Mörbisch am See
Mörbisch am See is an Austrian town on the shore of Lake Neusiedl in the state of Burgenland.
Geography
Mörbisch am See is located in northern Burgenland on the south-western shore of Lake Neusiedl, just north of the national border with Hungary and the town of Fertőrákos. The town is connected via the B52, which leads through Rust and Sankt Margarethen to Eisenstadt. It is 70km south-east of Vienna and 10km north-east of Sopron, Hungary.History
Mörbisch has been inhabited since around 5000 BC. The name Mörbisch was first recorded in 1254 as possessio Megyes. The original Hungarian-speaking settlers likely named the village after a prominent cherry tree or an abundance of cherry trees in the area. The name later evolved into the German Mörbisch and the Croatian Merbiš, the latter borrowed from German.The area was part of the Celtic Kingdom of Noricum. To the west of the town, in the area known as Salzäcker, a La Tène-period burial ground was discovered in 1935. Excavations revealed several graves containing early La Tène artifacts, including bronze fibulae, neck rings with hook-and-eye closures, iron swords and knives, and a hollow-bossed ring indicating use into the Middle La Tène period.
Under Roman rule, the area became part of the province of Pannonia. South of the Hungarian border, a Mithras relief from the Roman era can still be seen.
Until 1921, the town belonged to Hungary, specifically to Sopron County. Following World War I and the treaties of St. Germain and Trianon, the area was awarded to Austria. Mörbisch became part of the newly founded state of Burgenland in 1921, though during the Nazi era it was incorporated into Lower Austria. Despite the political shift, economic and cultural ties to Sopron remained strong until 1945.
From 1945 to 1989, the Iron Curtain divided Mörbisch and Sopron. Since then, the border has reopened, and in late 2007, border controls were abolished following Hungary’s entry into the Schengen Area.