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Baja, Hungary

Baja, Hungary

FieldValue
settlement_typeCity with county rights
image_skylineBaja városháza.jpg
image_captionTown hall
nicknameThe Capital of Fisherman's Soup
image_shieldHUN Baja Címer.svg
image_flagFlag of Baja.svg
pushpin_mapHungary#Europe
pushpin_label_positiontop
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Hungary
coordinates_footnotes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Southern Great Plain
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Bács-Kiskun
subdivision_type3District
subdivision_name3Baja
official_nameBaja
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameKlára Nyirati (Sikeres Bajáért Egyesület)
area_total_km2177.61
area_rank20th in Hungary
population_total33142
population_as_of2023
population_footnotes
demographics_type1Population by ethnicity
demographics1_footnotes
demographics1_title1Hungarians
demographics1_info183.4%
demographics1_title2Germans
demographics1_info24.3%
demographics1_title3Croats
demographics1_info32.1%
demographics1_title4Gypsies
demographics1_info41.2%
demographics1_title5Serbs
demographics1_info50.5%
demographics1_title6Romanians
demographics1_info60.2%
demographics1_title7Slovaks
demographics1_info70.1%
demographics1_title8Bulgarians
demographics1_info80.1%
demographics1_title9Others
demographics1_info90.8%
<!-- demographics (section 3) -->demographics_type2Population by religion
demographics2_footnotes
demographics2_title1Roman Catholic
demographics2_info147.9%
demographics2_title2Greek Catholic
demographics2_info20.1%
demographics2_title3Calvinists
demographics2_info33.3%
demographics2_title4Lutherans
demographics2_info40.6%
demographics2_title5Jews
demographics2_info50.1%
demographics2_title6Other
demographics2_info62.7%
demographics2_title7Non-religious
demographics2_info716.0%
demographics2_title8Unknown
demographics2_info829.2%
postal_code6500
area_code79
coordinates
website
population_demonymbajai

Baja () is a city with county rights in Bács-Kiskun}}, southern Hungary. It is the second largest city in the county, after the county seat at Kecskemét, and is home to some 35,000 people. Baja is the seat of the Baja municipality.

The environs of Baja have been continuously inhabited since the end of the Iron Age, but there is evidence of human presence since prehistoric times. The settlement itself was most likely established in the 14th century. After the Ottoman Empire had conquered Hungary, it grew to prominence more than the other nearby settlements, and was granted town rights in 1696.

Today, Baja plays an important role in the life of Northern Bácska as a local commercial centre and the provider of public services such as education and healthcare. It has several roads and a railway connection to other parts of the country, and also offers local Public transport for its residents. Being close to the Danube and the forest of Gemenc, as well as having its own cultural sights, makes it a candidate for tourism, but this is not well established yet.

Etymology

The city's Hungarian name is probably derived from a Turkic language. The commonly known "bull" name is likely not its real origin, but may have gotten its title from the first owner of the city, Baja. The Latin name of the town is Francillo. Baja also used to have a German name: Frankenstadt.

The South Slavs, Bunjevci and Serbs, who live in the city call Baja by the same name as Magyars do, but with a slightly different pronunciation ( instead of ). Its spelling in Serbian Cyrillic writing is Баја.

History

The city was first mentioned in 1308. The Bajai family was the first known owner of the town. In 1474 the settlement was given to the Czobor family by Matthias Corvinus.

During the Turkish Conquest in the 16th and 17th centuries it was the official center for the region and it possessed a fortification. This era saw the immigration of Bunjevci and Serbs into the town. There was also an active Franciscan mission with monks from Bosnia.

Kálmán Tóth Square, Baja

In the 18th century, Hungary with its regained territories was a part of the Habsburg Empire. Germans, Hungarians and Jews migrated into the town. Due to its location on the Danube, it became a transportation and commercial hub for the region. This was the place where grain and wine were loaded onto boats to be transported upriver to Austria and Germany. In 1727 the Czobor family regained its ownership. Until 1765, the inhabitants belonged to three nations; Bunjevac (under name of Dalmatians), the Germans and the Serbs. Following this, according to a government decree the Natio Dalmatica was changed into the Natio Hungarica, but even in 1768, the elected mayor swore the oath in the Bunjevac language in the Franciscan Church.

In 1699, Baja was Bács-Bodrog county's most "industrialized" city.

In the 19th century Baja became a minor railway hub, but its importance declined as the railway to Fiume (Rijeka) was built in order to get Hungarian grain seaborne. The city was still a commercial and service center for the region.

In 1918, after World War I, the ceasefire line placed the city under administration of the newly formed Kingdom of Yugoslavia. By the Treaty of Trianon from 1920, the city was assigned to Hungary, and became the capital of the reduced county of .

After World War II the city became known for its textile mill and because of its important bridge crossing the Danube. Its importance is still evident as people from the Bácska region (Serbian: Bačka) of Hungary come for higher education, government and business services.

Historical population

Population growth in Baja, 1870–2005

The city's population was growing rapidly in the 20th century (especially in the interwar period and during the socialist era), but in the last decade its population declined significantly.

The demographic evolution of Baja is the following:

YearPopulation
187021,248
191024,588
192022,522
194132,084
194927,936
196030,263
197035,575
198038,523
199038,686
200138,360
200837,573
201934 495

Demographics

The city has 33,142 residents as of 1 January 2023. In the 2001 Census, the 16% larger population of 38,360 reported its ethnicity thus:

  • 93.5% Hungarians;
  • 2.7% Germans;
  • 1.3% Croats;
  • 0.4% Serbs;
  • 0.1% Slovaks;
  • 0.5% Romani people;
  • 6.1% unknown or did not say.

As of 1 January 2019, there are 17 149 houses.

Geography

Franciscan Monastery

Location

Baja is located about 150 km south of Budapest and 108 km southwest of Kecskemét, at the crossing of Road 55 and Road 51, on the river Danube. Baja's main river is Sugovica (also called Kamarás-Duna).

Baja is at the meeting point of two large regions: the Great Hungarian Plain (Alföld) and Transdanubia (Dunántúl). The River Danube separates the two regions. The occidental part of the city is where the Gemencforest starts to spread out next to the István Türr Bridge. Gemenc is part of the Danube-Drava National Park. It can be discovered from Baja via a narrow gauge railway.

Baja is located on the left bank of the river, on the Great Hungarian Plain. However, Baja is more similar to the cities of Transdanubia. To the east, arable crops such as maize, wheat and barley are grown.

Climate

Baja is at the meeting of the continental and mediterranean region of Hungary. The summers are hot (the temperature sometimes goes up to 36–37 °C) and stifling, while the winters are cold and snowy. It often rains in the spring. At summertime extreme torrential rains are getting common every now and then in the region.

|Jan record high C = 18.0 |Feb record high C = 21.4 |Mar record high C = 25.5 |Apr record high C = 31.9 |May record high C = 34.1 |Jun record high C = 37.2 |Jul record high C = 41.2 |Aug record high C = 40.4 |Sep record high C = 37.3 |Oct record high C = 29.1 |Nov record high C = 24.3 |Dec record high C = 20.1 |year record high C = 41.2 |Jan record low C = -26.6 |Feb record low C = -26.1 |Mar record low C = -22.5 |Apr record low C = -8.0 |May record low C = -1.8 |Jun record low C = 1.4 |Jul record low C = 4.0 |Aug record low C = 4.5 |Sep record low C = -0.1 |Oct record low C = -9.8 |Nov record low C = -15.2 |Dec record low C = -24.9 |year record low C = -26.6 |access-date = August 18, 2023 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230818124524/https://www.nodc.noaa.gov/archive/arc0216/0253808/1.1/data/0-data/Region-6-WMO-Normals-9120/Hungary/CSV/Baja_12960.csv |archive-date = 2023-08-18}}}}

Economy

The city plays an important role in the country's water transport on the river Danube with its second biggest port in Hungary. Baja gives home to an extensive corporation: to AXIÁL Co. Axiál sells agricultural machines all over eastern Europe with great success. Gemenc Forest and Game Co. Ltd. is managing the nearby nature reserve, Gemenc. There are numerous commercial structures in the city, which prove important to the people living in and around Baja. Roughly 10 years ago a TESCO supermarket opened along with a shopping centre next to it.

Culture, education, and life

The city has some museums and art galleries, most of them with permanent exhibitions. These include the István Türr Museum (exhibits objects of former local life), the István Nagy Gallery (a collection of István Nagy's paintings), and the Bunjevci House (about Bunjevci traditions). The annual Fisherman's Soup Boiling Festival is a famous event in Europe, which includes a great fish soup boiling contest, and other cultural occurrences.

Calvary Chapel in Baja

There are 15 churches in the city, representing the religion of each ethnicity. These religions include (with the number of believers) Roman Catholic (25 203), Protestant (1 623), Evangelist (268), Unitarian, Orthodox (90), Lutheran and Judaism (27).

Located relatively close to the Great Hungarian Plain, to Gemenc and Transdanubia, the city is also feasible as a base for regional tourists.

There are three notable educational institutes in the city: Béla III High school and the Eötvös József College. A smaller observatory also exists. There is the MNÁMK (Magyarországi Németek Általános Művelődési Központja; English: General Culture Center of Germans Living in Hungary).

Endre Ady Library

Baja's library got its name from the famous Hungarian poet, Endre Ady. The library's building used to be Baja's synagogue. The building was offered by the city's Jewish community. The Holocaust appreciation memorial stands in the synagogue's garden.

The library has a very large collection of pre-18th-century books. The "Ancient book" collection includes 4,352 volumes, and a lot more writings, because many of the volumes are collectives (for example, one of them contains 17 writings). The library has three incunabulums.

Current and past residents in Baja

  • Bogoboj Atanacković (1826–1858), a well-known Serbian novelist and a friend of poet Branko Radičević
  • Ede Telcs, sculptor
  • Emma Sándor, composer, wife of Zoltán Kodály
  • Gavrilo Popović, Bishop of Šabac, Rector of Lyceum and the catechist of Belgrade.
  • Ibolya Dávid, present-day democrat politician of the Hungarian Democratic Forum
  • István Türr, a general under Giuseppe Garibaldi
  • Joakim Vujić, known as the "Father of Serbian Theatre", writer and playwright who lived and worked in the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth- century.
  • Jovan Pačić (1771–1849), Serbian writer, poet, translator, illustrator and watercolor painter, the first to translate Goethe in Serbian.
  • Kálmán Tóth, 19th-century poet
  • Karl Isidor Beck, Austrian poet, writer of poem The Blue Danube
  • Lázár Mészáros, Hungary's first defence minister
  • Lukijan Bogdanović, Serbian Patriarch (1908-1913)
  • Pavel Đurković, famous Serbian icon painter and muralist who lived and worked in the Habsburg Empire, from 1772 until 1830.
  • Rajko Tomović, Serbian scientist
  • Radovan Jelašić, Governor of the National Bank of Serbia
  • János Rácz (1941–2023), Hungarian basketball player
  • Teodosije Mraović, Metropolitan of the Eastern Orthodox Church in the Kingdom of Serbia from 1883 to 1889

Twin towns – sister cities

Baja is twinned with:

  • FRA Argentan, France
  • HUN Hódmezővásárhely, Hungary
  • CRO Labin, Croatia
  • ROU Sângeorgiu de Pădure, Romania
  • SRB Sombor, Serbia
  • ROU Târgu Mureş, Romania
  • DEN Thisted, Denmark
  • GER Waiblingen, Germany

Nearby villages

  • Pörböly
  • Dunafalva
  • Érsekcsanád
  • Gara
  • Vaskút
  • Csávoly
  • Szeremle
  • Bátmonostor
  • Dávod
  • Hercegszántó

References

Bibliography

  • Nemzeti és etnikai kisebségek Magyarországon, Budapest 1998
  • Baja története. Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest 1989

Notes

References

  1. [http://www.ksh.hu/apps/hntr.telepules?p_lang=EN&p_id=03522 KSH - Baja, 2011]
  2. [http://www.ksh.hu/apps/hntr.telepules?p_lang=EN&p_id=03522 KSH - Baja, 2011]
  3. "Detailed Gazetteer of Hungary".
  4. [{{ksh url03522 Baja] at the [[Hungarian Central Statistical Office]]. 1 January 2009.
  5. "Baja testvérvárosai". Baja.
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