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BUDAPEST STICKY NOTE PADS 3 x 3 INCHES SET OF 2 #847

$ 3.69

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days

    Description

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    ABOUT THE PHOTO
    Budapest is filled with many outdoor locations where you can enjoy a great meal while amazed at all the views  surrounding you. The people are friendly and always willing to participate in conservation and good humor.
    Budapest is known all over the world as a must see location on your travels. Anyone who has ever visited Budapest will tell how fantastic it is to experience this city.
    This photo was taken at the bridge that separates the city of Buda and the city of Pest. It is an amazing location with majestic views.
    There are actually several bridges in this area where you can take amazing photographs. They link the city of Buda and the city of Pest.
    Compiled and Edited Internet Research About Budapest
    Budapest first appeared on the world map when the Romans founded the town of
    Aquincum
    around 89 AD, in what is today Óbuda. It soon became the capital of the province of Lower Pannonia, and the Romans even founded a proto-Pest known as
    Contra Aquincum
    on the other side of the river.
    The Romans were replaced around 900 by the Magyars, who went on to found the kingdom of Hungary (
    Magyar Királyság
    ). The Mongols dropped in uninvited in 1241, but the Magyars bounced back and built the Royal Castle, which still dominates Buda, in 1427.
    In 1541, Buda and Pest fell to the Ottomans and stayed in the hands of the Turks until 1686, when the Austrian Habsburgs conquered the town. Now at peace, both sides of the river boomed, and after an abortive Hungarian revolution in 1848–49, the great Compromise of 1867 made Budapest the united capital of the Hungarian half of the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary.
    Budapest emerged from World War I battered but now the capital of an independent Hungary. Its population reached one million in 1930. Air raids and a terrible three-month siege towards the end of World War II resulted in the death over 38,000 civilians, and up to 40% of Budapest's Jewish community were murdered during the Holocaust. A total of 400,000 Jews in the area were murdered by the Nazis and their Nyilas sympathizers. Various people helped members of the local Jewish community including Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish humanitarian sent to Hungary under a diplomatic cover, who tried to make a difference by distributing Swedish passports to as many Jews as possible, and the Italian Giorgio Perlasca, that, pretending to be a Spanish diplomat, rescued a good share of Budapest's Jewish community.