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Sopron

KNOWLEDGE OF Sopron

Sopron (pronounced "shop-ron"), historically also known by the German name Ödenburg, is the name of a city in Hungary. It is also the name of a historical county or comitatus in Hungary, see Sopron county.

Sopron is situated near the Austrian border, at 47°41′12″N, 16°34′49″E, a short train ride from Vienna.

The area has been inhabited since ancient times. When the area that is today Western Hungary was a province of the Roman Empire, a city called Scarbantia stood here. Its forum was where now the main square of Sopron can be found.

During the Great Migration Scarbantia was deserted and by the time Hungarians arrived in the area, it was in ruins. In the 9th–11th centuries Hungarians strengthened the old Roman city walls and built a castle. The town got its Hungarian name at this time, from a castle steward named Suprun. In 1153 it was mentioned as an important town.

In 1273 Otakar II, the king of Bohemia occupied the castle and even though he took the children of Sopron's noblemen with him as hostages, the city opened its gates when the armies of Ladislaus IV arrived. The king awarded Sopron by elevating her to the rank of free royal town.

During the Ottoman occupation of Hungary the Turks ravaged the city in 1529 but didn't occupy it. Lots of people fled to Sopron from the occupied areas, and the city's importance grew.

The people of Sopron didn't support the revolution led by Francis II Rákóczi against the Habsburgs, and because of this the armies of István Bocskai ravaged the city. In the following decades the citizens strengthened the castle and the city walls.

In 1676 Sopron was destroyed by a fire. The modern-day city was born in the next few decades, when beautiful Baroque buildings were built in place of the old mediaeval ones. Sopron became seat of the comitatus Sopron.

Following the break up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, four western Hungarian counties were awarded to Austria in the Treaties of St.Germain (1919) and Trianon (1920). After local unrest, Sopron's status as part of Hungary (along with that of the surrounding 8 villages) was decided by local plebiscite, held on December 14, 1921, with 65% voting for Hungary. Since then Sopron is called Civitas Fidelissima (The Most Loyal Town), and the anniversary of the plebiscite is a city holiday. The other three counties today form the Austrian federal state of Burgenland.

Sopron suffered a lot during World War II, it was bombed several times. The Soviet army occupied the city on March 6, 1945. In August 1989 It was the site of the Pan-European Picnic, a protest by anti-communist activists on the border between Austria and Hungary, that was used by over 200 citizens of East Germany to cross illegally to the west. As the first successful trespass on the border it helped pave the way for the mass flight of East German citizens that led to the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989.

During the Socialist era the government tried to turn Sopron into an industrial city, but didn't succeed, and Sopron remained the pretty Baroque city it was.
Chapi
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