Bratislava ( , ) is the
capital of the Slovak
Republic
and, with a population of about 429,000, also the
country's largest city. Bratislava is in southwestern
Slovakia on both banks of the
Danube River.
Bordering
Austria
and Hungary
, it is the
only national capital that borders two independent countries, and
it and Vienna
are the two
European national capitals closest to one another, at less than
apart.
Bratislava is the
political,
cultural, and
economic centre of Slovakia. It is the
seat of the
Slovak
president, the
parliament, and the
executive branch of the
government. It is home to several universities, museums,
theatres, galleries and other important cultural and educational
institutions. Many of Slovakia's large businesses and financial
institutions are also headquartered there.
The history of the city, long known by the German name
Pressburg, has been strongly influenced by people
of different nations, namely by
Austrians,
Czechs,
Germans,
Hungarians,
Jews, and
Slovaks. The city was
the capital of the
Kingdom of
Hungary under the
Habsburg
Monarchy from 1536 to 1783 and has been home to many
Slovak,
Hungarian,
and
German historical figures.
Names
Bratislava ( ), as it was renamed in March 6. 1919, has been known
by many names in different languages throughout its history. Its
first recorded name, in the 10th century
Annales Iuvavenses, was
Brezalauspurc. Notable alternative names are: (still used
in German speaking countries today - mostly in Austria, only seldom
in Germany), (still used in Hungarian today), former
Slovak name:
Prešporok.
Other names are or were:
Greek:
Istropolis (meaning "
Danube City",
also used in Latin), , , , , . The name Pressburg was also used in
English language publications until 1919, and it is still
occasionally used today. For the history and etymology of the
various names, see
History of
Bratislava.
In older
documents, confusion can be caused by the Latin forms
Bratislavia, Wratislavia etc, which refer to Breslau
, not to
Bratislava.
History
The first known permanent settlement of the area began with the
Linear Pottery Culture,
around 5000 BC in the
Neolithic era. About
200 BC, the
Celtic Boii
tribe founded the first significant settlement, a fortified town
known as an
oppidum, and also established a
mint which produced silver coins known
as
biatecs.The area fell under
Roman influence from the first to the fourth
century AD and formed part of the
Limes
Romanus, a border defence system. The Romans introduced
grape growing to the area and began a
tradition of
winemaking, which survives
to the present.
The
Slavs arrived between the 5th and
6th centuries during the
Migration
Period. As a response to onslaughts by
Avars, the local Slavic tribes rebelled and
established
Samo's Empire (623–658), the first
known Slavic political entity.
In the 9th century, the castles at Bratislava
(Brezalauspurc) and Devín
(Dowina) were important centres of the Slavic states the
Principality of Nitra and
Great Moravia. On the other
hand, the identification of the two castles as fortresses built in
Great Moravia has been under debate based on linguistic arguments
and because of the absence of convincing archaeologic evidence.
The first
written reference to the city dates to 907 and is related to
a battle during which a
Bavarian
army was defeated by the Hungarians and which is connected to the
fall of Great Moravia under the attacks of the
Hungarians.
In the 10th century, the territory of Pressburg (what would later
become
Pozsony county) became part of
Hungary (called "the
Kingdom of
Hungary" from 1000) and became a key economic and
administrative centre on the kingdom's frontier. This strategic
position destined the city to be the site of frequent attacks and
battles, but also brought it economic development and high
political status. It was granted its first known town privileges in
1291 by the Hungarian
King Andrew
III, and was declared a free royal town in 1405 by
King Sigismund of Luxemburg, who
also entitled the town to use its
own coat of arms in 1436.
The
Kingdom of Hungary was defeated by the Ottoman Empire in the Battle of
Mohács
in 1526. Thereafter the Turks besieged and
damaged Pressburg but failed to conquer it. Owing to Ottoman
advances into Hungarian territory, the city was designated the new
capital of Hungary in 1536, becoming part of the Austrian
Habsburg monarchy and marking the
beginning of a new era. The city became a coronation town and the
seat of kings, archbishops (1543), the nobility and all major
organisations and offices.
Between 1536 and 1830, eleven kings and
queens were crowned at St. Martin's
Cathedral
. Nevertheless, the 17th century was marked
by anti-Habsburg uprisings, fighting with the Turks, floods,
plagues and other disasters.

Pressburg in a drawing from
1787
Pressburg flourished during the 18th century reign of
Maria Theresa of Austria, becoming
the largest and most important town in the territory of present-day
Slovakia and Hungary. The population tripled; many new palaces,
monasteries, mansions, and streets were built, and the city was the
centre of social and cultural life of the region.
However, the city
started to lose its importance under the reign of Maria Theresa's
son Joseph II,
especially when the crown
jewels were taken to Vienna
in 1783 in
an attempt to strengthen the union between Austria and
Hungary. Many central offices subsequently moved to
Buda, followed by a large segment of the nobility. The
first newspapers in Hungarian and Slovak were published here, resp.
Magyar hírmondó in 1780, and
Presspurske Nowiny
in 1783. In the course of the 18th century, the city became a
centre for the
Slovak national
movement.

Pressburg, ca. 1840
19th century history was closely tied to the major events in
Europe. The
Peace of Pressburg
between Austria and France was signed here in 1805.
Theben
Castle
was ruined by Napoleon's French troops in
1809. In 1825 the Hungarian
National Learned Society
(the present Hungarian Academy of Sciences) was
founded in Pressburg using a donation from István Széchenyi. In 1843
Hungarian was proclaimed the official language in legislation,
public administration and education by the Diet in the city.
As a
reaction to the Revolutions
of 1848, Ferdinand V
signed the so-called April laws, which
included the abolition of serfdom, at the
Primate's
Palace
.
Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 444 The city chose
the revolutionary Hungarian side, but was captured by the Austrians
in December 1848. Industry grew rapidly in the 19th century.
The first
horse-drawn railway in the Kingdom of
Hungary, from Pressburg to Svätý Jur
, was built in 1840. A new line to Vienna
using steam locomotives was opened
in 1848, and a line to Pest
in
1850. Many new industrial, financial and other institutions
were founded; for example, the first bank established in
present-day Slovakia was founded in 1842.
The city's first
permanent bridge over the Danube, Starý
most
, was built in 1891.
Before
World War I, the city had 42%
German, 41% Hungarian and 15% Slovak population (1910 census).
After
World War I and the formation of
Czechoslovakia
on October 28, 1918, the city was incorporated into
the new state despite its representatives' reluctance. The
dominant Hungarian and German population tried to prevent
annexation of the city to Czechoslovakia and declared it a free
city. However, the
Czechoslovak
Legions occupied the city on January 1, 1919, thereby making it
part of Czechoslovakia. The city became the seat of Slovakia's
political organs and organizations and became Slovakia's capital on
4-February 5. On February 12, 1919 the German and Hungarian
population started a protest against the Czechoslovak occupation,
but the Czechoslovak Legions opened fire upon the unarmed
demonstrators. On March 27, 1919, the name
Bratislava was
officially adopted for the first time. Left without any protection
after the retreat of the Hungarian army, many Hungarians were
expelled or fled and Czechs and Slovaks took their houses and moved
to Bratislava. Education in
Hungarian and
German was radically reduced.
In the
1930 Czechoslovakian
census the Hungarian
population of Bratislava had decreased to 15.8% (see the Demographics of Bratislava
article for more details).
In 1938,
Nazi Germany annexed neighbouring
Austria in the Anschluss; later that year
it also annexed the still-independent Petržalka
and Devín boroughs on ethnic grounds.
Bratislava was declared the capital of the
first independent Slovak
Republic on March 14, 1939, but the new state quickly fell
under Nazi influence. In 1941–1942 and 1944–1945, the new
Slovak
government expelled most of Bratislava's approximately 15,000
Jews, with most of them being sent into
concentration camp.
Bratislava was
bombarded by the Allies,
occupied by German troops in 1944 and eventually taken by the
Soviet
Red Army on April 4, 1945. At the end of
World War II, most Bratislava Germans were evacuated by German
authorities; a few returned after the war, but were expelled
without their properties under the
Beneš decrees.
After the
Communist
Party seized power in
Czechoslovakia
in February 1948, the city became part of the
Eastern Bloc. The city annexed new land, and
the population rose significantly, becoming 90% Slovak. Large
residential areas consisting of high-rise
prefabricated panel
buildings, such as those in the Petržalka borough, were built.
The
Communist government also built several new grandiose buildings,
such as the Nový
Most
bridge and the Slovak Radio headquarters, sometimes
at the expense of the historical cityscape.
In 1968, after the unsuccessful
Czechoslovak attempt to liberalize the
Communist regime, the city was occupied by
Warsaw Pact troops. Shortly thereafter, it
became capital of the
Slovak
Socialist Republic, one of the two states of the federalized
Czechoslovakia.Bratislava's dissidents anticipated the fall of
Communism with the
Bratislava candle
demonstration in 1988, and the city became one of the foremost
centres of the anti-Communist
Velvet
Revolution in 1989.
In 1993,
the city became the capital of the newly formed Slovak Republic
following the Velvet Divorce. In the
1990s and the early 21st century, its economy boomed due to foreign
investment. The flourishing city also hosted several important
cultural and political events, including the
Slovakia Summit 2005 between
George W. Bush
and
Vladimir Putin.
Geography

Map of Bratislava
is situated in south-western Slovakia, within the
Bratislava Region.
Its location on the
borders with Austria
and Hungary
makes it the
only national capital that borders two countries.
It is
only 62 kilometres (38.5 mi) from the border with the Czech
Republic
and only 60
kilometres (37 mi) from the Austrian
capital Vienna
.
The city
has a total area of , making it the second-largest city in Slovakia
by area (after the township of Vysoké Tatry
). Bratislava straddles the
Danube River, which crosses the city from the west to
the south-east.
The Middle
Danube basin begins at Devín Gate
in western Bratislava. Other rivers are the
Morava River, which forms the
north-western border of the city and enters the Danube at Devín,
the Little Danube, and the Vydrica
, which enters the Danube in the borough of Karlova Ves
.
The
Carpathian
mountain range begins in city territory with the
Little
Carpathians
(Malé Karpaty). The Záhorie
and Danubian
lowlands stretch into Bratislava. The city's lowest
point is at the Danube's surface at AMSL, and the highest point is Devínska
Kobyla
at . The average altitude is .
Climate
Bratislava lies in the
north temperate
zone and has a
continental
climate with four distinct seasons. It is often windy with a
marked variation between hot summers and cold, humid winters. The
city is in one of the warmest and driest parts of Slovakia.
Recently, the transitions from winter to summer and summer to
winter have been rapid, with short autumn and spring periods. Snow
occurs less frequently than previously.
Some areas,
particularly Devín and Devínska Nová Ves
, are vulnerable to floods from the Danube and
Morava rivers. New flood protection is being built on both
banks.
Cityscape and architecture

Nový most bridge with UFO restaurant,
the most famous modern landmark of Bratislava

St. Martin's Cathedral
The cityscape of Bratislava is characterized by medieval towers and
grandiose 20th-century buildings, but it has undergone profound
changes in a construction boom at the start of the 21st
century.

Kamzík TV Tower
Most
historical buildings are concentrated in the Old
Town
. Bratislava's Town Hall is a
complex of three buildings erected in the 14th–15th centuries and
now hosts the
Bratislava City
Museum.
Michael's Gate
is the only gate that has been preserved from the
medieval fortifications,
and it ranks among the oldest of the town's buildings; the
narrowest house in Europe is nearby. The University Library
building, erected in 1756, was used by the
Diet of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1802 to
1848.
Much of the significant legislation of the
Hungarian Reform Era (such as
the abolition of serfdom and the foundation
of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
) was enacted there.
The historic centre is characterised by many
baroque palaces.
The Grassalkovich Palace
, built around 1760, is now the residence of the
Slovak president, and the Slovak government now has its seat in the
former Archiepiscopal Palace
. In 1805, diplomats of emperors Napoleon and Francis II signed the fourth
Peace of Pressburg in the
Primate's
Palace
, after Napoleon's victory in the Battle of
Austerlitz
. Some smaller houses are historically
significant; composer
Johann
Nepomuk Hummel was born in an 18th-century house in the Old
Town.
Notable
cathedrals and churches include the Gothic St. Martin's
Cathedral
built in the 13th–16th centuries, which served as
the coronation church of the Kingdom of Hungary between 1563 and
1830. The Franciscan
Church
, dating to the 13th century, has been a place of
knighting ceremonies and is the oldest preserved sacral building in
the city. The Church of
St. Elisabeth
, better known as the Blue Church due to its colour,
is built entirely in the Hungarian
Secessionist style.
A curiosity is the underground (formerly ground-level) restored
portion of the Jewish cemetery where 19th-century Rabbi
Moses Sofer is buried, located at the base of
the castle hill near the entrance to a tram tunnel.
The only military
cemetery in Bratislava is Slavín
, unveiled
in 1960 in honour of Soviet Army soldiers
who fell during the liberation of Bratislava in April 1945.
It offers
an excellent view of the city and the Little Carpathians
.
Other
prominent 20th-century structures include the Nový
Most
(New Bridge) across the Danube featuring a UFO-like tower restaurant,
Slovak Radio's
inverted-pyramid-shaped headquarters, and the uniquely designed
Kamzík TV
Tower
with an observation deck and rotating
restaurant. In the early 21st century, new edifices have
transformed the traditional cityscape.
The construction boom
has spawned new public buildings, such as the Most Apollo
and a new building of the Slovak National Theatre, as well as
private real-estate
development.
Bratislava Castle
One of
the most prominent structures in the city is Bratislava
Castle
, on a plateau above the Danube. The castle
hill site has been inhabited since the transition period between
the
Stone and
Bronze ages and has been the
acropolis of a
Celt town,
part of the
Roman Limes Romanus, a huge Slavic fortified settlement, and
a political, military and religious centre for
Great Moravia. A stone
castle was not constructed until the 10th century,
when the area was part of the
Kingdom
of Hungary. The castle was converted into a
Gothic anti-
Hussite fortress under
Sigismund of Luxemburg in
1430, became a
Renaissance castle in
1562, and was rebuilt in 1649 in the baroque style. Under
Queen Maria Theresa, the castle became a
prestigious royal seat. In 1811, the castle was inadvertently
destroyed by fire and lay in ruins until the 1950s, when it was
rebuilt mostly in its former Theresan style. The castle is
temporarily closed for reconstruction at the moment.
Devín Castle
The
ruined and recently renovated Devín Castle
is in the borough of Devín
, on top of a
rock where the Morava River, which
forms the border between Austria and Slovakia, enters the
Danube. It is one of the most important Slovak
archaeological sites and contains a museum dedicated to its
history. Due to its strategic location, Devín Castle was a very
important frontier castle of
Great
Moravia and the early Hungarian state. It was destroyed by
Napoleon's troops in 1809. It is an important symbol of Slovak and
Slavic history.
Rusovce
Rusovce
mansion
, with its English
park, is in the Rusovce borough. The house was
originally built in the 17th century and was turned into an English
neo-Gothic-style mansion
in 1841–1844.
The borough is also known for the ruins of
the Roman military camp Gerulata
, part of Limes Romanus, a border defence
system. Gerulata was built and used between the 1st and 4th
centuries
AD.
Parks and lakes
Due to
its location in the foothills of the Little Carpathians
and its riparian
vegetation on the Danubian floodplains, Bratislava has forests close to the
city centre. The total amount of public green space is , or
per inhabitant.The largest city park is Horský park (literally,
Mountainous Park), in the Old Town.
Bratislavský
lesný park
(Bratislava Forest Park) is located in the Little
Carpathians and includes many locales popular among visitors, such
as Železná studienka and Koliba
. The
Forest Park covers an area of , of which 96% is forested, and
contains original flora and fauna such as
European badger,
red
fox and
mouflons.
On the right bank of
the Danube, in the borough of Petržalka, is Janko Kráľ
Park
founded in 1774–76. A new city park is
planned for Petržalka between the Malý Draždiak and Veľký Draždiak
lakes.
Bratislava's
zoological park
is located
in Mlynská dolina, near the
headquarters of Slovak
Television. The zoo, founded in 1960, currently houses
152 species of animals, including the rare
white lion and
white
tiger. The Botanical Gardens, which belong to
Comenius University, can
be found on the Danube riverfront and house more than 120 species
of domestic and foreign origin.
The city has a number of natural and man-made lakes, most of which
are used for recreation.
Examples include Štrkovec lake in Ružinov
, Kuchajda in Nové Mesto
, Zlaté Piesky
and the Vajnory
lakes in the north-east, and Rusovce
lake in the south, which is popular with nudists.
Demographics
|
2001 census results
With Vienna, Bratislava forms the Twin City metropolitan
area,
with a rough population of 3.1 million inhabitants. |
| District |
Population |
Ethnic group |
Population |
| Bratislava I–V |
428,672 |
Slovaks |
391,767 |
| Bratislava I |
44,798 |
Hungarians |
16,541 |
| Bratislava II |
108,139 |
Czechs |
7,972 |
| Bratislava III |
61,418 |
Germans |
1,200 |
| Bratislava IV |
93,058 |
Moravians |
635 |
| Bratislava V |
121,259 |
Croats |
614 |
From the city's origin until the nineteenth century, Germans were
the dominant ethnic group. However, after the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise
of 1867, active
Magyarisation took
place, and by the end of World War I 40% of the population of
Pressburg spoke Hungarian as native language, 42% German, and 15%
Slovak. After the formation of the
Czechoslovak
Republic in 1918, Bratislava remained a multi-ethnic city, but
with a different demographic trend. Thanks to
Slovakization, the proportion of Slovaks and
Czechs increased in the city, while the proportion of Germans and
Hungarians fell. In 1938, 59% of population were Slovaks or Czechs,
while Germans represented 22% and Hungarians 13% of the city's
population. The creation of the first Slovak Republic in 1939
brought other changes, most notably the expulsion of many Czechs
and Jews. In 1945, most of the Germans were evacuated. After the
restoration of Czechoslovakia, the
Beneš decrees (partly revoked in 1948)
collectively punished ethnic German and Hungarian minorities by
expropriation and deportation to Germany, Austria, and Hungary for
their alleged collaborationism with Nazi Germany and Hungary
against Czechoslovakia.The city thereby obtained its clearly Slovak
character. Hundreds of citizens were expelled during the communist
oppression of the 1950s, with the aim of replacing "reactionary"
people with the proletarian class. Since the 1950s, the Slovaks
have been the dominant ethnicity in the town, making up around 90%
of the city's population.
Government
Bratislava is the seat of the
Slovak parliament,
presidency,
ministries, supreme court ( ), and
central bank. It is the seat of
the
Bratislava Region and, since
2002, also of the Bratislava Self-Governing Region. The city also
has many foreign
embassies and
consulates.
The current local government (
Mestská samospráva)
structure has been in place since 1990. It is composed of a
mayor (
primátor), a city board
(
Mestská rada), a
city council
(
Mestské zastupiteľstvo),
city commission (
Komisie
mestského zastupiteľstva), and a city
magistrate's office (
Magistrát).
The
mayor, based at the Primate's Palace
, is the city's top executive officer and is elected
to a four-year term of office. The current mayor of
Bratislava is
Andrej
Ďurkovský, who won the election in 2006 as a candidate of the
KDH–
SDKÚ
coalition and is serving his second term in the office. The city
council is the city's legislative body, responsible for issues such
as budget, local ordinances,
city
planning, road maintenance, education, and culture. The Council
usually convenes once a month and consists of 80 members elected to
four-year terms concurrent with the mayor's. Many of the council's
executive functions are carried out by the city commission at the
council's direction. The city board is a 28-member body composed of
the mayor and his deputies, the borough mayors, and up to ten city
council members. The board is an executive and supervisory arm of
the city council and also serves in an advisory role to the
mayor.
Administratively, Bratislava is divided into five
districts: Bratislava I (the city
centre), Bratislava II (eastern parts), Bratislava III
(north-eastern parts), Bratislava IV (western and northern parts)
and Bratislava V (southern parts on the right bank of the Danube,
including Petržalka, the most densely populated residential area in
Central Europe).
For self-governance purposes, the city is divided into 17 boroughs,
each of which has its own mayor (
starosta) and council.
The number of councillors in each depends on the size and
population of the borough. Each of the boroughs coincides with the
city's 20
cadastral areas, except for two
cases: Nové Mesto is further divided into the Nové Mesto and
Vinohrady cadastral areas and Ružinov is divided into Ružinov, Nivy
and Trnávka. Further unofficial division recognizes additional
quarters and localities.
Economy

National Bank of Slovakia
The
Bratislava Region is the
wealthiest and economically most prosperous region in Slovakia as
of 2007, despite being the smallest by area and having the second
smallest population of
the eight
Slovak regions. It accounts for about 26% of the Slovak
GDP.
The GDP per capita
(PPP), valued at €33,124 (2005), is 147.9% of the EU average and is the second-highest level
(after Prague
) of all
regions in the new EU member states and higher than all regions of
France
except
Paris
.
The average brutto salary in Bratislava region in first three
quarters of
2008 was € 1015.47 (30,592
Sk).
The unemployment rate in Bratislava was 1.83% in December 2007.
Many governmental institutions and private companies have their
headquarters in Bratislava. More than 75% of Bratislava's
population works in the
service sector, mainly
composed of
trade,
banking,
IT,
telecommunications, and
tourism. The Bratislava Stock Exchange (BSSE), the
organiser of the public securities market, was founded on March 15,
1991.
The automaker
Volkswagen built a factory
in Bratislava in 1991 and has expanded since. Currently, its
production focuses on
SUVs,
which represent 68% of all production. The
VW Touareg is produced in Bratislava, and
the
Porsche Cayenne and
Audi Q7 are partially built there.
In recent years,
service and
high-tech-oriented businesses have prospered in
Bratislava. Many global companies, including
IBM,
Dell,
Lenovo,
AT&T,
SAP, and
Accenture, have
built
outsourcing and service centres
here or plan to do so soon. Reasons for the influx of
multi-national corporation include
proximity to the Western Europe, skilled labour force and the high
density of universities and research facilities.
Other
large companies and employers with headquarters in Bratislava
include Slovak Telekom, Orange Slovensko, Slovenská sporiteľňa,
Tatra banka, Doprastav, Hewlett-Packard Slovakia, Slovnaft, Henkel Slovensko,
Slovenský
plynárenský priemysel, Kraft Foods
Slovakia, Whirlpool Slovakia,
Železnice Slovenskej
republiky, and Tesco
Stores
Slovak Republic.
The
Slovak economy's strong
growth in the 2000s has led to a boom in the construction industry,
and several major projects have been completed or are planned in
Bratislava. Areas attracting developers include the Danube
riverfront, where two major projects already under construction:
River Park in the Old Town, and Eurovea near the Apollo Bridge.
Other locations under development include the areas around the main
railway and bus stations, around the former industrial zone near
the Old Town and in the boroughs of Petržalka, Nové Mesto and
Ružinov. It is expected that investors will spend €1.2 billion on
new projects by 2010.The city has a balanced budget of almost six
billion
Slovak korunas (€182 million,
as of 2007), with one fifth used for investment. Bratislava holds
shares in 17 companies directly, for example, in the public
transport company (
Dopravný podnik Bratislava),
the
waste collection and disposal
company, and the water utility.
The city also manages municipal
organisations such as the City Police
(Mestská polícia), Bratislava City Museum and ZOO
Bratislava
.
Tourism
- For the list of sights in the city, see cityscape and
architecture above.
New Year's Eve celebration in 2006, which attracts about 100.000
people every year

Tourist train Prešporáčik in the Old
Town
In 2006, Bratislava had 77 commercial accommodation facilities (of
which 45 were hotels) with a total capacity of 9,940 beds. A total
of 686,201 visitors, 454,870 of whom were foreigners, stayed
overnight. Altogether, visitors made 1,338,497 overnight stays.
However, a considerable share of visits is made by those who visit
Bratislava for a single day, and their exact number is not known.
Largest
numbers of foreign visitors come from the Czech Republic
, Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, Poland
, and
Austria
.
Among other factors, the growth of
low-cost airline flights to Bratislava, led
by
SkyEurope, has led to conspicuous
stag parties, primarily from the UK.
While these are a boon to the city's tourist industry, cultural
differences and
vandalism have led to
concern by local officials.
Culture
Bratislava is the cultural heart of Slovakia. Owing to its
historical multi-cultural character, local culture is influenced by
various ethnic groups, including Germans, Slovaks, Hungarians, and
Jews. Bratislava enjoys numerous theatres, museums, galleries,
concert halls, cinemas, film clubs, and foreign cultural
institutions.
Performing arts

Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra
Bratislava is the seat of the
Slovak National Theatre, housed in
two buildings.
The first is a Neo-Renaissance theatre building situated in
the Old Town at the end of Hviezdoslav Square
. The new building, opened to the public in
2007, is on the riverfront. The theatre has three ensembles: opera,
ballet and drama.
Smaller theatres include the Bratislava
Puppet Theatre, the Astorka Korzo '90 theatre, the Arena Theatre
, L+S Studio, and the Naive Theatre of
Radošina.
Music in Bratislava flourished in the 18th century and was closely
linked to Viennese musical life.
Mozart visited the town at the age
of six. Among other notable composers who visited the town were
Haydn,
Liszt,
Bartók and
Beethoven, who played his
Missa Solemnis for the first
time in Bratislava. It is also the birthplace of the composer
Johann Nepomuk Hummel.
Bratislava is home to the Slovak
Philharmonic Orchestra
. The city hosts several annual festivals,
such as the Bratislava Music Festival and Bratislava Jazz Days. The
Wilsonic Festival, held annually
since 2000, brings dozens of international musical acts to the city
each year. During the summer, various musical events take place as
part of the Bratislava Cultural Summer. Apart from musical
festivals, it is possible to hear music ranging from underground to
well known pop stars.
Museums and galleries

Slovak National Museum
The
Slovak National Museum
(
Slovenské národné múzeum), founded in 1961, has its
headquarters in Bratislava on the riverfront in the Old Town, along
with the Natural History Museum, which is one of its subdivisions.
It is the largest museum and cultural institution in Slovakia. The
museum manages 16 specialised museums in Bratislava and beyond. The
Bratislava City Museum
(
Múzeum mesta Bratislavy), established in 1868, is the
oldest museum in continuous operation in Slovakia. Its primary goal
is to chronicle Bratislava's history in various forms from the
earliest periods using historical and archaeological collections.
It offers permanent displays in eight specialised museums.
The
Slovak National Gallery,
founded in 1948, offers the most extensive network of galleries in
Slovakia. Two displays in Bratislava are next to one another at
Esterházy Palace
(
Esterházyho palác,
Eszterházy palota) and the
Water Barracks (
Vodné kasárne,
Vizikaszárnya) on
the Danube riverfront in the Old Town. The
Bratislava City Gallery, founded in
1961, is the second-largest Slovak gallery of its kind.
The
gallery offers permanent displays at Pálffy
Palace
(Pálffyho palác,Pálffy palota)
and Mirbach
Palace
(Mirbachov palác,Mirbach palota),
in the Old Town. Danubiana Art Museum, one of the youngest
art museums in Europe, is near Čunovo
waterworks
.
Media
As the national capital, Bratislava is home to national and many
local media outlets. Notable TV stations based in the city include
Slovak Television
(
Slovenská televízia),
Markíza,
JOJ and
TA3.
Slovak Radio (
Slovenský
rozhlas) has its seat in the centre, and many Slovak
commercial radio stations are based in the city. National
newspapers based in Bratislava include
SME,
Pravda,
Nový čas,
Hospodárske noviny and the
English-language
The Slovak
Spectator. Two news agencies are headquartered there: the
News Agency of the
Slovak Republic (TASR) and the Slovak News Agency (SITA).
Sport
Various
sports and sports teams have a long
tradition in Bratislava, with many teams and individuals competing
in Slovak and international
leagues
and
competitions.
Football is currently
represented by two clubs playing in the top Slovak football league,
the
Corgoň Liga.
ŠK Slovan Bratislava, founded in
1919, has its home ground at the Tehelné pole
stadium. ŠK Slovan is the most successful football
club in Slovak history, being the only club from the former
Czechoslovakia
to win the European football competition the
Cup Winners' Cup, in
1969.FC
Artmedia Bratislava is the oldest of Bratislava's football
clubs, founded in 1898, and is based at Štadión
Pasienky
in Nové Mesto (formerly at Štadión
Petržalka
in Petržalka). Another known club from the
city is
FK Inter Bratislava.
Founded in 1945, they have their home ground at Štadión Pasienky
and currently play in the
Slovak
Second Division.
Bratislava is home to three winter sports arenas:
Ondrej Nepela Winter Sports Stadium,
V. Dzurilla Winter Sports Stadium, and
Dúbravka
Winter Sports Stadium. The
HC Slovan Bratislava ice hockey team
represents Bratislava in Slovakia's top ice hockey league, the
Slovak Extraliga.
Samsung Arena
, a part of Ondrej
Nepela Winter Sports Stadium, is home to HC Slovan.
The
Ice Hockey World
Championships in 1959 and 1992 were played in Bratislava, and
the 2011 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships will be held in
Bratislava and Košice
, for which
a new arena is being planned.
The
Water
Sports Centre Čunovo
is a whitewater
slalom and rafting area, close to the
Gabčíkovo dam
. It hosts several international and national
canoe and
kayak
competitions annually.
The
National Tennis Centre, which includes Sibamac Arena
, hosts various cultural, sporting and social
events. Several
Davis Cup matches
have been played there, including the
2005 Davis Cup final. The city is represented
in the top Slovak leagues in women's and men's
basketball, women's
handball and
volleyball, and men's
water
polo. The Devín–Bratislava National run is the oldest athletic
event in Slovakia, and the Bratislava City Marathon has been held
annually since 2006.
A race track is
located in Petržalka
, where horse racing and
dog racing events and dog shows are held regularly.
Bratislava is also the centre of
rugby union in Slovakia.
Education and science
The first
university in Bratislava, in the Kingdom of Hungary (and also in the
territory of present-day Slovakia
) was Universitas Istropolitana
, founded in 1465 by King Matthias Corvinus. It
was closed in 1490 after his death.
Bratislava is the seat of the largest university (
Comenius University,
27,771 students), the largest technical university (
Slovak University
of Technology, 18,473 students), and the oldest art schools
(the
Academy of
Performing Arts and the
Academy of Fine
Arts and Design) in Slovakia. Other institutions of tertiary
education are the public
University of
Economics and the first private college in Slovakia,
City University of Seattle. In total, about 56,000 students
attend university in Bratislava.
There are 65 public
primary schools,
nine private primary schools and ten religious primary schools.
Overall, they enroll 25,821 pupils. The city's system of
secondary education (some middle schools
and all high schools) consists of 39
gymnasia with 16,048 students, 37
specialized
high schools with 10,373
students, and 27
vocational
schools with 8,863 students (data as of 2007).
The
Slovak Academy of
Sciences is also based in Bratislava. However, the city is one
of the few European capitals to have neither an
observatory nor a
planetarium.
The nearest observatory is in Modra
, away, and
the nearest planetarium is in Hlohovec
, away. CEPIT, the Central European Park For
Innovative Technologies, is slated for development in Vajnory
. This science and technology park will
combine public and private research and educational institutions.
Construction is expected to begin in 2008.
Transport

Mercedes Benz CapaCity in
Bratislava
The geographical position of Bratislava in Central Europe has long
made it a natural crossroads for international trade traffic.
Public transport in Bratislava is managed by
Dopravný podnik Bratislava,
a city-owned company. The transport system is known as
Mestská
hromadná doprava (MHD, Municipal Mass Transit) and employs
buses,
trams, and
trolleybuses. An additional service,
Bratislavská integrovaná doprava (Bratislava Integrated
Transport), links train and bus routes in the city with points
beyond.
As a rail hub, the city has direct connections to Austria, Hungary,
the Czech Republic, Poland, Germany and the rest of Slovakia.
The
motorway system provides direct access to Brno
in the
Czech Republic, Trnava
and other
points in Slovakia, and Budapest
in Hungary. The
A6 motorway between Bratislava and Vienna
was opened in November 2007.
The Port of
Bratislava provides access to the Black Sea
via the Danube and to the North Sea
through the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal
. M.
R.
Štefánik Airport
is north-east of the city centre. It served
2,024,000 passengers in 2007.
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Bratislava is
twinned with:
* Numbers in brackets list the year of twinning.
The first agreement was signed with
the city of Perugia
, Umbria in Italy on July 18,
1962.
Partnerships
Notes
- Graesse, Orbis latinus
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 73
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 90
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 95
- Špiesz, "Bratislava v stredoveku", p. 9
- Špiesz, "Bratislava v stredoveku", p. 43
- Špiesz, "Bratislava v stredoveku", p. 132
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 30
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 62
- Lacika, "Bratislava", pp. 31–34
- Lacika, "Bratislava", pp. 34–36
- Lacika, "Bratislava", pp. 35–36
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", pp. 350–351
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 384
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 385
- Erzsébet Varga, "Pozsony", p. 14 (Hungarian)
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 457
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", pp. 426–427
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 451
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 1", p. 430
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 41
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 42
- Marcel Jankovics, "Húsz esztendő Pozsonyban", p. 65-67
(Hungarian)
- Kováč et al., "Bratislava 1939–1945", pp. 16–17
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 43. Kováč et al., "Bratislava
1939–1945, pp. 174–177
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 2", p. 300
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 2", pp. 307–308
- Kováč et al., "Kronika Slovenska 2" p. 498
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 10
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 147
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 112
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 179
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 135
- Lacika, "Bratislava", pp. 11–12
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 121
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 124
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 128
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 191
- Permanently resident population by nationality and
by regions and districts - archive link
- Iris Engemann (European University
Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder) The Slovakization of
Bratislava 1918-1948. Processes of national appropriation in the
interwar-period. CEU 07.03.2008
http://web.ceu.hu/urbanstudiesworkshop/documents/iris_engemann.pdf
- NAME CHANGES OF THE STREET IN BRATISLAVA FROM
POLITICAL REASONS AFTER THE CREATION OF THE FIRST CZECHOSLOVAK
REPUBLIC, The disintegration of the Austria–Hungarian Monarchy (In
Hungarian)
- Lacika, "Bratislava", p. 43
- Priemerná mzda v Bratislavskom kraji bola vyše 1015
eur (in Slovak)
- . .
- .
- .
References
External links
Images