpadding=4 width=300 style="float:right; border:1px solid grey; border-collapse:collapse; font-size:90%; margin:0 0 .5em 1em;"
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|-
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Preßburg''
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Preßburg''
|colspan="2" valign="top"|[[German language|German]] (before the 19th century occasionally and since the [[German spelling reform of 1996]] regularly spelled ''Pressburg'')
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|colspan="2" valign="top"|[[German language|German]] (before the 19th century occasionally and since the German spelling reform of 1996 regularly spelled ''Pressburg'')
 
|-
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Prešporok''
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Prešporok''
Line 91: Line 188:
 
|}
 
|}
  
==Geography==
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==Prehistory and Early Middle Ages==
Bratislava lies on both banks of the River [[Danube River|Danube]] and is the only capital in the world that borders two countries, [[Austria]] and [[Hungary]], and is only an hour's drive from the border with the [[Czech Republic]]. The Little Carpathians (''Malé Karpaty'') massif of the Carpathian Mountains mountain range begins within its territory. The Austrian capital [[Vienna]] is only 50 km away. Two more rivers flow across the city &mdash; Morava, which forms its northwestern border, and the Little Danube.
+
* Bratislava's position in the center of [[Europe]] and flanking the [[Danube River|River Danube]] predestined it to becoming a crossroads of trade routes as well as a hub of various cultures. The first traces of a permanent settlement are from the late Stone Age.
 
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* Neolithic Age: the first permanent settlement of the region begins with the Linear Pottery Culture.
'''Climate:'''
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* 400 B.C.E. - 50 B.C.E.: Celts settled here. The real door to history, however, did not open until the arrival of the Boii Celtic tribe in the second century B.C.E., who established a strategic power and defense center here. In 125 B.C.E. they founded an oppidum (fortified town) with a coin mint. The most famous coin is the gold Stater with the inscription Biatec. Just as [[Vienna]], [[Budapest]], [[Paris]], and other major [[Europe]]an cities, Bratislava stands on the foundations of a [[Celtic]] settlement.
The climate is mild, with frequent winds and marked variations between hot summers and cold, humid winters.
+
* 100 C.E. - 500 C.E.: the border of the [[Roman Empire]] (Limes Romanus) runs across the city center; Romans and Germanic tribes form settlements in the area. Around the time of the birth of [[Christ]], the Romans discovered the city's strategic importance. They did not settle the area permanently; instead they built military camps to protect local trade. One of such camps, called Gerulata, was situated on the site of the Bratislava district of Rusovce and represented part of the defense system Limes Romanus, which separated the Roman world from the [[Barbarian|barbaric]] tribes. The Romans also laid the groundwork for the city's reputation as one of vintners and viticulturists. Part of the mission of the Roman conquests was namely to introduce vines and wine-making to all inhabited areas. This is how wine-growing eventually spread to other countries as well, such as [[France]], [[Spain]], and [[Germany]].
*annual average temperature: 9.9 °C
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* sixth century - eighth century: arrival of Slavs (500 C.E. - today) and [[Eurasia]]n Avars (560 - 800).
*annual sunshine hours: 1976.4 (5.4 hours/day)
 
*annual average rainfall: 527.4 mm <small>(according to 1993 data)</small>
 
  
  
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===Samo's Empire & Great Moravian Empire===
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* During the migration of nations, Slavs populated the area of Bratislava. Led by the Frankish merchant Samo, they founded the Empire of King Samo, which was the first known organized community of Slavs that served as protection against the raids of nomadic Avars. Avars and their allies terrorized all neighboring tribes. Being a wealthy man operating in the territory of central and eastern Europe, [[Samo]] realized that the Slavs, given to feuds and animosity, would benefit greatly from the shipment of weapons, so he armed them and led them to the war against the Avars, and was elected the king of Slavs. He reigned from 623 to 658, having established a Slavic empire in the fashion of the Frankish empire. He is credited for spearheading the process of the pacification of Slavic tribes, who thanks to him, refocused their energies on [[agriculture]] and gave up looting expeditions. After his death, the Empire dissolved into principalities, which were later consolidated within the Great Moravian Empire.
  
==History==
+
* From the late eighth century to 833, Bratislava was part of the Principality of Nitra, and subsequently of Great Moravia (833-907). The Great Moravian Empire enjoyed greatest expansion during the reign of Lord Svätopluk (870-894), who expanded its territory to include the [[Czech Republic]], [[Slovakia]], southwestern [[Poland]], southeastern [[Germany]], [[Hungary]], northern and eastern [[Austria]], and western [[Romania]]. This state was built on [[Christianity|Christian]] culture, which was introduced to the Slavs by brothers [[Cyril]] and [[Methodius]] in 863. The downfall of the Empire came at the hands of nomadic Hungarian tribes. [[Salzburg]] chronicles provide the first written record of the Bratislava Castle in a description of a battle between Hungarian and Bavarian troops that took place near the castle in 907. This period coincides with the start of the gradual demise of the Great Moravian Empire. The Hungarians won and occupied the eastern part of Great Moravia.
5000 B.C.E.
 
    Archaeologically proven colonisation of Bratislava in the late Stone Age – in Neolithic;
 
1st century BC.
 
    Celts built fortified settlements at Devin and Bratislava, in addition to which they established a Celtic mint, where silver coins were minted known as „biatecs“;
 
1st – 4th centuries AD
 
    The country south of the river Danube under domination of the Roman Empire;
 
5th. – 6th centuries.
 
    Arrival of Slavic tribes;
 
623 – 658
 
    Population in the period of the Samo‘s Empire, the first state structure of Slavonic people;
 
7th – 8th centuries
 
    The territory of Bratislava becomes an important centre of Avarian-Slavic Empire;
 
9th century
 
    Establishment of the Greater Moravian Empire, Castle of Bratislava – military, administration and church centre;
 
864
 
    The first written reference to the Devin castle as a strong boundary fortress of the Greater Moravian Empire in the Fulda annals;
 
907
 
    The first written reference to Bratislava (as Brezalauspurc) in annals of Salzburg in association with a battle between Bavarians and Old Hungarians;
 
10th – 11th centuries
 
    The castle of Bratislava becomes an important boundary of Hungary, a seat of the head of province administration and chapter;
 
1000 – 1038
 
    Establishment of the commitat (province) of Bratislava by the Hungarian King Stephen I;
 
12th century
 
    Settlement on the eastern side of the castle hill;
 
1221
 
    Romanesque church of St. Salvator moved from the castle to the settlement round the castle, to the place of the present St. Martin Dome built in the 14th and 15th centuries;
 
1291
 
    Hungarian King Andrew III granted Bratislava extensive municipal privileges, thus confirming its incorporation to a system of free royal towns and simultaneously laying foundations for development of trade and crafts;
 
14th – 15th centuries
 
    Period of development of crafts, viticulture and international trade;
 
1430
 
    The town was granted minting right by the King Sigismund of Luxembourg;
 
1436
 
    Sigismund of Luxembourg granted the town the right to use its coat of arms;
 
1464
 
    Hungarian King Mathias Corvinus confirmed all old privileges of Bratislava by the Golden bull;
 
1465
 
    King Mathias founded the first university in the territory of present Slovakia – Academia Istropolitana;
 
1468
 
    The right of the sword was granted to the city by the King Mathias Corvinus;
 
1526
 
    In the battle at Mohac, the King Louis died, while Ferdinand I of Hapsburg was elected the King in the Franciscan cloister;
 
1536
 
    Bratislava became capital city of Hungary, assembly town and a seat of central offices and coronation town of Hungarian kings;
 
1543
 
    Bratislava became seat of archbishop;
 
1563 – 1830
 
    During three centuries, there were crowned 11 Hungarian kings and 8 royal wives;
 
17th century
 
    A century of uprisings against the Hapsburgs;
 
1711
 
    Big plague epidemic during which 3,860 people died;
 
1741
 
    Coronation of Maria-Theresa;
 
1775
 
    Queen Maria-Theresa ordered city walls to be pulled down, which meant construction development of the town;
 
1776
 
    Establishment of the Theatre of estates with a permanent company of actors;
 
1780
 
    Establishment of the first manufacture;
 
1783
 
    Joseph II ordered central offices to be moved to Buda and coronation Jules to Vienna;
 
1805
 
    After battle of 3 emperors at Austerlitz, the so-called Peace of Pressburg (nowadays Bratislava) between Napoleonic French and Austria was signed in the Mirror hall of the Primacial palace.  
 
1809
 
    The town besieged by Napoleonic troops;
 
1811
 
    May 28 – the castle of Bratislava burnt down;
 
1818
 
    The first steamboat on the Danube-river;
 
1840
 
    Horse-drawn railway started running between Bratislava and Svaty Jur;
 
1843
 
    Codification of Slovak language by Ludovit Stur and his followers;
 
1848
 
    King Ferdinand V signed the so-called Laws of March on abolition of serfdom in the Mirror hall of the Primacial palace;
 
1886
 
    The building of the present Slovak National Theatre was built in place of the Theatre of estates;
 
1891
 
    Opening of the first bridge over the Danube – Old bridge;
 
1895
 
    The first tram in Bratislava;
 
1912
 
    First trolleybuses in the streets of Bratislava;
 
1913
 
    79 houses in the settlement beneath the castle destroyed by destructive fire;
 
1918
 
    October 10 – establishment of the Slovak National Council with powers for Bratislava and its vicinity
 
1919
 
    January 1 – occupation of the town by Czechoslovak legions and its annex to the Czechoslovak Republic;
 
1939
 
    March 14 – Bratislava became capital city of the nazi Slovak State;
 
1945
 
    April 4 – the town was liberated by troops of the Soviet Army;
 
1946
 
    Inception of the so-called Greater Bratislava by annexing the villages of Devin, Dubravka, Lamac, Petrzalka, Prievoz, Raca a Vajnory;
 
1948
 
    February 25 – political coup of communists, all executive power in the town and country was assumed by communists;
 
1969
 
    October 30 – agreement on the Czechoslovak Federation signed at the castle of Bratislava, Bratislava becoming capital city of the Slovak Socialist Republic;
 
1971
 
    Villages of Cunovo, Devinska Nova Ves, Jarovce, Podunajske Biskupice, Rusovce, Vrakuna and Zahorska Bystrica were annexed to Bratislava;
 
1989
 
    November 27 – general strike of citizens of the town, supporting requirements of the movements „Public against Violence“, „Civic Forum“ as well as those of students;
 
1993
 
    Bratislava became capital of the independent Slovak Republic.  
 
  
Celtic settlements
+
==Part of the Kingdom of Hungary (907-1918)==
 
 
The position of Bratislava right at the very heart of Europe on the banks of the River Danube predestined the city to become a crossroads and destination point for trade routes, as well as a hub of various cultures. The first traces of a permanent settlement are associated with the late Stone Age.
 
 
 
The real door to history, however, did not open until the arrival of the Boii Celtic tribe to Bratislava in the 2nd century B.C.E., as they established a strategic power centre here with defensive function. They were famous also for the minting of coins, the most well-known of which are the gold Stater coins with the inscription Biatec. Bratislava therefore, just like Vienna, Budapest, Paris and other major European cities, stands on the foundations of a Celtic settlement.
 
 
 
Bratislava and the Romans
 
 
 
Around the time of the birth of Christ the Romans discovered the strategic importance of the site of today’s Bratislava. They did not settle the area permanently, but instead just built up military camps here, which were just as strategic in terms of trade.
 
 
 
One of the camps was called Gerulata and was situated on the site of the Bratislava district of Rusovce and represented part of the defence system Limes Romanus, which separated the Roman world from the barbaric tribes. Bratislava can also thank the Romans for being celebrated as a town of vintners and viticulturists. During their conquests the Roman legions spread the cultivating of vines and winemaking at the order of the sovereign to cover all inhabited areas. This is how winegrowing eventually spread to France, Spain, Germany and also the territory of Bratislava and its surroundings.
 
MORE ON MORAVIAN EMPIRE
 
 
 
Great Moravia Empire
 
 
 
During the movement of nations the Slavs settled in the area of present day Bratislava. Led by the Frankish merchant Samo, the Empire of King Samo was created – the first known organised community of Slavs.
 
 
 
It was preceded by the raids of the nomadic Avars and the need to defend against them. After Samo’s death the empire dissolved into principalities. The subsequent merger of principalities produced the empire of Great Moravia. The Slav realm culminated during the reign of the most distinguished lord, Svätopluk. The start of its gradual demise is linked to the first written mention of Bratislava Castle in the Salzburg chronicles from 907, when a battle took place near the castle between Hungarian and Bavarian troops. The Magyars won this battle and occupied the eastern part of Great Moravia.
 
 
 
Bratislava in the Middle Ages
 
 
 
In 1436 King Sigismund granted the city a coat-of-arms deed with escutcheon rights in 1436. Bratislava is the only city in Europe to have had such a deed drawn up in two copies – both created by the painter Michal from the Vienna workshop.
 
 
 
At the end of the 10th century the Kingdom of Hungary was formed and under the rule of Stephan I (1001-1038) the territory of today’s Bratislava was annexed to it. Bratislava became a key economic and administrative centre of the kingdom’s frontier. This also had its negative side in the shape of frequent onslaughts by enemy forces. Already in 1042 Bratislava was destroyed by German King Henry I. More unrest came to it between 1074  1077 in connection with the battle for the Hungarian throne. In the 13th century Bratislava was afforded royal privileges. An important period in the life of the city at the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries was the reign of Sigismund of Luxembourg. He reaffirmed the older donations and privileges for the city granted by the Arpads and Anjous and by granting Bratislava new privileges he raised the city to become a leading political and economic hub within the Kingdom of Hungary. At his decree from 1405 Bratislava was included among the most distinguished cities that since that time were referred to as free royal cities. In 1436 the city was awarded a coat-of-arms deed with right to use the symbol with tower argent and portcullis in city walls.
 
 
 
The coronation city of the Kingdom of Hungary
 
 
 
An unexpected turnaround in the history of the city came in the 16th century. In a tragic battle with the Turks at the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 Hungarian King Louis II died after falling from his horse. Despite the counter candidature of John Zapolya and resistance from a large part of the Hungarian nobility, at the subsequent session in Bratislava’s Franciscan church it was Ferdinand Habsburg who was appointed as the new king. The Turks advanced swiftly into the heart of the country.
 
 
 
The Hungarian nobility rescued itself by fleeing to the territory of present day Slovakia, to which they took also the state offices. In 1530 the Turks threatened also Bratislava and partly destroyed it with cannon fire. The catastrophe that struck the Kingdom of Hungary after the Battle of Mohacs paradoxically worked in favour of Bratislava. After the occupation of the capital Buda, the Hungarian nobility, secular and clerical dignitaries looked for a refuge to the north of the River Danube, and one that was as close as possible to Vienna, the seat of King Ferdinand. The advantageous position and relative safety of Bratislava predestined it to become the new capital of the Kingdom of Hungary. The Hungarian Diet took the decision at its session from 1536. This small city of traders, craftsmen and winemakers became the seat of the country, and the seat of the lordship and the church. Bratislava became the parliament city of the kingdom and the coronation city of Hungarian kings, the seat of the king, the archbishop and the most important institutions of the country. In the period 1536-1830 some 11 kings and queens were crowned in St. Martin’s Cathedral in Bratislava.
 
 
 
 
 
Maria Theresa’s City
 
 
 
In the 18th century Bratislava became not only the largest and most important city in Slovakia, but also of the whole of the Kingdom of Hungary. The century saw the construction of many splendid palaces of the Hungarian aristocracy, as well as numerous churches, monasteries and other clerical buildings. The castle was also extended and new streets appeared as the population of the city quadrupled. Here meetings of the Hungarian Diet were held, kings and queens were crowned, and the city pulsed with a thriving cultural and social life.
 
 
 
The greatest boom experienced by the city occurred under the reign of Maria Theresa (1740-1780). Since she took up the throne she started directing construction development in the city building office of the chamber of the Kingdom of Hungary, which managed the building of government ordered buildings in particular (palace of the chamber of the Kingdom of Hungary, Water casern, etc.). Major construction work was also carried out on the castle, which became a representative royal seat (or the seat of the local royal governor) and the centre of social and political life at the highest level. The government of Joseph II spelled a decline for Bratislava. Bratislava lost its position as the capital of the Kingdom of Hungary. In 1783 Joseph ordered the governor’s council and other central authorities to relocate to Buda and on 13 May he took the royal crown, which till then had been guarded in Bratislava castle, to Vienna. The relocation of central authorities led to a mass exodus of nobility from the city. Bratislava went from being the capital of the country to a principality city once more.
 
 
 
 
 
Between the campaigns of the Napoleonic troops and the abolition of bondage
 
 
 
The beginning of the 19th century was marked by the Napoleonic wars. In 1805 following the Battle of Austerlitz (Slavkov), the French and Austrians signed the Treaty of Pressburg in the Mirror Hall of Primate’s Palace in Bratislava.
 
 
 
The treaty did not last long, however, and just a few years later in 1809 Napoleon’s army bombarded the city with cannon fire from the right bank of the Danube. From the 1930’s the city experienced sharp growth in industrial production, supported by the arrival of modern transport. Fast transportation on a mass scale was made possible on the River Danube by the steamships, which were also capable of sailing upstream. From 1848 steam trains started to operate here. The last major political event in the city under the Kingdom of Hungary was the session of the Hungarian Diet in 1847-1848. In March 1848 the Diet voted in favour of abolishing bondage. Emperor Ferdinand V then visited Bratislava and on 11 April 1848 he signed and promulgated the so-called March Laws in the Mirror Hall of Primate’s Palace. After dissolving the last session of the Hungarian Diet and relocating the political seat of the Kingdom of Hungary to Pest, Bratislava definitively lost a lot of its political significance.
 
 
 
First Czechoslovak Republic
 
 
 
World War I represented a key milestone in the history of the city. Bratislava was not directly hit by the war, but the consequences of it were borne by the people of the city in everyday life. Supplies would not arrive, and prices were the highest in the whole monarchy. The end of World War I in November 1918 brought changes to the map of Europe. The Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved and the Czechoslovak Republic was created.
 
 
 
The fate of Bratislava was decided on at the Paris peace talks. When at the end of 1918 it became clear that it was to be incorporated to the CzechoslovakRepublic, city representatives decide to rename the city to WilsonCity, after US president T. W. Wilson. Representatives of the city demand that the negotiating powers acknowledge the city as an open – free city. The proposal was rejected and the city, which was called Pressburg, Pozsony, Prešpork, became part of the CzechoslovakRepublic in January 1919. The new name of the city was approved on 27 March 1919, and so Bratislava appeared on the map of Europe. 
 
 
 
In-between wars
 
 
 
 
 
In the period between the wars Bratislava developed fairly harmoniously. During that period the city experienced a strong urban, architectonic, industrial and manufacturing boom. In a model example of tolerance, until the outbreak of World War II it was home to various nationalities and cultural communities: Slovak, German, Hungarian, Jewish, Czech and Croatian.
 
 
 
 
 
Wartime Bratislava
 
 
 
Hitler’s rising influence in Central Europe culminated in March 1939 with the splitting of Czechoslovakia. In the Czech territory a protectorate under Nazi administration was established. Slovak politicians were called on by Hitler to decide on the future fate of Slovakia.
 
 
 
From the two alternatives – the division of Slovakia among Poland, Hungary and the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia, or the creation of an independent state, the political leadership of the time decided on the second alternative. This then saw the establishment of an independent Slovak state, the 6-year existence of which continues to be a controversial and unresolved chapter in the history of the country to the present day. During the period of the Slovak independent state Bratislava became the capital for the first time. The city was the seat of the president, parliament, the government and all state administration authorities. It lost part of its territory, however - Petržalka and Devín were annexed to Germany. At the end of the war, as the capital of an allied state of Hitler’s Germany, Bratislava was bombed by US air forces. Bratislava was liberated on 4 April 1945 by the Russian Red Army.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Post-war Bratislava
 
 
 
Following World War II the situation in Bratislava fundamentally changed. Most of its former Jewish population did not return from the concentration camps, and after liberalisation most of the German and Hungarian populations were also displaced from the city. Bratislava thus lost a large part of its unique multicultural atmosphere.
 
 
 
The communistic coup in February 1948 marked a turning point in post-war development. Czechoslovakia became part of the socialist camp and the buffer zone between the West and the East. Europe was divided by the Iron Curtain. For Bratislava, which after the war was still linked to Vienna by a tramway, it meant building up closed borders with the West. Parts of the city were caught in the border separated by barbed wire. The residents there had to move. The end of the 1940s and beginning of the 1950s was marked by a period of construction and the reconstruction of war destroyed parts of the city, especially industrial companies, which were nationalised after 1948. The lives of those living in the city were affected by communist repression in the 1950s. Many people were imprisoned and thousands that were accused in contrived processes were forced out of the city. The 40-year plus period of communist rule was interrupted by the events of 1968 ‑ 1969. The Bratislava born Alexander Dubček became a symbol of these events. The launched process of democratic changes was only suppressed by the occupation armies of the Warsaw Pact. The following “temporary presence” of Soviet troops lasted more than 20 years. Together with widespread political persecution, it was supposed to be an assurance against potential attempts at reform, or a change of the social make-up in Czechoslovakia.
 
 
 
 
 
Capital city for second time
 
 
 
The events that took place in Prague in November 1989 marked the start of the disassembly of the communist regime. At the same time as the first political changes started to be carried out, the long-term unresolved issue of real federalisation of Czechoslovakia became paramount.
 
 
 
The inability of the political elite of the time to find a compromise led to the break up of Czechoslovakia. At the stroke of midnight on 31 December 1992, as 1 January 1993 began, Czechoslovakia stopped existing for the second time. Bratislava once more became the capital of independent Slovakia. The status of a capital induced radical changes in the character of the city. At the beginning of the 1990s visitors referred to Bratislava as a city where the war had just ended. Nowadays it is regarded as one of the most dynamically developing and most prospective regions in Europe.
 
 
 
 
 
===Prehistory and early Middle Ages===
 
 
 
*[[Neolithic]] Age: the first permanent settlement of the region now known as Bratislava begins with the [[Linear Pottery Culture]]
 
*[[400 B.C.E.]]-[[50 B.C.E.]]: [[Celt]]s were settled here. From [[125 B.C.E.]] they had an important [[oppidum]] (fortified town) with a [[Mint (coin)|mint]] here.
 
*[[1st century]] &ndash; [[5th century]]: the border of the [[Roman Empire]] ([[limes|Limes Romanus]]) runs right through the middle of today's town; many Roman (e.g. "Gerulata") and Germanic settlements
 
*[[6th century]]-[[8th century]]: first [[Slavs]] (500 C.E.- today) and [[Eurasian Avars|Avarians]] ([[560s]] - [[8th century]])
 
: - [[623]]-[[658]]: part of King [[Samo]]'s Empire
 
*late [[8th century]] &ndash; [[833]]: part of the [[Principality of Nitra]]
 
*[[833]] &ndash; [[907]]: part of [[Great Moravia]]
 
 
 
===907-1918===
 
 
[[Image:Bratislavsky hrad.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Medieval Bratislava Castle]]
 
[[Image:Bratislavsky hrad.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Medieval Bratislava Castle]]
*From 2nd half of 10th century to [[1918]]: part of the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] (with short interruptions) and the capital of the [[Bratislava county|Posonium Comitatus]]:
+
* From the second half of the tenth century to 1918, except for short interruptions, Bratislava was part of the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] and the capital of the Bratislava county (Posonium Comitatus). The Kingdom of Hungary was formed under the rule of Stephan I (1001-1038), and the city was annexed to it. Toward the end of the tenth century, Bratislava was a key economic and administrative center of the kingdom’s frontier, which had a downside to it in the form of frequent onslaughts by foreign invaders. In 1042 the city was destroyed by German King Henry I. More plight followed between 1074 and 1077 with the battle for the Hungarian throne.  
*[[1536]]-[[1784]]: capital of the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] (whose territory consisted until 1699 of today's Slovakia and parts of today's Western Hungary, because the [[Ottoman Empire|Turks]] ruled [[Budapest|Buda]] at that time); the Kingdom of Hungary was part of the [[Habsburg]] (i. e. Austrian) Monarchy from [[1526]] to [[1918]]
 
*[[1542]]-[[1848]]: meeting place of the Hungarian Diet (with short interruptions)
 
*[[1563]]-[[1830]]: coronation town for Hungarian kings ([[St. Martin's Cathedral]] (picture below))
 
*since the [[18th century]]: centre of the [[Slovaks|Slovak]] national movement
 
  
===Post WWI (1919-present)===
+
* In the thirteenth century Bratislava was afforded royal privileges. King Sigismund of [[Luxembourg]], who ruled at the turn of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, reaffirmed the older donations and privileges granted to it by the Houses of Arpad and Anjou and extended new privileges, whereby the city was promoted to a major political and economic hub within the Kingdom of Hungary. Upon Sigismund's decree of 1405, Bratislava began to be referred to as a free royal city and thus assumed the status enjoyed only by the most distinguished cities of that time. In 1436 it was granted by King Sigismund a coat-of-arms deed with escutcheon rights, and as the only city in Europe it had this deed drawn up in two copies, both created by the painter Michal from the [[Vienna]] workshop.
*[[1919]]-[[1939]]: part of [[Czechoslovakia]]; official new name becomes "Bratislava"- instead of "Prešporok" ([[Slovak language|Slovak]]) /"Pressburg" ([[German language|German]])/ "Pozsony" ([[Hungarian language|Hungarian]]) in 1919
 
*[[1939]]-[[1945]]: capital of [[Slovakia]]
 
*[[1945]]-[[1992]]: part of [[Czechoslovakia]] again:
 
:[[1969]]-[[1992]]: capital of the [[Slovak Socialist Republic|federal state of Slovakia]] within [[Czechoslovakia]]
 
*since [[1993]]: capital of [[Slovakia]]
 
  
===Important events held in Bratislava===
 
  
==Culture and points of interest==
+
===Battle of Mohacs; Capital of the Kingdom of Hungary===
Bratislavské památky
+
* The sixteenth century brought with it a turnaround when Hungarian King Louis II died after falling from his horse in the 1526 Battle of Mohacs with the [[Turkish|Turks]]. In spite of resistance from a large part of the Hungarian nobility and a candidate for the throne in the person of John Zapolya, Ferdinand Habsburg ascended to the throne, and the Turks advanced swiftly into the heart of Slovakia. The Hungarian nobility fled Slovakia and abandoned local authorities. In 1530 the [[Ottoman Empire|Turks]] partly leveled Bratislava with cannon fire. However, the Battle of Mohacs fiasco paradoxically worked in the city's favor, as the Hungarian nobility and secular and clerical dignitaries looked to the north for refuge following the occupation of the Kingdom of Hungary's capital [[Budapest|Buda]]. In addition, it was conveniently close to [[Vienna]], the seat of King Ferdinand. These factors as well as its relative safety were attributed to Bratislava's becoming a new capital of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1536. The small city of traders, craftsmen, and winemakers was thus transformed into the center of Slovakia and of the lordship and the Church &ndash; it became the seat of the Parliament of the Kingdom and the coronation city of Hungarian kings, the seat of the king, the archbishop, and major institutions. Between 1536-1830, some 11 kings and queens were crowned at its Saint Martin’s Cathedral.
Národními památkami Bratislavy je Bratislavský hrad, hrad Devín, Slavín, budova Academie Istropolitany a budova evangelické školy. Symbolem města je hrad se čtyřmi věžemi a tzv. Nový most, který vede přes řeku Dunaj. Celé historické jádro můžete za krátký čas shlédnout během okružní jízdy vyhlídkovým autíčkem zvaným Prešporáčik.
 
Další turistické cíle
 
Kromě výše zmíněných památek stojí za to navštívit také tyto historické památky:
 
Dóm sv. Martina
 
Dóm je raritou pro svou 85 m vysokou kostelní věž. Původně byl součástí městského opevnění, několik let sloužil také jako korunovační kostel, o čemž svědčí pozlacená koruna zasazená na samé špici věže
 
Kostel Františkánů
 
Kostel Františkánů na Františkánském náměstí je nejstarším slovenským kostelem (1297).
 
Bratislavská pyramida
 
Budova ve tvaru pyramidy, postavená v letech 1969—84, slouží dodnes jako sídlo Slovenského rozhlasu. Budova je architektonickou raritou.
 
Nový most
 
Most přes řeku Dunaj je dvoupodlažní, více než 430 m dlouhý. Na jeho vrcholu se ve výšce 80 m nachází restaurace. Most získal ocenění Stavba 20. století.
 
http://www.mineralfit.cz/clanek/1819--bratislava---mesto-na-dunaji.html
 
  
===Theatres===
+
* 1536-1784: capital of the Kingdom of Hungary, which until 1699 comprised present-day Slovakia and parts of present-day western Hungary. The Turks ruled Buda; the Kingdom of Hungary was part of the larger Austrian [[Habsburg]] Monarchy from 1526 to 1918. Bratislava was the meeting place of the Hungarian Diet until 1848.
[[Image:Bratislava divadlo.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Seat of the Slovak National Theatre]]
 
  
Bratislava is the seat of [[Slovak National Theatre]], which until April 2007 is housed in 3 buildings in the city centre, when it will move to the new building near the Danube. Smaller and alternative theatres include: [[Bratislava Puppet Theatre]], [[Astorka Korzo '90 theatre]], [[Aréna theatre]], etc.
 
  
===Museums===
+
===Empress Maria Theresa and Slovak National Movement===
 +
* In the eighteenth century Bratislava became not only the largest and most important city in [[Slovakia]] but also of the entire [[Kingdom of Hungary]]. This century saw the construction of splendid palaces for the Hungarian aristocracy as well as churches, monasteries, and other clerical buildings as the population tripled. The city pulsed with culture and social life. Its apex came with the ascension to the throne by Empress [[Maria Theresa of Austria]] (1740-1780) and the start of the management of construction development by the Hungarian royal chamber, which handled the construction of government–mandated buildings in particular. Major construction work was also carried out on the castle, which became the seat of the local royal governor and the center of social and political life.
  
Main museums:
+
===Joseph II turns back time===
 +
* The government of [[Joseph II of Austria]] spelled decline for the city, which was quickly stripped of its privilege as the capital of the Kingdom of Hungary. In 1783 Joseph ordered the relocation of the governor’s council and other central authorities to Buda; soon afterward he took the royal crown, safeguarded at the Bratislava castle, to Vienna. These steps spurred a mass exodus of nobility, and Bratislava once again turned into a mere provincial city.
  
* [[Slovak National Museum]] is located near the [[Nový Most]] near the Danube [http://www.snm.sk/]. 
 
* [[Municipal Museum of Bratislava]] focuses on the history of Bratislava (established 1868) [http://www.muzeumbratislava.sk/]
 
  
Other museums:
+
===Napoleonic wars and beyond===
 +
* The beginning of the nineteenth century was marked by the [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Napoleonic]] wars, and particularly by the [[Battle of Austerlitz]] (Slavkov, Czech Republic) in 1805, also known as the Battle of the Three Emperors: French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, Russian Tsar [[Alexander I]], and [[Holy Roman Empire]]'s Frances I. Napoleon won and considered this victory the triumph of his lifetime. It was followed by the signing of the Treaty of Pressburg on December 26, 1805, in Bratislava’s Primate's Palace, which forced Austria to cede land to Napoleon's [[German]] allies and led to the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. The treaty did not bring about lasting peace, as Napoleon’s army bombarded the city with cannon fire from the right bank of the Danube in 1809.
  
* ''Museum of Transportation'' is located near the main railway station
+
* Bratislava staged the last major political event as part of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1848, when the Hungarian Diet voted in favor of abolishing bondage. Emperor Ferdinand V visited the city in April 1848 to sign and promulgate the March Laws in the Mirror Hall of the Primate’s Palace. The Hungarian Diet was then dissolved and the political center of the Kingdom of Hungary shifted to [[Budapest|Pest]]. This was a major blow for Bratislava, as it deprived it of a great deal of its political significance.
* ''Museum of Weapons'' is in the [[Michael's Gate]]
 
* ''Museum of Modern Art'' in the [[Čunovo]] city part
 
  
===Science===
+
* The 1930s brought a boom in industrial output, facilitated by the arrival of the modern transportation system and steamships capable of sailing upstream.
  
[[Slovak Academy of Sciences]] has its seat in Bratislava. The town is one of the few European capitals that does not have either an [[observatory]] or a [[planetarium]]. The closest observatory is in [[Modra]] (30 km away from Bratislava), and planetarium in [[Hlohovec]] (70 km away).
+
[[Image:Bratislava Panorama 01.jpg|center|thumb|800px|Panorama of Bratislava I (from castle)]]
  
===Music===
+
==Twentieth Century==
  
Seat of the [[Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra]].
+
===First Czechoslovak Republic: 1919-1939===
 +
* Bratislava was not directly affected by [[World War I]], although it lacked supplies and prices were the highest within the monarchy. The outcome of the war that ended in November 1918 was significant though, as it rewrote the map of Europe &ndash; the [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]] dissolved and was succeeded by the [[Czechoslovakia|Czechoslovak Republic]] in the Czech and Slovak portions of it. When at the end of 1918 it became imminent that Bratislava would be incorporated into the Czechoslovak Republic, representatives of the city decided to rename it "Wilson City," after U.S. president [[Woodrow Wilson]] and demanded a status of the open/free city for it, but the proposal was rejected. Bratislava, with its multiple names of Pressburg ([[German language|German]]), Pozsony ([[Hungarian language|Hungarian]]), and Prešpork ([[Slovak language|Slovak]]), became part of the Czechoslovak Republic in January 1919. The name that is in use in present&mdash;Bratislava&mdash;was approved on March 27, 1919, the day that Bratislava appeared on the map of Europe for the first time.  
  
===Landmarks===
+
* In the period between [[World War I]] and [[World War II]], Bratislava experienced an urban, architectural, industrial, and manufacturing upsurge. As a model example of tolerance, until the outbreak of World War II it was home to Slovak, German, Hungarian, Jewish, Czech, and Croatian nationals and cultural communities.
  
[[Image:Bratislava street.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Paved street in the Old Town of Bratislava]]
+
===World War II: 1939-1945===
Bratislava is picturesquely situated on both banks of the [[Danube]], at the base of the outlying spurs of the [[Lesser Carpathians]], in a position of strategic importance near the [[Devín Gate]] (earlier called ''Hainburger Pforte'' or ''Porta Hungarica'').  The area includes a picturesque old town centre.
+
* [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]]’s rising influence in [[Central Europe]] culminated in March 1939 with the division of Czechoslovakia: the Czech territory became the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia under [[Nazism|Nazi]] administration, while Slovak politicians were given two alternatives by Hitler to decide the future of Slovakia: divide the country among [[Poland]], [[Hungary]], and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, or create an independent state. The political leadership opted for the second alternative, giving birth to an independent Slovak state, the six year existence of which continues to be a controversial and unresolved chapter in the history of the country. During the period of the Slovak independent state, Bratislava became the capital for the first time. It lost part of its territory, however &ndash; Petržalka and Devín quarters were annexed to [[Germany]]. At the end of the war, as the capital of an allied state of Hitler’s Germany, Bratislava was bombed by [[United States of America|U.S.]] air forces. It was liberated on April 4, 1945, by the [[Russia|Russian]] [[Red Army]].
  
One of the most conspicuous buildings of the town is the [[Bratislava Castle]] situated on a plateau 82 m above the Danube. A [[castle]] has existed on the site since time immemorial.  It has been the [[acropolis]] of a [[Celt]]ic town, part of the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] [[Limes Romanus]], a huge Slav fortified settlement and a political, military and religious centre of [[Great Moravia]]. A castle of stone was built only in the [[10th century]] (part of Hungary), it was turned into a Gothic anti-[[Hussite]] fortress under [[Sigismund of Luxemburg]] in [[1430]], in [[1562]] it became a [[Renaissance]] castle, and in [[1649]] a [[baroque]] reconstruction took place. Under [[Queen regnant|Queen]] [[Maria Theresa of Austria|Maria Theresa]], the castle was turned into a prestige seat of the royal governor [[Albert von Sachsen-Teschen]], the son-in-law of [[Maria Theresa of Austria|Maria Theresa]], who founded the [[Albertina]] picture gallery in the castle, which was later moved to [[Vienna]]. In [[1784]], when Bratislava ceased to be the [[capital]] of Hungary, the castle was turned into a school for Catholic clergy, and later, in 1802, into [[barracks]]. In [[1811]], the castle was inadvertently destroyed by fire by the French soldiers and lay in ruins until the [[1950s]], when it was reconstructed mostly in its former [[Maria Theresa of Austria|Maria Theresa]] style.
 
  
Another castle is [[Devín Castle]] (now in ruins) in the borough of Bratislava-Devín. It is situated on the top of a high rock at the point where the [[Morava River, Central Europe|March (Morava) river]], which forms the boundary between Austria and Slovakia, reaches the Danube. It is one of the most important Slovak archaeological sites and has been &ndash; thanks to its excellent location &ndash; a very important frontier castle of [[Great Moravia]] and the early Hungarian state. It was destroyed by Napoleonic troops in [[1809]] and is an important symbol of Slovak and Slavic history.  
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===Czechoslovak Republic: 1945-1992===
 +
* [[World War II]] left Bratislava with very little of the once flourishing [[Jewish]] community, whose population had either been annihilated in Nazi [[concentration camp]]s or chose not to return. In addition, a majority of [[Germany|German]] and [[Hungary|Hungarian]] nationals were displaced, depriving the city of a great deal of its former unique multicultural atmosphere.
  
Yet another castle, built in [[1813]] and turned into an [[English Gothic]] style castle in the late [[19th century]], is situated in the borough of Bratislava-[[Rusovce]], otherwise known for ruins of Roman ''Gerulata'' settlements.  
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===Communist takeover===
 +
* The successful [[Communism|Communist]] coup in February 1948 steered [[Czechoslovakia]] toward the [[Socialism|socialist]] camp and behind the [[Iron Curtain]], and its position between the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Western Europe]] predisposed it to becoming a buffer zone between East and West. The border with [[Vienna]], to which Bratislava was linked by the tram service, was sealed, and residents living in those parts of the city that overlapped with the political border, marked by barbed wire, were forced to relocate.  
  
[[Image:Bratislava square.jpg|right|thumb|250px|A street in the Old Town]]
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* Construction and reconstruction of the war ravaged areas were in full swing in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Businesses and factories were rebuilt, only to be nationalized in the wake of the [[Communism|Communist]] takeover in 1948. Severe repression followed in the 1950s, with many imprisoned and thousands accused in contrived [[Franz Kafka|Kafkaesque]] processes and forced out of the city. The 40-year period under the influence of the "Evil Empire," as [[Ronald Reagan]] labeled the Soviet Union, was interrupted by the [[Prague Spring]] of 1968. The Bratislava-born [[Alexander Dubček]] became a symbol of this movement that was an attempt at the reformation of Socialism. However, the democratic revolution-in-the-works was crushed by the occupation armies of the [[Warsaw Pact]]. The subsequent “sojourn” of Soviet troops was extended to over 20 years.  
Other noteworthy buildings are:
 
[[Image:Bratislava (building).jpg|left|thumb|150px|City Museum]]
 
* [[St. Martin's Cathedral]] (a Gothic edifice of the 14th-15th century replacing an older church from the 13th century) in which many of the Hungarian kings were crowned
 
*[[Bratislava's Town hall]] (a complex of 14th-15th century buildings) containing an interesting museum &ndash; the City Museum founded in 1868
 
*[[Bratislava's Franciscan church]], dating from 1297
 
*the building of the University Library (erected in 1756) where the sittings of the Diet (parliament) of the Kingdom of Hungary were held from 1802 to 1848 and many important laws of the Hungarian Reform Era were enacted (liberation of serfs, foundation of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences).
 
*the Primate's Palace (erected in 1781) in which the (4th) [[Peace of Pressburg]] was signed
 
*the beautiful [[Slovak National Theatre]] (built in 1886), and
 
*the [[Michael's Gate]] (early 17th century), the only extant gate of the municipal fortification
 
*the narrowest house in central (or maybe in the whole of) Europe (just behind the Michael's Gate)
 
*the 18th century house of the composer [[Johann Nepomuk Hummel]] who was born in the town.
 
*[[Nový Most Bratislava]] is a bridge across the [[Danube]] river, featuring a [[UFO]]-like tower restaurant
 
*[[Kamzik TV Tower]] is a TV tower of unique design with an observation deck
 
*Seat of the [[Slovak Radio]] - an inverted pyramid.
 
  
The historic centre is characterized by many [[baroque]] palaces. The [[Grassalkovich Palace]] (built around 1760), for example, is now the residence of the Slovak president, and the Slovak government now has its seat in the former [[Summer Archbishop's Palace|Archiepiscopal palace]], the former summer residence of the archbishop of [[Esztergom]]).
+
* From 1969 to 1992, Bratislava was the capital of the [[Slovak Socialist Republic]] within the federal Czechoslovakia.
  
A curiosity is the underground restored portion of the Jewish cemetery where Rabbi [[Moses Sofer]] is buried. (See article on Sofer).
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===Czechoslovakia's divorce===
 +
* The [[Velvet Revolution]] in [[Prague]] that unseated the Communist regime in November 1989 exacerbated long-standing issues within the federal [[Czechoslovakia]]. The inability of political representatives to reach a compromise that would settle the complaints of inequality within the federal framework led to the amicable divorce at the stroke of midnight on December 31, 1992, and the emergence of two independent countries: the [[Czech Republic]]and [[Slovakia]] on January 1, 1993. This was the second time that Czechoslovakia was wiped off the map of Europe, and Bratislava once again became the capital of independent Slovakia and a dynamically developing and prosperous region of [[Europe]].
  
[[Image:Slavin.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Slavín memorial]]
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==City in Timeline==
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[[Image:Slavin.jpg|thumb|right|190px|Slavín memorial honors [[Soviet Army]] soldiers who gave their lives during the liberation of Bratislava from Nazi Germany.]]
 +
[[Image:Bratislava street.jpg|right|thumb|190px|Paved street in the Old Town of Bratislava]]
 +
[[Image:Bratislava square.jpg|right|thumb|190px|A street in the Old Town]]
 +
[[Image:Bratislava (building).jpg|right|thumb|190px|City Museum]]
 +
[[Image:Bratislava divadlo.jpg|thumb|right|190px|Seat of the Slovak National Theater]]
  
The only military cemetery and known memorial is [[Slavín]], which was revealed in [[1960]], in the honour of [[Soviet Army]] soldiers, who fell when liberating Bratislava from the [[Nazi]] German troops. It also offers an excellent view of the city and the Little Carpathians.
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* 5000 B.C.E. &ndash; archaeologically proven colonization of Bratislava in the late Stone Age (Neolithic) period
 +
* First century C.E. &ndash; [[Celts]] build fortified settlements at Devin and Bratislava and mint [[silver]] coins called "biatecs"
 +
* first – fourth centuries C.E. &ndash; the area south of the river Danube under domination of the Roman Empire
 +
* fifth – sixth centuries &ndash; arrival of Slavic tribes
 +
* 623 – 658 &ndash; Samo‘s Empire, the first state structure of Slavs
 +
* seventh – eighth centuries &ndash;  Bratislava becomes an important center of Avarian-Slavic Empire
 +
* ninth century &ndash; establishment of the Greater Moravian Empire; with the Castle of Bratislava its military, administration and religious center
 +
* 864 &ndash; the first written reference to the Devin Castle as a strong fortress and the border of the Greater Moravian Empire in the Fulda annals
 +
* 907 &ndash; the first written reference to Bratislava (as ''Brezalauspurc'') in annals of Salzburg in association with a battle between Bavarians and Old Hungarians
 +
* tenth – eleventh centuries &ndash; the Castle of Bratislava forms a boundary of Hungary as the seat of the head of the province’s administration and chapter
 +
* 1000 – 1038 &ndash; establishment of the commitat (province) of Bratislava by the Hungarian King Stephen I
 +
* twelfth century &ndash; settlement on the eastern side of the castle hill
 +
* 1291 &ndash; Hungarian King Andrew III grants Bratislava extensive municipal privileges, thus confirming its incorporation into a system of free royal towns and simultaneously laying foundations for the development of trade and crafts
 +
* fourteenth – fifteenth centuries &ndash; development of crafts, [[viticulture]], and international trade
 +
* 1430 &ndash; the city granted minting rights by the King Sigismund of Luxembourg 
 +
* 1465 &ndash; King Mathias founds the first university in Slovakia &ndash; Academia Istropolitana
 +
* 1526 &ndash; King Louis dies in the Battle at Mohacs and Ferdinand I of Habsburg is elected the king in the Franciscan cloister
 +
* 1536 &ndash; Bratislava becomes the capital of Hungary, an assembly town, the seat of central offices, and the coronation town of Hungarian kings
 +
* 1563 – 1830 &ndash; 11 Hungarian kings and eight royal wives crowned in the city
 +
* seventeenth century &ndash; uprisings against the Habsburgs
 +
* 1711 &ndash; Great Plague left 3,860 dead
 +
* 1741 &ndash; coronation of [[Maria Theresa of Austria]]
 +
* 1775 &ndash; Maria Theresa orders demolition of the city walls and thus spurs new construction and development
 +
* 1776 &ndash; establishment of the Theater of Estates with a permanent company of actors
 +
* 1780 &ndash; establishment of the first manufacture
 +
* 1783 &ndash; Joseph II of Austria orders central offices to be moved to Buda and coronation jewels to Vienna
 +
* 1805 &ndash; Peace of Pressburg ends the Battle of Three Emperors at Battle of Austerlitz between Napoleonic France and Austria; the document is signed in the Primate's Palace
 +
* 1809 &ndash; Napoleonic siege
 +
* 1811, May 28 &ndash; the Castle of Bratislava burnt down
 +
* 1818 &ndash; the first steamboat on the Danube River
 +
* 1840 &ndash; first horse-drawn railway
 +
* 1843 &ndash; codification of Slovak language by Ludovit Stur and his followers
 +
* 1848 &ndash; King [[Ferdinand V of Austria]] abolishes [[serfdom]] by signing the March Laws in the Primate's palace
 +
* 1886 &ndash; Slovak National Theatre built in place of the Theater of Estates
 +
* 1891 &ndash; the first bridge over the Danube opens
 +
* 1895 &ndash; tram service starts
 +
* 1912 &ndash; trolleybus service introduced
 +
* 1918 &ndash; October 10 – establishment of the Slovak National Council with Bratislava and adjacent areas in its jurisdiction
 +
* 1919 &ndash; January 1 – occupation of the town by Czechoslovak legions and its annexation to the Czechoslovak Republic
 +
* 1939 &ndash; March 14 – Bratislava becomes the capital city of the Nazi Slovak State
 +
* 1945 &ndash; April 4 – liberated by the Soviet Army
 +
* 1946 &ndash; inception of Greater Bratislava by annexing seven villages 
 +
* 1948 &ndash; February 25 – [[Communism|Communist]] takeover
 +
* 1969 &ndash; October 30 – agreement on the federal Czechoslovakia signed at the Bratislava Castle; Bratislava becomes the capital of the Slovak Socialist Republic
 +
* 1971 &ndash; further villages annexed
 +
* 1989 &ndash; November 27 – general strike in support of the Public Against Violence and Civic Forum movements; student strike
 +
* 1993 &ndash; Bratislava becomes the capital of the independent Slovak Republic
  
===Squares===
 
  
The most known square in Bratislava is the [[Hlavné námestie (Bratislava)|Main Square]]. It was completely reconstructed in 2005. The [[Hviezdoslavovo námestie|Hviezdoslav]] and [[Primaciálne námestie|Primatial's]] squares are nearby. There is also [[Námestie SNP (Bratislava)|square of Slovak National Uprising]] in the town centre, near the main shopping street.
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==Culture==
 +
* The Bratislava Castle is situated on a plateau 82 m above the [[Danube River]], a successor to the acropolis of a Celtic town, part of the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] Limes Romanus, a vast Slavic fortified settlement, and a political, military and religious center of Great Moravia. The stone castle was built in the tenth century, when Bratislava was part of [[Hungary]], and was turned into a [[Gothic]] anti-[[Jan Hus|Hussite]] fortress under [[Sigismund of Luxembourg]] in 1430. In 1562 it received a [[Renaissance]] makeover and in 1649, [[Baroque]] reconstruction took place. Empress Maria Theresa of Austria converted it into a prestigious seat of her son-in-law, the royal governor Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, who set up the Albertina picture gallery there. The collection was later moved to [[Vienna]]. In 1784, when Bratislava ceased to be the capital of Hungary, the castle served as a school for [[Catholic]] clergy, and later, in 1802, barracks. In 1811, it was inadvertently destroyed by fire by the French soldiers and lay in ruins until the 1950s, when it was reconstructed mostly in its former Maria Theresa style.  
  
===Lakes===
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* Devín Castle, reduced to ruins, overlooks the confluence of the Morava River, which forms the boundary between [[Austria]] and [[Slovakia]], and the Danube. Sitting on the top of a rocky hill, it is one of the most important Slovak [[Archeology|archaeological]] sites and, due to its excellent location, a strategic frontier castle during the period of Great Moravia and the early Hungarian state. It was destroyed by [[Napoleon Bonapart|Napoleonic]] troops in 1809, but it remains an important symbol of the Slovak and Slavic history.
  
The city has a number of natural or man-made lakes, most of which are also used for recreation.
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* The historic core of the city is famous for its numerous [[Baroque]] palaces. The Grassalkovich Palace, built around 1760, serves as the residence of the Slovak president; and the Slovak government resides in the former summer residence of the archbishop of Esztergom.  
  
Examples include [[Štrkovec lake]], [[Kuchajda]] in [[Ružinov]], the [[Vajnory lakes]], [[Zlaté Piesky]] in the north-east and [[Malý Dráždiak]], [[Veľký Dráždiak]] in [[Petržalka]].
+
* Saint Martin's Cathedral stands on the site of a church built in the thirteenth century. This Gothic edifice dates back to the fourteenth or fifteenth century and saw many a Hungarian king crowned in there. It boasts an 85 m high tower.
  
===Parks===
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* Town hall, built in the fourteenth to fifteenth century.
[[Image:Sad janka krala 2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Sad Janka Kráľa]]
 
  
Bratislava is a city with lots of parks, thanks to its location on the foothills of the [[Little Carpathians]]. The biggest of those parks is the Bratislava forest park, which includes some tourist locations, for example [[Železná studienka]] or [[Koliba]]. [[Horský park]] (literally ''Mountain(ous) Park'') is located near the Old Town and it's still with original flora and fauna. On the right bank of the Danube is [[Sad Janka Kráľa]], the first public park in Europe.
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* Franciscan Church, dating from 1297, is Slovakia's oldest church.  
  
[[ZOO Bratislava|Bratislava's zoological park]] is located at [[Mlynská dolina]], close to the headquarters of the [[Slovak Television]].
+
* University Library, erected in 1756, housed the sessions of the Diet (parliament) of the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] from 1802 to 1848, and major events of the Hungarian Reform Era took place there, among them the abolition of [[serfdom]] and the establishment of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
  
===Sport===
+
* Primate's Palace, built in 1781.
 +
[[Image:MariaValeriaBridge.jpg|thumb|200px|left|At [[Esztergom]] and [[Štúrovo]], the Danube separates [[Hungary]] from [[Slovakia]].]]
  
=====Football=====
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* Michael's Gate, from early seventeenth century, is the remnant of municipal fortification. The narrowest house in central Europe is directly behind it.
  
Currently 3 teams from Bratislava are playing the [[Corgoň Liga]]:
+
* Nový Most Bratislava, a bridge across the Danube River, features a [[Unidentified Flying Object|UFO]]-like tower restaurant. The two-storey bridge, over 430 m in length, has been awarded the prize of the "Structure of the Twentieth Century."
  
*[[Š.K. Slovan Bratislava]] [http://www.slovanfutbal.com/ Official website]
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* Kamzik TV Tower, with an observation deck.
*[[FC Artmedia Bratislava]] [http://www.fcartmedia.sk/ Official website]
 
*[[FK Inter Bratislava]] [http://www.askinter.sk/futbal/index.php3 Official website]
 
  
=====Ice hockey=====
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* Offices of the Slovak Radio Station, which are an inverted pyramid.
  
One team from Bratislava plays the [[Slovak Extraliga]]: [[HC Slovan Bratislava]] [http://www.hcslovan.sk Official website]
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* Theater lovers can choose among the Slovak National Theater, Puppet Theater, Astorka Korzo '90, Aréna and others. Modern art is on display at the Museum of Modern Art. The Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra caters to classical music audiences. One of the city's popular curiosities is the underground portion of the [[Jewish]] cemetery, where Rabbi [[Moses Sofer]] is buried.
  
===Entertainment===
+
==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.
  
Bratislava is known as a city with pulsing nightlife. Most of the bars and night clubs are located in the city centre.  
+
===Religion===
 +
The population of Bratislava belongs to the [[Christian]] faith, with [[Roman Catholic]]s making up over half the population at (56.7 percent). [[Lutheran]]s 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.  
  
{| border=1 cellspacing=0  cellpadding=4 width=300 style="float:right; border:1px solid gray; border-collapse:collapse; font-size:90%; margin:0 0 .5em 1em;"
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According to the 2001 census, there were seven hundred Jews, and a high percentage of professed Atheists, 29.3 percent.
!align="center" bgcolor="lightblue" colspan="3"|<big>Demographics</big>
 
|-
 
!align="center" bgcolor="lightblue" colspan="3"|data derived from the 2001 census
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Population''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"|428,672 inhabitants
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Population by districts''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"|Bratislava I 44,798, Bratislava II 108,139, Bratislava III 61,418, Bratislava IV 93,058, Bratislava V 121,259
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Average age''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"| 38.7 years
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Age structure''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"|0&ndash;5: 4.1%,  6&ndash;14: 9.8%,  Working age: 62.9%,  Retirement age: 19%
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Ethnic groups''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"|[[Slovaks]] 391,761 (91.4%), [[Hungarians]] 16,451 (3.8%),  [[Czechs]] 7,972 (1.9%), [[Moravians]] 635, [[Ruthenes]] 461, [[Ukrainians]] 452, [[Germans]] 1 200, [[Croats]] 614, [[Roma People|Roma]] 417, [[Poles]] 339
 
|-
 
!align="left" valign="top"|''Religion''
 
|colspan="2" valign="top"|[[Roman Catholics]] 243,048 (56.7%), [[Atheist]]s 125,729 (29.3%), [[Lutherans]] of the Augsburg Confession 24,810 (6%), [[Eastern Rite Catholic Churches|Greek Catholics]] 3,163 (0.7%), [[Calvinism|Reformed Christians]] 1,918, [[Eastern Orthodox]] 1,616, [[Jehovah's Witnesses]] 1,827, [[Methodist]] Protestants 737, [[Jews]] 700, [[Baptists]] 613
 
|-
 
|-
 
| align="center" colspan="1" |{{Tnavbar|Demographics of Bratislava table}}
 
|}
 
  
==Tourism==
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===Sports===
 +
Bratislava has two major sports interests; [[soccer]] ("football") and [[ice hockey]], and has several official teams. '''Football teams:''' are:
 +
* Š.K. Slovan Bratislava
 +
* FC Artmedia Bratislava
 +
* FK Inter Bratislava
 +
while
 +
'''Ice hockey:''' teams are:
 +
* HC Slovan Bratislava
  
In the recent years, particularly after Slovakia's entry to the [[European Union]], Bratislava is target for the tourists from surrounding, as well as from more distant countries ([[Britain]], [[United States]], [[Japan]], ...). But the growth of tourism has brought problem with insufficient hotel capacity, especially from  more luxurious ones. Most tourists are staying in the city centre, or they are coming for annual event such as for celebrations of New Year.
+
===Education===
 +
The first university in Bratislava and also in Slovakia was the Academia Istropolitana, established in 1467.
  
==Education==
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Today, Bratislava is the seat of several colleges and universities:
The oldest university in Bratislava and Slovakia was the Academia Istropolitana, established in 1467.
 
  
 
* Academy of Performing Arts  
 
* Academy of Performing Arts  
Line 481: Line 368:
  
 
==Economy==
 
==Economy==
The boom in local economy derives from the services, engineering (Volkswagen auto plant), chemical, and electrical industries.
+
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 [[Gross domestic product|GDP]] per capita ([[Purchasing power parity|PPP]]), which was valued at €25,351 (2002), reaches 120% of the [[European Union|EU]] average, which is the second highest level (after [[Prague]]) of all regions in all the recently joined countries ([[Eurostat]]; for the latest Eurostat data, see: [http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-AF-05-001/EN/KS-AF-05-001-EN.PDF])
 
Bratislava has the all-time lowest unemployment in Slovakia (around 3%), and many people from Slovakia are commuting to Bratislava for work.
 
 
 
In recent years [[service]] and [[high-tech]] oriented businesses are thriving in Bratislava. Many global companies, including [[IBM]], [[Dell]], [[Accenture]], [[AT&T]], [[Lenovo]] and [[SAP]] to name a few, are building their [[outsourcing]] and service centres here.
 
 
 
==Transport==
 
'''''Geographical position in Central Europe has always made Bratislava a natural crossroads for international trade traffic.
 
'''''
 
===Road transportation===
 
 
 
[[Image:Einsteinova.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Motorway D1 in Bratislava-[[Petržalka]]]]
 
 
 
Large international motorway junction: [[Motorway D1 (Slovakia)|D1]] motorway connecting Bratislava to [[Trnava]], [[Nitra]], [[Trenčín]], [[Žilina]] and further, while [[Motorway D2 (Slovakia)|D2]] motorway connecting it to [[Prague]], [[Brno]] and [[Budapest]] in the north-south direction. [[Motorway D4 (Slovakia)|D4]] motorway (the outer bypass) is mostly at planning stage.
 
 
 
The [[Nordostautobahn|A6]] motorway to [[Vienna]] is currently under construction and will be open in November 2007.
 
 
 
Currently five bridges stand over the [[Danube]]:(ordered by the flow of river):[[Lafranconi Bridge]], [[Nový Most]], [[Starý Most]], [[Most Apollo]] and [[Prístavný most]].
 
 
 
===Rail transportation===
 
 
 
The most important is the [[Main Railway Station, Bratislava|main railway station]] at the edge of [[Old Town, Bratislava|Old Town]] with lines connecting it to [[Košice]] through northern Slovakia, [[Czech Republic]], [[Austria]], [[Hungary]] and southern Slovakia.
 
Another important station is the [[Petržalka railway station]], which is important especially for lines from Austria. There are also many suburb stations, for example in [[Rača (Bratislava)|Rača]], [[Lamač]], [[Čunovo]] and so on.
 
 
 
===Air transportation===
 
 
 
Bratislava has the largest [[M. R. Štefánik Airport|international airport]] in Slovakia, which enjoys rapidly growing traffic in recent years, and in conjunction with the [[Vienna International Airport]], which is located some 40 km away, is providing a large international network.
 
 
 
===River transportation===
 
 
 
Bratislava has one of two international  Slovak [[port|river ports]] (see [[Port of Bratislava]]), as well as numerous tourist lines along the [[Danube]].
 
 
 
===Public transportation===
 
 
 
[[Image:Public Transfer TrolleyBus Bratislava.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Trolleybuses of Bratislava]]
 
  
Public transportation in Bratislava is run by [[Dopravný podnik Bratislava]], the city-owned company. There are three types of transport vehicles used in Bratislava including [[bus]]es (covering the most of the city and the largest district of [[Petržalka]]), [[tram]]s (covering the most frequent commuter trips and connecting city centre with suburbs) and [[trolleybus]]es (connecting the city centre with suburbs and serving as a complementary mean of transport).
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The GDP per capita, which was valued at €25,351 in 2002, reaches 120 percent of the [[European Union|EU]] average, trailing [[Prague]] among the recently joined countries (Eurostat). [http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-AF-05-001/EN/KS-AF-05-001-EN.PDF Regional GDP per Inhabitant in the EU 27], February 19, 2007, ''Eurostat News Release''. Retrieved March 19, 2007
  
==Territorial division==
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==Transportation==
[[image:Bratislava_parts.png|thumb|Bratislava districts]]
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[[Image:Einsteinova.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Motorway D1 in Bratislava-[[Petržalka]]]]
Bratislava is divided to:
+
[[Image:Public Transfer TrolleyBus Bratislava.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Trolleybuses of Bratislava]]
  
'''5 ''districts''''' (national administrative division):
+
'''Road'''
 +
* Highway D1 connects Bratislava to Trnava, Nitra, Trenčín, Žilina, and beyond, while Highway D2 connects it to [[Prague]], Brno, and [[Budapest]] in the North-South direction. There are five bridges cross the [[Danube River]]: Lafranconi Bridge, Nový Most (New Bridge), Starý Most (Old Bridge), Most Apollo, and Prístavný most (Port Bridge).
  
* Bratislava I: Covers the city centre
+
'''Rail'''
* Bratislava II: Covers the south-eastern and eastern parts
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* The Main Railway Station is an intersection of routes connecting the city to the rest of Slovakia, the [[Czech Republic]], [[Austria]], and [[Hungary]]. The Petržalka railway station serves traffic with Austria.
* Bratislava III: Covers the north-eastern parts
 
* Bratislava IV: Covers the western, north-western and northern parts
 
* Bratislava V: Covers the southern parts
 
  
'''17 ''"city parts"''''' (i.e. approx. boroughs) (for the purpose of municipal administrative division and of serving as entities to which the town delegates its powers and functions imposed by law on communities)
+
'''Air'''
 
+
* Served by the international M. R. Štefánik Airport, in conjunction with the Vienna International Airport, located some 40 km away.
'''20 ''"cadastral areas"''''' they coincide with the '''''"city parts"''''',
 
*''except:''
 
*Nové Mesto is further split into Nové Mesto + Vinohrady 
 
*Ružinov is split into : Ružinov + Nivy + Trnávka
 
 
 
{| class="wikitable" style="empty-cells:show; margin-bottom:0.5em; background-color:#FCFCFC;"
 
!colspan=3 style="background-color:#999999; color:white"|Administrative and Territorial Division of Bratislava
 
|- style="background-color:#DDDDDD;"
 
|Districts||"City Parts" (Boroughs)||Quarters or Localities
 
|- <!-- 1 ============================== —>
 
|[[Bratislava I]]
 
|[[Old Town, Bratislava|Staré Mesto]]
 
|- <!-- 2 ============================== —>
 
|rowspan=3|[[Bratislava II]]
 
|[[Ružinov]]|| '''''Nivy''''', ''Pošeň'', ''Prievoz'', ''Ostredky'', ''Trávniky'', ''Štrkovec'', ''Vlčie hrdlo'', '''''Trnávka'''''
 
|-
 
|[[Vrakuňa]] || ''Dolné hony''
 
|-
 
| style="white-space:nowrap"|[[Podunajské Biskupice]] || ''Dolné hony'', ''Ketelec'', ''Lieskovec'', ''Medzi jarkami''
 
|- <!-- 3 ============================== —>
 
|rowspan=3|[[Bratislava III]]
 
|[[Nové Mesto, Bratislava|Nové Mesto]] || ''Ahoj'', ''Jurajov dvor'', ''Koliba'', ''Kramáre'', ''Mierová kolónia'', ''Pasienky/Kuchajda'' , '''''Vinohrady'''''
 
|-
 
|[[Rača]] || ''Krasňany'', ''Rača'', ''Východné''
 
|-
 
|[[Vajnory]] ||
 
|- <!-- 4 ============================== —>
 
|rowspan=6 style="white-space:nowrap"|[[Bratislava IV]]
 
|[[Karlova Ves]] || [[Dlhé diely]], ''Kútiky'', ''Mlynská dolina'', ''Rovnice''
 
|-
 
|[[Dúbravka, Bratislava|Dúbravka]] || ''Podvornice'', ''Záluhy'', ''Krčace''
 
|-
 
|[[Lamač]] || ''Podháj'', ''Rázsochy''
 
|-
 
|[[Devín (city part)|Devín]] ||
 
|-
 
|[[Devínska Nová Ves]] || ''Devínske Jazero'', ''Kostolné'', ''Paulinské'', ''Podhorské'', ''Stred'', ''Vápenka''
 
|-
 
|[[Záhorská Bystrica]] ||
 
|- <!-- 5 ============================== —>
 
|rowspan=4|[[Bratislava V]]
 
|[[Petržalka]] || ''Dvory'', ''Háje'', ''Janíkov dvor'', ''Lúky'', ''Ovsište'', ''Kopčany'', ''Zrkadlový háj'', ''Kapitulský dvor'', ''Starý háj''
 
|-
 
|[[Jarovce]]||
 
|-
 
|[[Rusovce]]||
 
|-
 
|[[Čunovo]]||
 
|}
 
  
 +
'''River'''
 +
* Port of Bratislava is an international river port.
  
 +
'''Public transit'''
 +
* Public transportation is run by the city-owned Dopravný podnik Bratislava, operating buses (serving most of the city and the largest district of Petržalka), trams (the busiest commuter routes as well as suburban traffic), and trolleybuses (connects downtown areas with the suburbs).
  
 
==Images==
 
==Images==
[[Image:Bratislava Panorama 01.jpg|center|thumb|800px|Panorama of Bratislava I (from castle)]]
+
<center><gallery>
[[Image:Ufo night.jpg|center|thumb|800px|Panorama of Bratislava II (from New Bridge)]]
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
 
Image:Bratislava-old town hall.jpg|The Old Town Hall viewed from the Main Square.
 
Image:Bratislava-old town hall.jpg|The Old Town Hall viewed from the Main Square.
Image:Theben.jpg|[[Devín Castle]] at the confluence of the Danube and the Morava viewed from Austria - an old picture.
 
 
Image:Bratislava.jpg|Bratislava on the river [[Danube]]
 
Image:Bratislava.jpg|Bratislava on the river [[Danube]]
Image:Bratislava old town from castle hill.jpg|Old Town (''Staré mesto'') of Bratislava viewed from Bratislava Castle.
+
Image:Bratislava old town from castle hill.jpg|Old Town ''(Staré mesto)'' of Bratislava viewed from Bratislava Castle.
 
Image:Bratislava_divadlo.jpg|[[Slovak National Theatre]].
 
Image:Bratislava_divadlo.jpg|[[Slovak National Theatre]].
 
Image:Bratislava Danube.jpg|Bratislava on the river Danube  
 
Image:Bratislava Danube.jpg|Bratislava on the river Danube  
 
Image:Bratislava-grassalkovičov palác.jpg|The [[Grassalkovich Palace]] - the seat of the President.
 
Image:Bratislava-grassalkovičov palác.jpg|The [[Grassalkovich Palace]] - the seat of the President.
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: Image:NovyMost.jpg|The [[Novy Most Bratislava|Nový Most]] (New Bridge).{{speedy-image-c|[[2006-12-22]]}} —>
+
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: Image:NovyMost.jpg|The [[Novy Most Bratislava|Nový Most]] (New Bridge).{{speedy-image-c|2006-12-22}} —>
 
Image:Ba-michalská brána.jpg|[[Michael's Gate]].
 
Image:Ba-michalská brána.jpg|[[Michael's Gate]].
Image:Bratislava-Dom-sv-Martina.jpg|[[St. Martin's Cathedral]] - the coronation cathedral.
+
Image:Bratislava-Dom-sv-Martina.jpg|[[Saint Martin's Cathedral]] - the coronation cathedral.
 
Image:Petržalka apartment blocks in Bratislava.jpg|Apartment blocks of [[Petržalka]], across the [[Danube]] and the [[Nový Most]]
 
Image:Petržalka apartment blocks in Bratislava.jpg|Apartment blocks of [[Petržalka]], across the [[Danube]] and the [[Nový Most]]
 
Image:Bratislava_Town_Centre.jpg|A typical paved street in [[Old Town, Bratislava|Bratislava's Old Town district]]
 
Image:Bratislava_Town_Centre.jpg|A typical paved street in [[Old Town, Bratislava|Bratislava's Old Town district]]
 
Image:Hlavne namestie.jpg|Bratislava's Old Town district
 
Image:Hlavne namestie.jpg|Bratislava's Old Town district
Image:Hotel Carlton.jpg|Hotel Carlton in [[Pavol Országh Hviezdoslav|Hviezdoslav]] Square (''Hviezdoslavovo námestie'')
+
Image:Hotel Carlton.jpg|Hotel Carlton in [[Pavol Országh Hviezdoslav|Hviezdoslav]] Square ''(Hviezdoslavovo námestie)''
</gallery>
+
</gallery></center>
 +
 
 +
{{Danube}}
 +
{{Capital cities of the European Union}}
  
  
 +
==Sources and further reading==
 +
* ''Bratislava, 2007, Cityspots.'' Peterborough: Thomas Cook. ISBN 1841576166
 +
* Lacika, Ivan. 2001. ''Bratislava, Visiting Slovakia.'' Wauconda, IL: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 9780865165229
 +
* Halpern, Cindy, and Michael Fink. 2002. ''The Jews on the Danube: a timeline through history.'' Warwick, RI: C. Halpern 
 +
* [http://www.bratislava.sk/en/ “Bratislava”] ''Official Website of the City of Bratislava''. accessed March 11, 2007
 +
* [http://www.bratislavaslovakia.com/ “Bratislava”] ''Bratislava, the Capital of the Slovak Republic''. accessed March 11, 2007
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{Commons|Bratislava|Bratislava}}
+
All links retrieved November 20, 2023.
{{wiktionary}}
 
===City Information===
 
*[http://www.bratislava.sk/en/ Official website of the City of Bratislava]
 
*{{wikitravel}}
 
*[http://www.bratislavaguide.com Travel guide to Bratislava]
 
*[http://www.bratislavahotels.com Accommodation in Bratislava]
 
*[http://www.slovakia.org/tourism/bratislava.htm Guide to Bratislava]
 
*[http://www.bratislavaslovakia.com/ Bratislava, Slovakia - city districts]
 
*[http://www.bratislavacity.sk/en/ Bratislava information, history, tips]
 
http://www.visit.bratislava.sk/en/vismo/dokumenty2.asp?id_org=700014&id=1016&p1=1580
 
http://www.unia-miest.sk/Aktivity/BA-Mesto%20tolerancie/2002/index.htm
 
http://www.mineralfit.cz/clanek/1819—bratislava---mesto-na-dunaji.html
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
===Public Transport===
 
*[http://www.imhd.sk/ba/?lang=en Public urban transport in Bratislava]
 
  
===Maps===
+
* [http://www.bratislavaguide.com "Welcome to the ultimate travel guide to Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia"] ''Independent Travel Guide to Bratislava''.
*[http://www.bratislavaguide.com/bratislava-map Satellite photo map with streets and info points]
+
* [http://www.visitbratislava.com/ "Bratislava - The City Where You Find Real Life"] ''Visit Bratislava''.
  
===Photographs===
 
* [http://www.panoramy.net/index.php?cat=3&lang=english_gb Panoramic photo gallery of Bratislava]
 
* [http://vvpg.net/bratislava/Downtown.htm Bratislava Downtown by Summer]
 
* [http://www.travel2bratislava.com/ Bratislava in pictures]
 
{{Bratislava Region}}
 
{{Danube}}
 
{{Capital cities of the European Union}}
 
  
[[Category:Nations and places]]
+
{{credits|103899249}}
[[Category:Cities Europe]]
 
  
{{credit|103899249}}
+
[[Category:Geography]]
 +
[[Category:Cities]]
 +
[[Category:Europe]]

Latest revision as of 22:52, 20 November 2023

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.

  • annual average temperature: 9.9 °C
  • annual sunshine hours: 1976.4 (5.4 hours/day)
  • annual average rainfall: 527.4 mm (according to 1993 data)

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

  • Bratislava's position in the center of Europe and flanking the River Danube predestined it to becoming a crossroads of trade routes as well as a hub of various cultures. The first traces of a permanent settlement are from the late Stone Age.
  • Neolithic Age: the first permanent settlement of the region begins with the Linear Pottery Culture.
  • 400 B.C.E. - 50 B.C.E.: Celts settled here. The real door to history, however, did not open until the arrival of the Boii Celtic tribe in the second century B.C.E., who established a strategic power and defense center here. In 125 B.C.E. they founded an oppidum (fortified town) with a coin mint. The most famous coin is the gold Stater with the inscription Biatec. Just as Vienna, Budapest, Paris, and other major European cities, Bratislava stands on the foundations of a Celtic settlement.
  • 100 C.E. - 500 C.E.: the border of the Roman Empire (Limes Romanus) runs across the city center; Romans and Germanic tribes form settlements in the area. Around the time of the birth of Christ, the Romans discovered the city's strategic importance. They did not settle the area permanently; instead they built military camps to protect local trade. One of such camps, called Gerulata, was situated on the site of the Bratislava district of Rusovce and represented part of the defense system Limes Romanus, which separated the Roman world from the barbaric tribes. The Romans also laid the groundwork for the city's reputation as one of vintners and viticulturists. Part of the mission of the Roman conquests was namely to introduce vines and wine-making to all inhabited areas. This is how wine-growing eventually spread to other countries as well, such as France, Spain, and Germany.
  • sixth century - eighth century: arrival of Slavs (500 C.E. - today) and Eurasian Avars (560 - 800).


Samo's Empire & Great Moravian Empire

  • During the migration of nations, Slavs populated the area of Bratislava. Led by the Frankish merchant Samo, they founded the Empire of King Samo, which was the first known organized community of Slavs that served as protection against the raids of nomadic Avars. Avars and their allies terrorized all neighboring tribes. Being a wealthy man operating in the territory of central and eastern Europe, Samo realized that the Slavs, given to feuds and animosity, would benefit greatly from the shipment of weapons, so he armed them and led them to the war against the Avars, and was elected the king of Slavs. He reigned from 623 to 658, having established a Slavic empire in the fashion of the Frankish empire. He is credited for spearheading the process of the pacification of Slavic tribes, who thanks to him, refocused their energies on agriculture and gave up looting expeditions. After his death, the Empire dissolved into principalities, which were later consolidated within the Great Moravian Empire.
  • From the late eighth century to 833, Bratislava was part of the Principality of Nitra, and subsequently of Great Moravia (833-907). The Great Moravian Empire enjoyed greatest expansion during the reign of Lord Svätopluk (870-894), who expanded its territory to include the Czech Republic, Slovakia, southwestern Poland, southeastern Germany, Hungary, northern and eastern Austria, and western Romania. This state was built on Christian culture, which was introduced to the Slavs by brothers Cyril and Methodius in 863. The downfall of the Empire came at the hands of nomadic Hungarian tribes. Salzburg chronicles provide the first written record of the Bratislava Castle in a description of a battle between Hungarian and Bavarian troops that took place near the castle in 907. This period coincides with the start of the gradual demise of the Great Moravian Empire. The Hungarians won and occupied the eastern part of Great Moravia.

Part of the Kingdom of Hungary (907-1918)

Medieval Bratislava Castle
  • From the second half of the tenth century to 1918, except for short interruptions, Bratislava was part of the Kingdom of Hungary and the capital of the Bratislava county (Posonium Comitatus). The Kingdom of Hungary was formed under the rule of Stephan I (1001-1038), and the city was annexed to it. Toward the end of the tenth century, Bratislava was a key economic and administrative center of the kingdom’s frontier, which had a downside to it in the form of frequent onslaughts by foreign invaders. In 1042 the city was destroyed by German King Henry I. More plight followed between 1074 and 1077 with the battle for the Hungarian throne.
  • In the thirteenth century Bratislava was afforded royal privileges. King Sigismund of Luxembourg, who ruled at the turn of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, reaffirmed the older donations and privileges granted to it by the Houses of Arpad and Anjou and extended new privileges, whereby the city was promoted to a major political and economic hub within the Kingdom of Hungary. Upon Sigismund's decree of 1405, Bratislava began to be referred to as a free royal city and thus assumed the status enjoyed only by the most distinguished cities of that time. In 1436 it was granted by King Sigismund a coat-of-arms deed with escutcheon rights, and as the only city in Europe it had this deed drawn up in two copies, both created by the painter Michal from the Vienna workshop.


Battle of Mohacs; Capital of the Kingdom of Hungary

  • The sixteenth century brought with it a turnaround when Hungarian King Louis II died after falling from his horse in the 1526 Battle of Mohacs with the Turks. In spite of resistance from a large part of the Hungarian nobility and a candidate for the throne in the person of John Zapolya, Ferdinand Habsburg ascended to the throne, and the Turks advanced swiftly into the heart of Slovakia. The Hungarian nobility fled Slovakia and abandoned local authorities. In 1530 the Turks partly leveled Bratislava with cannon fire. However, the Battle of Mohacs fiasco paradoxically worked in the city's favor, as the Hungarian nobility and secular and clerical dignitaries looked to the north for refuge following the occupation of the Kingdom of Hungary's capital Buda. In addition, it was conveniently close to Vienna, the seat of King Ferdinand. These factors as well as its relative safety were attributed to Bratislava's becoming a new capital of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1536. The small city of traders, craftsmen, and winemakers was thus transformed into the center of Slovakia and of the lordship and the Church – it became the seat of the Parliament of the Kingdom and the coronation city of Hungarian kings, the seat of the king, the archbishop, and major institutions. Between 1536-1830, some 11 kings and queens were crowned at its Saint Martin’s Cathedral.
  • 1536-1784: capital of the Kingdom of Hungary, which until 1699 comprised present-day Slovakia and parts of present-day western Hungary. The Turks ruled Buda; the Kingdom of Hungary was part of the larger Austrian Habsburg Monarchy from 1526 to 1918. Bratislava was the meeting place of the Hungarian Diet until 1848.


Empress Maria Theresa and Slovak National Movement

  • In the eighteenth century Bratislava became not only the largest and most important city in Slovakia but also of the entire Kingdom of Hungary. This century saw the construction of splendid palaces for the Hungarian aristocracy as well as churches, monasteries, and other clerical buildings as the population tripled. The city pulsed with culture and social life. Its apex came with the ascension to the throne by Empress Maria Theresa of Austria (1740-1780) and the start of the management of construction development by the Hungarian royal chamber, which handled the construction of government–mandated buildings in particular. Major construction work was also carried out on the castle, which became the seat of the local royal governor and the center of social and political life.

Joseph II turns back time

  • The government of Joseph II of Austria spelled decline for the city, which was quickly stripped of its privilege as the capital of the Kingdom of Hungary. In 1783 Joseph ordered the relocation of the governor’s council and other central authorities to Buda; soon afterward he took the royal crown, safeguarded at the Bratislava castle, to Vienna. These steps spurred a mass exodus of nobility, and Bratislava once again turned into a mere provincial city.


Napoleonic wars and beyond

  • The beginning of the nineteenth century was marked by the Napoleonic wars, and particularly by the Battle of Austerlitz (Slavkov, Czech Republic) in 1805, also known as the Battle of the Three Emperors: French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, Russian Tsar Alexander I, and Holy Roman Empire's Frances I. Napoleon won and considered this victory the triumph of his lifetime. It was followed by the signing of the Treaty of Pressburg on December 26, 1805, in Bratislava’s Primate's Palace, which forced Austria to cede land to Napoleon's German allies and led to the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. The treaty did not bring about lasting peace, as Napoleon’s army bombarded the city with cannon fire from the right bank of the Danube in 1809.
  • Bratislava staged the last major political event as part of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1848, when the Hungarian Diet voted in favor of abolishing bondage. Emperor Ferdinand V visited the city in April 1848 to sign and promulgate the March Laws in the Mirror Hall of the Primate’s Palace. The Hungarian Diet was then dissolved and the political center of the Kingdom of Hungary shifted to Pest. This was a major blow for Bratislava, as it deprived it of a great deal of its political significance.
  • The 1930s brought a boom in industrial output, facilitated by the arrival of the modern transportation system and steamships capable of sailing upstream.
Panorama of Bratislava I (from castle)

Twentieth Century

First Czechoslovak Republic: 1919-1939

  • Bratislava was not directly affected by World War I, although it lacked supplies and prices were the highest within the monarchy. The outcome of the war that ended in November 1918 was significant though, as it rewrote the map of Europe – the Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved and was succeeded by the Czechoslovak Republic in the Czech and Slovak portions of it. When at the end of 1918 it became imminent that Bratislava would be incorporated into the Czechoslovak Republic, representatives of the city decided to rename it "Wilson City," after U.S. president Woodrow Wilson and demanded a status of the open/free city for it, but the proposal was rejected. Bratislava, with its multiple names of Pressburg (German), Pozsony (Hungarian), and Prešpork (Slovak), became part of the Czechoslovak Republic in January 1919. The name that is in use in present—Bratislava—was approved on March 27, 1919, the day that Bratislava appeared on the map of Europe for the first time.
  • In the period between World War I and World War II, Bratislava experienced an urban, architectural, industrial, and manufacturing upsurge. As a model example of tolerance, until the outbreak of World War II it was home to Slovak, German, Hungarian, Jewish, Czech, and Croatian nationals and cultural communities.

World War II: 1939-1945

  • Hitler’s rising influence in Central Europe culminated in March 1939 with the division of Czechoslovakia: the Czech territory became the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia under Nazi administration, while Slovak politicians were given two alternatives by Hitler to decide the future of Slovakia: divide the country among Poland, Hungary, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, or create an independent state. The political leadership opted for the second alternative, giving birth to an independent Slovak state, the six year existence of which continues to be a controversial and unresolved chapter in the history of the country. During the period of the Slovak independent state, Bratislava became the capital for the first time. It lost part of its territory, however – Petržalka and Devín quarters were annexed to Germany. At the end of the war, as the capital of an allied state of Hitler’s Germany, Bratislava was bombed by U.S. air forces. It was liberated on April 4, 1945, by the Russian Red Army.


Czechoslovak Republic: 1945-1992

  • World War II left Bratislava with very little of the once flourishing Jewish community, whose population had either been annihilated in Nazi concentration camps or chose not to return. In addition, a majority of German and Hungarian nationals were displaced, depriving the city of a great deal of its former unique multicultural atmosphere.

Communist takeover

  • The successful Communist coup in February 1948 steered Czechoslovakia toward the socialist camp and behind the Iron Curtain, and its position between the Soviet Union and Western Europe predisposed it to becoming a buffer zone between East and West. The border with Vienna, to which Bratislava was linked by the tram service, was sealed, and residents living in those parts of the city that overlapped with the political border, marked by barbed wire, were forced to relocate.
  • Construction and reconstruction of the war ravaged areas were in full swing in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Businesses and factories were rebuilt, only to be nationalized in the wake of the Communist takeover in 1948. Severe repression followed in the 1950s, with many imprisoned and thousands accused in contrived Kafkaesque processes and forced out of the city. The 40-year period under the influence of the "Evil Empire," as Ronald Reagan labeled the Soviet Union, was interrupted by the Prague Spring of 1968. The Bratislava-born Alexander Dubček became a symbol of this movement that was an attempt at the reformation of Socialism. However, the democratic revolution-in-the-works was crushed by the occupation armies of the Warsaw Pact. The subsequent “sojourn” of Soviet troops was extended to over 20 years.
  • From 1969 to 1992, Bratislava was the capital of the Slovak Socialist Republic within the federal Czechoslovakia.

Czechoslovakia's divorce

  • The Velvet Revolution in Prague that unseated the Communist regime in November 1989 exacerbated long-standing issues within the federal Czechoslovakia. The inability of political representatives to reach a compromise that would settle the complaints of inequality within the federal framework led to the amicable divorce at the stroke of midnight on December 31, 1992, and the emergence of two independent countries: the Czech Republicand Slovakia on January 1, 1993. This was the second time that Czechoslovakia was wiped off the map of Europe, and Bratislava once again became the capital of independent Slovakia and a dynamically developing and prosperous region of Europe.

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
  • 5000 B.C.E. – archaeologically proven colonization of Bratislava in the late Stone Age (Neolithic) period
  • First century C.E.Celts build fortified settlements at Devin and Bratislava and mint silver coins called "biatecs"
  • first – fourth centuries C.E. – the area south of the river Danube under domination of the Roman Empire
  • fifth – sixth centuries – arrival of Slavic tribes
  • 623 – 658 – Samo‘s Empire, the first state structure of Slavs
  • seventh – eighth centuries – Bratislava becomes an important center of Avarian-Slavic Empire
  • ninth century – establishment of the Greater Moravian Empire; with the Castle of Bratislava its military, administration and religious center
  • 864 – the first written reference to the Devin Castle as a strong fortress and the border of the Greater Moravian Empire in the Fulda annals
  • 907 – the first written reference to Bratislava (as Brezalauspurc) in annals of Salzburg in association with a battle between Bavarians and Old Hungarians
  • tenth – eleventh centuries – the Castle of Bratislava forms a boundary of Hungary as the seat of the head of the province’s administration and chapter
  • 1000 – 1038 – establishment of the commitat (province) of Bratislava by the Hungarian King Stephen I
  • twelfth century – settlement on the eastern side of the castle hill
  • 1291 – Hungarian King Andrew III grants Bratislava extensive municipal privileges, thus confirming its incorporation into a system of free royal towns and simultaneously laying foundations for the development of trade and crafts
  • fourteenth – fifteenth centuries – development of crafts, viticulture, and international trade
  • 1430 – the city granted minting rights by the King Sigismund of Luxembourg
  • 1465 – King Mathias founds the first university in Slovakia – Academia Istropolitana
  • 1526 – King Louis dies in the Battle at Mohacs and Ferdinand I of Habsburg is elected the king in the Franciscan cloister
  • 1536 – Bratislava becomes the capital of Hungary, an assembly town, the seat of central offices, and the coronation town of Hungarian kings
  • 1563 – 1830 – 11 Hungarian kings and eight royal wives crowned in the city
  • seventeenth century – uprisings against the Habsburgs
  • 1711 – Great Plague left 3,860 dead
  • 1741 – coronation of Maria Theresa of Austria
  • 1775 – Maria Theresa orders demolition of the city walls and thus spurs new construction and development
  • 1776 – establishment of the Theater of Estates with a permanent company of actors
  • 1780 – establishment of the first manufacture
  • 1783 – Joseph II of Austria orders central offices to be moved to Buda and coronation jewels to Vienna
  • 1805 – Peace of Pressburg ends the Battle of Three Emperors at Battle of Austerlitz between Napoleonic France and Austria; the document is signed in the Primate's Palace
  • 1809 – Napoleonic siege
  • 1811, May 28 – the Castle of Bratislava burnt down
  • 1818 – the first steamboat on the Danube River
  • 1840 – first horse-drawn railway
  • 1843 – codification of Slovak language by Ludovit Stur and his followers
  • 1848 – King Ferdinand V of Austria abolishes serfdom by signing the March Laws in the Primate's palace
  • 1886 – Slovak National Theatre built in place of the Theater of Estates
  • 1891 – the first bridge over the Danube opens
  • 1895 – tram service starts
  • 1912 – trolleybus service introduced
  • 1918 – October 10 – establishment of the Slovak National Council with Bratislava and adjacent areas in its jurisdiction
  • 1919 – January 1 – occupation of the town by Czechoslovak legions and its annexation to the Czechoslovak Republic
  • 1939 – March 14 – Bratislava becomes the capital city of the Nazi Slovak State
  • 1945 – April 4 – liberated by the Soviet Army
  • 1946 – inception of Greater Bratislava by annexing seven villages
  • 1948 – February 25 – Communist takeover
  • 1969 – October 30 – agreement on the federal Czechoslovakia signed at the Bratislava Castle; Bratislava becomes the capital of the Slovak Socialist Republic
  • 1971 – further villages annexed
  • 1989 – November 27 – general strike in support of the Public Against Violence and Civic Forum movements; student strike
  • 1993 – Bratislava becomes the capital of the independent Slovak Republic


Culture

  • The Bratislava Castle is situated on a plateau 82 m above the Danube River, a successor to the acropolis of a Celtic town, part of the Roman Limes Romanus, a vast Slavic fortified settlement, and a political, military and religious center of Great Moravia. The stone castle was built in the tenth century, when Bratislava was part of Hungary, and was turned into a Gothic anti-Hussite fortress under Sigismund of Luxembourg in 1430. In 1562 it received a Renaissance makeover and in 1649, Baroque reconstruction took place. Empress Maria Theresa of Austria converted it into a prestigious seat of her son-in-law, the royal governor Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, who set up the Albertina picture gallery there. The collection was later moved to Vienna. In 1784, when Bratislava ceased to be the capital of Hungary, the castle served as a school for Catholic clergy, and later, in 1802, barracks. In 1811, it was inadvertently destroyed by fire by the French soldiers and lay in ruins until the 1950s, when it was reconstructed mostly in its former Maria Theresa style.
  • Devín Castle, reduced to ruins, overlooks the confluence of the Morava River, which forms the boundary between Austria and Slovakia, and the Danube. Sitting on the top of a rocky hill, it is one of the most important Slovak archaeological sites and, due to its excellent location, a strategic frontier castle during the period of Great Moravia and the early Hungarian state. It was destroyed by Napoleonic troops in 1809, but it remains an important symbol of the Slovak and Slavic history.
  • The historic core of the city is famous for its numerous Baroque palaces. The Grassalkovich Palace, built around 1760, serves as the residence of the Slovak president; and the Slovak government resides in the former summer residence of the archbishop of Esztergom.
  • Saint Martin's Cathedral stands on the site of a church built in the thirteenth century. This Gothic edifice dates back to the fourteenth or fifteenth century and saw many a Hungarian king crowned in there. It boasts an 85 m high tower.
  • Town hall, built in the fourteenth to fifteenth century.
  • Franciscan Church, dating from 1297, is Slovakia's oldest church.
  • University Library, erected in 1756, housed the sessions of the Diet (parliament) of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1802 to 1848, and major events of the Hungarian Reform Era took place there, among them the abolition of serfdom and the establishment of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
  • Primate's Palace, built in 1781.
At Esztergom and Štúrovo, the Danube separates Hungary from Slovakia.
  • Michael's Gate, from early seventeenth century, is the remnant of municipal fortification. The narrowest house in central Europe is directly behind it.
  • Nový Most Bratislava, a bridge across the Danube River, features a UFO-like tower restaurant. The two-storey bridge, over 430 m in length, has been awarded the prize of the "Structure of the Twentieth Century."
  • Kamzik TV Tower, with an observation deck.
  • Offices of the Slovak Radio Station, which are an inverted pyramid.
  • Theater lovers can choose among the Slovak National Theater, Puppet Theater, Astorka Korzo '90, Aréna and others. Modern art is on display at the Museum of Modern Art. The Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra caters to classical music audiences. One of the city's popular curiosities is the underground portion of the Jewish cemetery, where Rabbi Moses Sofer is buried.

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:

  • Š.K. Slovan Bratislava
  • FC Artmedia Bratislava
  • FK Inter Bratislava

while Ice hockey: teams are:

  • HC Slovan Bratislava

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:

  • Academy of Performing Arts
  • Bratislava Technical College
  • Comenius University
  • Slovak University of Technology
  • University of Economics
  • Academy of Fine Arts and Design

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

  • Highway D1 connects Bratislava to Trnava, Nitra, Trenčín, Žilina, and beyond, while Highway D2 connects it to Prague, Brno, and Budapest in the North-South direction. There are five bridges cross the Danube River: Lafranconi Bridge, Nový Most (New Bridge), Starý Most (Old Bridge), Most Apollo, and Prístavný most (Port Bridge).

Rail

  • The Main Railway Station is an intersection of routes connecting the city to the rest of Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Austria, and Hungary. The Petržalka railway station serves traffic with Austria.

Air

  • Served by the international M. R. Štefánik Airport, in conjunction with the Vienna International Airport, located some 40 km away.

River

  • Port of Bratislava is an international river port.

Public transit

  • Public transportation is run by the city-owned Dopravný podnik Bratislava, operating buses (serving most of the city and the largest district of Petržalka), trams (the busiest commuter routes as well as suburban traffic), and trolleybuses (connects downtown areas with the suburbs).

Images


Sources and further reading

  • Bratislava, 2007, Cityspots. Peterborough: Thomas Cook. ISBN 1841576166
  • Lacika, Ivan. 2001. Bratislava, Visiting Slovakia. Wauconda, IL: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 9780865165229
  • Halpern, Cindy, and Michael Fink. 2002. The Jews on the Danube: a timeline through history. Warwick, RI: C. Halpern
  • “Bratislava” Official Website of the City of Bratislava. accessed March 11, 2007
  • “Bratislava” Bratislava, the Capital of the Slovak Republic. accessed March 11, 2007

External links

All links retrieved November 20, 2023.


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