Esztergom


Esztergom

(ĕ`stĕrgôm), Ger. Gran, city (1991 est. pop. 29,751), N Hungary, on the Danube River and the border of Slovakia. It is a county administrative center, a river port, and a railroad terminus. There are food-processing industries, but the city's largest economic concern is a large Japanese-owned motor vehicle assembly plant. Situated in an extensive vineyard region, Esztergom carries on trade in wine and grain. Its mineral springs make the city popular with tourists. Esztergom is one of Hungary's oldest towns. The Roman Strigonium was the first royal residence and the capital of Hungary until the 13th cent. King Stephen I, later canonized as Hungary's patron saint, was crowned at Esztergom (his birthplace) in 1001. The city has been the seat of the archprimate of Hungary since 1198. Mongols sacked Esztergom in 1241, and the Turks occupied it during much of the 16th and 17th cent. Overlooking the Danube is the city's 19th-century dome-topped cathedral, thought to be the most beautiful church in Hungary. The palace of the primates contains a museum of antiquities and a library rich in old manuscripts and incunabula.

Esztergom

 

a city in northern Hungary, in the megye (county) of Komárom. River port on the right bank of the Danube. Population, 30,000 (1977). Esztergom has machine-tool and instrument-making industries; sports equipment is also manufactured. Brown coal is mined nearby. There are vineyards and a wine-making industry in the environs of the city.

Points of architectural interest in Esztergom include the old fort; the royal palace, which contains a 12th-century chapel and a Renaissance hall (end of the 15th century); and the Renaissance Bakócz Chapel (1506–07). Also noteworthy are the cathedral (1822–56, architects P. Khünel, J. Packh, and J. Hild) and the Church of St. Anne (begun in 1828, architect J. Packh), which are in the classical style.