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Tabán is a district of Budapest, to the south of György Dózsa Square, on the northern Buda side of Elisabeth Bridge to the east of Naphegy.
Contents |
Maps
- Meyers Lexikon (1905) on the right:
- Google-Maps Satellite [1] - streets on the Map:
- Kereszt Street was the center of old Tabán.
- near Naphegy Street and Kereszt Street Memorial 1956 Hungarian Revolution
- near Hadnagy Street Rácz fürdő.
- near Apród Street museum: Semmelweiss Orvostöténeti Múzeum.
History
The Tabán has been inhabited since Neolithic times, due to its location in a protected valley, the thermal waters at the bottom of the Gellért Hill and the ford over the Danube. In the Iron Age, it was inhabited by a tribe of Celts, who were replaced by the Romans in the 1st Century BC.
In the Middle Ages, the Tabán was a village right under the Buda Castle. The Turks developed the thermal medicinal baths in the area and brought immigrants from the Balkans. The population increased after the liberation of Hungary from the Turks as refugees came from Greece, Bosnia and Serbia. The Franciscans from Bosnia established the parish church in the 17th Century which still exists today and the Orthodox inhabitants established their own parish. In the 18th Century, the town was inhabited by Serbs, Greeks, Vlachs, Germans, Croats, Slovaks and Gypsies.
In the 19th Century, the Tabán became known as as a Bohemian quarter of Budapest with many restaurants, bars and bordellos. Its narrow streets on the hillsides echoed a Mediterranean atmosphere.
In the 1930's, the Tabán was demolished in order to facilitate urban planning in Budapest. Today, it is a park very popular with the population of the capital.
The history of Tabán is inseparable from that of the neighboring Naphegy and Gellérthegy districts. After the 1930 urban planning in Budapest, only a few old Tabán houses were left in the Naphegy district; one of them was the Tabán school, which was destroyed in January 1945, during the battle of Budapest. Today a sports field can be found where the school once stood. The only original streets remaining are Orom Street in Gellérthegy and Tabán Czakó Street in Naphegy.
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The old Tabán school was here, today sports field Naphegy near Czakó Street |
Tabán in literature
The poet Dezső Kosztolányi wrote:
"Köröttem - esõs akvarell - Tabán.
Nyugodt lennék itt s boldog is talán..."
"I crossed Tabán - a rainy watercolour.
I would be at peace here and maybe happy too..."
Tabán park today
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Memorial 1956 - 1956 Hungarian Revolution |
Sights
Its major sights include
- Rác Medicinal Baths (under reconstruction)
- Rudas Medicinal Baths
Sources
- Budapest Lexikon (Second edition, revised and expanded). 2 volumes. Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1993.
- Narodni Kalendar 1990, Aqua Kiadó és Nyomda, Budapest, 1990.
- Antal Szerb: Budapesti kalauz Marslakók számára (A Guide to Budapest for Martians)
See also near to Tabán
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 27 September 2008, at 19:56.
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