Want to find peace and security? Come to Budapest!

Change language:
Marking Budapest’s 150th anniversary, President Katalin Novák said on Friday that with the unification of the historical parts of the city 150 years ago not only a city was born, but “the Hungarian nation’s heart made its first beat”.
“The heart of our more than thousand-year-old state is but 150 years old: this heart lends strength to the nation to survive and grow,” the president told a gala evening.
“From this point of view Budapest looks like a young, not yet adolescent city, with a high perspectives and a long future,” she said.
The president noted the destruction in Budapest during the first and the second world war, as well as that of the failed anti-Soviet revolution in 1956 and changes of the political regime. She said that the city “has proved its vitality and ability for renewal … it is a city of freedom, which has always been home to alternative art movements and thinking different from the mainstream, and different political ideologies”.





