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Kiskunfélegyháza
Town in Bács-Kiskun, Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kiskunfélegyháza (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈkiʃkunfeːlɛchaːzɒ]) is a city in Bács-Kiskun County, Hungary.
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Geography
Kiskunfélegyháza is located in the middle of the Great Hungarian Plain, 130 kilometres (81 mi) southeast from Budapest. M5 motorway, Highway 5, 451, Budapest–Cegléd–Szeged railway line and railway lines to Szolnok, Kiskunhalas and Szentes also cross the town.[1] The surrounding country is covered with vineyards, fruit gardens, and tobacco and corn fields.[2]
Name
Félegyháza means "half church" in Hungarian, while prefix Kiskun refers to the region Kiskunság ("Little Cumania").
History

Numerous Roman urns and other ancient relics have been dug up in the vicinity.
Conquering Hungarians arrived in the 9th century, adopted Christianity and settled down in the region by the 10th century.[3] The first settlements devastated by the Mongols in 1241–42, the region became uninhabited. King Béla IV invited Cuman settlers,[4] who also adopted Christianity, farming lifestyle and the Hungarian language.[3] The town was existing in 1389 when a document mentions Feledház, an earlier name for the settlement.[5] The town was ruined in 1526 by Ottoman troops and was uninhabited until the Christian troops liberated the area.[2][3][4]
Kiskunfélegyháza was reestablished by Roman Catholic Hungarian settlers[3] from Jászfényszaru and Üllés in 1743.[4] Queen Maria Theresa moved the courts and prisons for the Kiskun district to Kiskunfélegyháza in 1753 and granted town privileges also in 1774.[4][5]
Notable people
- Ferenc Móra (1879–1934), novelist
- Béla Magyari (1949–2018), cosmonaut
- Sándor Petőfi (1823–1849), national poet
- László Réczi (1947), wrestler
- Csaba Szűcs (1965), athlete
- Gyula Zsivótzky (1937–2007), athlete
- Tamás Sulyok (1956), lawyer, President of Hungary
Twin towns – sister cities
Kiskunfélegyháza is twinned with:[6]
Bagnols-sur-Cèze, France
Braunfels, Germany
Corund, Romania
Die, France
Feltre, Italy
Jászfényszaru, Hungary
Kikinda, Serbia
Rabka-Zdrój, Poland
Sighișoara, Romania
Turda, Romania
Uhrovec, Slovakia
See also
References
External links
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