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Košice
Košice coat-of-arms
Region (kraj) Košice Region
District (okres) Košice I-IV
Location 48°43' N, 21°15' E 5
Altitude 184-851 m
Population 242,066 (2001)
Area 243.82 km²
Time Zone
• Summer DST
CET: UTC+1
CEST: UTC+2
Telephone prefix +421-55
Car registration plate KE
Košice location map
Statue of Košice´s Coat of arms
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Statue of Košice´s Coat of arms
Town Hall at Hlavná ulica (Main Street )
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Town Hall at Hlavná ulica (Main Street )
Slávia, the most beautiful Art Nouveau building in Košice
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Slávia, the most beautiful Art Nouveau building in Košice
The Singing Fountain in the centre of Košice
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The Singing Fountain in the centre of Košice
Premonstratensian Church
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Premonstratensian Church
Orthodox synagogue in Košice
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Orthodox synagogue in Košice

Košice [pronunciation: 'koshitse] (Latin: Cassovia, German: Kaschau, Hungarian: Kassa, Polish: Koszyce, Hebrew: קושיצה, Romany: Kasha) is Slovakia's second largest city and the center of eastern Slovakia.

It lies in the valley of the river Hornád in the Košice Basin, encircled by the spurs of the Čierna Hora mountains to the north and the Volovské vrchy hills to the west.

Košice is the seat of a Region (kraj) or the Košice Self-governing Region (KSK), of universities, of the Slovak Constitutional Court, of a Roman Catholic archbishopric (since 1995), Evangelical Lutheran bishopric and a Greek Catholic bishopric. The town has a relatively large historic center.


Contents

Administrative division

The town of Košice is divided into 4 districts and 22 city parts:

Košice I

Džungľa, Kavečany, Sever, Sídlisko Ťahanovce, Staré mesto, Ťahanovce

Košice II

Lorinčík, Luník IX, Myslava, Pereš, Poľov, Sídlisko KVP, Šaca, Západ

Košice III

Sídlisko dargovských hrdinov, Košická Nová Ves

Košice IV

Barca, Juh, Krásna, Nad jazerom, Šebastovce, Vyšné Opátske


History

The first signs of inhabitance can be traced back to the end of the older Stone Age. The first written reference to a southern suburb of the town can be dated back to the year 1230. Its advantageous business and strategic location helped the town grew quickly. The given privileges were helpful in developing crafts, business, increasing importance and for the development of this city. The oldest guild regulations were registered in 1307 and the city received its own coat-of-arms in 1369, making it the first municipial coat-of-arms in Europe. Since the beginning of the 15th century, the city had been playing a leading role in the Pentapolitana - a league of towns of five most important cities of eastern Slovakia (Bardejov, Levoča, Košice, Prešov, and Sabinov). Since the 14th century, it has been the second-most important town in Slovakia (which was part of Hungary from the 11th century to 1918) after Bratislava.

In the 15th century, the town was temporarily controlled by John Giskra (Jan Jiskra), in the 17th and 18th centuries a center of anti-Habsburg uprisings in Slovakia (Hungary) and seat of Francis II Rákóczi. In the 17th it was the de-facto capital of Upper Hungary, which was the official designation of eastern Slovakia, i.e. of the easternmost part of the then Hungary (1563-1686 seat of the "Captaincy Upper Hungary", 1567-1848 seat of the Spiš Chamber (Zipser Kammer), which was a subsidiary of the supreme financial agency in Vienna responsible for eastern Slovakia). Between 1657 and 1921 seat of the historic Košice University (1777 turned into a Royal Academy, in the 19th century turned to a Law Academy). In 1723, there was erected the Immaculata statue at the place of a former gallows at Hlavná ulica (Main Street) commemorating the plague from the years 1710-1711.

In the summer of 1919, it was the seat of the Slovak Soviet Republic for a short time. During World War II, after the First Vienna Award (Vienna Arbitration in 1938), Košice was a part of Hungary till 1944.

The most important building of the town is Slovakia's biggest church, the 15th-century Gothic St. Elisabeth Cathedral, the easternmost gothic cathedral in Central Europe. Except the magnificent cathedral, there are also the 14th-century St. Michael Chapel, the St. Urban Tower and the neo-baroque State Theatre in the centre of the town. The Executioner’s Bastion and the Mill Bastion are witnesses to the ancient system of fortifications for protecting the city against its enemies. The visitors can also discover the beauty of several other monuments and buildings of great cultural and historical interest (the old Town Hall, the Old University, the Captain's Palace, Liberation Square, etc.) as well as several galleries (the East Slovak Gallery) and museums (the East Slovak Museum). The visitors can relax in the quiet of Municipal Park located in the area around the city center.

Béla Gerster, the architect of the Corinth Canal and co-architect of the Panama Canal, was born in Košice in 1850.

Famous Hungarian writer Sándor Márai was born in Košice in 1900.

Swiss tennis star Martina Hingis was born here in 1980.

Former head coach of the National basketball team of the Netherlands Egon Steuer was born in Košice in 1935.

Former Košice´s mayor Rudolf Schuster was the second president of Slovakia (1999-2004).

The oldest marathon in Europe (the second oldest in the world - founded in 1924) - The Košice Peace Marathon is run on the first Sunday of October every year in Košice.


Sacral buildings


Partner Cities

External links

References

Slovak language

English language

See also

  • Július Jakoby, Slovak painter
  • Arpád Račko, Slovak sculptor
  • Ferenc Szálasi, Hungarian politician
  • Ladislav Troják, Slovak ice hockey player
  • The content of this page is retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ko%C5%A1ice under GFDL