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Hungaria
Hungaria or Hungária may refer to: *Latin for Hungary, a European country **For historical entities (from 895) see: Hungary (other) *Lady of Hungaria, the national personification of Hungary * ''Hungaria'' (Liszt), a symphonic poem by Franz Liszt * ''Hungaria'' (train), an express train between Budapest and Berlin * Hungária, a pop-rock music group from Hungary * Hungária körgyűrű, the longest boulevard in Budapest, Hungary *Hungária körút, part of Hungária körgyűrű *MTK Hungária, Hungarian football club *Hungaria, a former New Zealand association football team, now part of Wellington United * 434 Hungaria, an asteroid *Hungaria group The Hungaria asteroids, also known as the Hungaria group, are a dynamical group of asteroids in the asteroid belt which orbit the Sun with a semi-major axis (longest radius of an ellipse) between 1.78 and 2.00 astronomical units (AU). They are the ...
, a group of asteroids named after 434 Hungaria {{Disambiguation ...
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Hungary
Hungary ( hu, Magyarország ) is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Spanning of the Carpathian Basin, it is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Romania to the east and southeast, Serbia to the south, Croatia and Slovenia to the southwest, and Austria to the west. Hungary has a population of nearly 9 million, mostly ethnic Hungarians and a significant Romani minority. Hungarian, the official language, is the world's most widely spoken Uralic language and among the few non-Indo-European languages widely spoken in Europe. Budapest is the country's capital and largest city; other major urban areas include Debrecen, Szeged, Miskolc, Pécs, and Győr. The territory of present-day Hungary has for centuries been a crossroads for various peoples, including Celts, Romans, Germanic tribes, Huns, West Slavs and the Avars. The foundation of the Hungarian state was established in the late 9th century AD with the conquest of the Carpathian Basin by Hungar ...
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434 Hungaria
Hungaria (minor planet designation: 434 Hungaria) is a relatively small asteroid orbiting in the inner asteroid belt. It is an E-type (high-albedo) asteroid. It is the namesake of the Hungaria asteroids, which orbit the Sun on the inside of the 1:4 Kirkwood gap, standing out of the core of the asteroid belt. It was discovered by Max Wolf on 11 September 1898 at the University of Heidelberg. It was named after Hungary, which hosted an astronomical meeting in 1898 in Budapest. It is thought that there may be a genetic connection between 434 Hungaria and 3103 Eger and the aubrites. See also * Aubrite * E-type asteroid * Hungaria family * 1025 Riema * 1103 Sequoia * 1453 Fennia * 1750 Eckert * 7187 Isobe References External links Lightcurve plot of 434 Hungaria Palmer Divide Observatory, B. D. Warner (2011)SDSS image taken on 01APR2003 /Fermats BrotherRelation between 434 Hungaria, 3103 Eger, and e-type asteroidsNear IR-spectra of 3 Hungaria family asteroids: 4483 Petof ...
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Hungaria (train)
Hungaria () is a EuroCity train which runs between Budapest Nyugati and Hamburg - Altona, currently running with coaches of MÁV. It is numbered as ''EC 252-253'' and runs daily, mainly with MÁV owned rolling stocks. History Earlier numbering included ''EC 170-171'', ''EC 174-175'', ''IEx 74/75'' and ''Ex 154/155''. The Hungaria international express train is one of the oldest express trains still in operation. Its first run between Budapest and Berlin via Prague was on 29 May 1960 with a diesel locomotive. It was the first train in the former Czechoslovakia which reached a speed of 130 km/h. During the 1970s it ran as an express train between the capitals of Hungary and East Germany under train numbers ''Ex 154/155''. Electric locomotives were introduced in this period. The capacity of these locomotives just reached the necessary level. There were further improvements in the 1980s. MÁV planned to introduce a high level, international rail service with other railway ...
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Hungary (other)
Hungary is a country in Southeastern Europe. Hungary may also refer to: *Hungary (European Parliament constituency) *Historical entities: **Principality of Hungary ("Duchy of Hungary") **(895–1000) **Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1918) ***Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1301), Kingdom of Hungary in the High Middle Ages (1000–1301) ***Kingdom of Hungary (1301–1526), Kingdom of Hungary in the Late Middle Ages (1301–1526) ***Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (1526–1570) ****Ottoman Hungary (1541–1699) ****Royal Hungary (1541–1867) ****Austria-Hungary ("Austro-Hungarian Empire") (1867–1918) **Hungarian Democratic Republic ("Hungarian People's Republic") (1918–1919), an unrecognised rump state **Hungarian Soviet Republic ("Hungarian Republic of Councils") (1919) **Hungarian Republic (1919–20), Hungarian Republic (1919–1920) **Kingdom of Hungary (1920–46), Kingdom of Hungary ("Regency") (1920–1946) **Republic of Hungary (1946–1949), Second Hungarian Republic (1946–1949) ...
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Hungária (band)
Hungária was a Hungarian pop-rock band formed by singer/guitarist/keyboardist Miklós Fenyő in 1967. Despite periodic suppression by the Hungarian Communist regime, by the early 1980s Hungária was one of the country's most popular bands. History Miklós Fenyő had lived in the United States for a time. He entered the Hungarian music scene in 1962 and started his own band Syconor in 1964. In 1967 he formed a songwriting partnership with lyricist István S. Nagy, and formed Hungária as an outlet for his songs. The earliest Hungária songs were in the style of beat music. In 1968 the band won the televised talent competition '' Ki mit tud?''. In the following years, the band moved toward psychedelic rock and hard rock. Their first album ''Koncert a marson'' (''Concert on Mars'') was released in 1970. The band then experienced many lineup changes, with Fenyő as the only consistent member. Due to pressure from Hungary's Communist regime, which considered rock music to be subver ...
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Lady Of Hungaria
Hungaria is a national personification of Hungary, an allegory and a personification of the nation. The Lady of Hungaria is displayed in many places in Hungary and across its borders. She symbolizes the liberty of Hungary. History After the decades of the lost revolution and independence war of 1848/49 the Habsburg monarchy went into absolutism. In the 1860s, monuments were raised to commemorate the lost liberty. One of these depictions was the Lady of Hungaria. She is often symbolised as a woman with a helmet or the Holy Crown of Hungary on her head, and a sword and shield in her hands. At Arad where the 13 martyrs of independence war were executed, a huge monument was raised in 1889. The central figurine is Hungaria. After the Treaty of Trianon and the loss of lives after World War I, the lady became the symbol for hope and the resurrection of Hungary. See also * Statue of Liberty, a gift from the French people to the American people, to commemorate the American Decla ...
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Hungaria (Liszt)
Franz Liszt wrote his symphonic poem ''Hungaria'' in 1854, basing it partly on the Heroic March in the Hungarian Style for piano which he wrote in 1840. It was premiered under Liszt's baton at the Hungarian National Theater in Budapest on September 8, 1856, where it achieved an enormous success. "There was better than applause," the composer later wrote. "All wept, both men and women!"Quoted in Walker, ''Weimar'', 407. He was reminded with that scene of the proverb that "tears are the joy of the Hungarians." Structure ''Hungaria'' has no programme and is best considered a Hungarian Rhapsody on an extended scale. After a short introduction, marked ''Largo con duolo'', the main theme of the March in the Hungarian Style appears on clarinets, bassoons and violas. This theme and its continuation dominate the first section of this work, though interrupted at one point by a cadenza for solo violin. This section contains the stylistic characteristics of the ''verbunkos'', with ''Largo con ...
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Hungária Körgyűrű
Hungária körgyűrű (lit. ''Hungary beltway'' or ''Hungary boulevard'') is the longest and busiest boulevard, also the widest city street in Budapest, Hungary. It's 13 km long and has 6-10 traffic lanes with a rapid tram line on the median of the boulevard. It consists of three parts: Róbert Károly körút, Hungária körút and Könyves Kálmán körút. Location It starts by the Pester side of Árpád Bridge and crosses Váci út, Lehel út, M3 motorway, Thököly út, Kerepesi út, Kőbányai út, Üllői út, Gyáli út (M5 motorway) and Soroksári út. Róbert Károly körút part lies in Angyalföld ( 13th district), Hungária körút (bordering the Városliget, where it meets Ajtósi Dürer sor) in Zugló (14th district), Kőbánya (10th district) and Józsefváros (8th district), Könyves Kálmán körút in Kőbánya, Józsefváros and Ferencváros (9th district). History The construction started in 1980, the first part was completed in 1984 with the new Árp ...
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Hungária Körút
Hungária körgyűrű (lit. ''Hungary beltway'' or ''Hungary boulevard'') is the longest and busiest boulevard, also the widest city street in Budapest, Hungary. It's 13 km long and has 6-10 traffic lanes with a rapid tram line on the Central reservation, median of the boulevard. It consists of three parts: Róbert Károly körút, Hungária körút and Könyves Kálmán körút. Location It starts by the Pest (city), Pester side of Árpád Bridge and crosses Váci út, Lehel út, M3 motorway (Hungary), M3 motorway, Imre Thököly, Thököly út, Kerepesi út, Kőbányai út, Üllői út, Gyáli út (M5 motorway (Hungary), M5 motorway) and Soroksári út. Róbert Károly körút part lies in Angyalföld (13th district of Budapest, 13th district), Hungária körút (bordering the Városliget, where it meets Ajtósi Dürer sor) in Zugló (14th district), Kőbánya (10th district) and Józsefváros (8th district), Könyves Kálmán körút in Kőbánya, Józsefváros and Ferencv ...
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MTK Hungária
Magyar Testgyakorlók Köre Budapest Futball Club or shortly MTK is a Hungarian football club based in Józsefváros, Budapest. The team currently plays in the Nemzeti Bajnokság II. The club's colours are blue and white. As one of the most successful Hungarian football clubs, MTK has won the Hungarian League 23 times and the Hungarian Cup 12 times. The club has also won the Hungarian Super Cup twice. In 1955, as ''Vörös Lobogó SE'', they became the first Hungarian team to play in the European Cup and in 1964 they finished as runners-up in the European Cup Winners' Cup after losing to Sporting Clube de Portugal in the final. The club founded the Sándor Károly Football Academy in 2001. The Academy also has a partnership agreement with English club Liverpool. History MTK Budapest first entered the Nemzeti Bajnokság in the 1903 season. In the subsequent season, MTK won their first domestic title. Between 1913 and 1914 and 1924–25, MTK dominated Hungarian football by w ...
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Wellington United
Wellington United AFC is an association football club based in Wellington, New Zealand, that competes in the Central League. History Wellington Diamond United Wellington Diamond United was the result of the merger of Diamond and Zealandia/Wellington United in 1968. Diamond was founded as a junior football club in 1893 by members of the Star Rugby Club, who wished to play football. It became a senior team in 1895. Zealandia was founded in 1954 by Dutch immigrants, changing its name to Wellington United in 1964. In 1968 the club played in the Central Region's Division One, finishing fourth out ten. The club made it to the National League for the 1973 season but at the end of the following season they found themselves back in Division One. Wellington Diamond United won the National League in 1976, 1981 and 1985. Hungaria and Wellington City Hungaria was formed in 1962 by Hungarian immigrants. The club played in the Central Region league before being invited to join the first ...
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