Szarvas
Szarvas is a town in Békés County, Hungary.
Name
Placename Szarvas originated from the old Hungarian word szarvas, which means deer. Deer also can be found in the coat of arms of the town.Location
Szarvas is located in the Hungarian Plain upon the Körös River, southeast from Budapest. Highways 44 and 443, and the Mezőtúr-Orosháza-Mezőhegyes railway line also cross the town. The geographic centre of Hungary was near Szarvas before the Treaty of Trianon; a memorial in a windmill shape now marks that location in a park on a bank of the Körös River across from the Arboretum.History
According to the Hungarian Royal Treasury it was an ethnic Hungarian town in 1495. The Medieval town was ruined due to the Ottoman wars, native Hungarian population fled from the area. It was uninhabited until 1720, when Austrian baron Johann Georg Freiherr von Harruckern invited mainly Slovak settlers from Upper Hungary to the deserted area. They built a brand new town by the help of Sámuel Tessedik, who invited engineers to plan the town. Tessedik also established the first agricultural school in Hungary. Lutheran church was built from 1786 to 1788, the Roman Catholic from 1808 to 1812. Town hall was built in 1820. Hungarians overtook Slovaks in the 1920s, become the majority according to the census was held in 1930.Since 1990 Szarvas is home to the Ronald S. Lauder Szarvas International Jewish Youth Camp.
Demographics
According to the 2011 census the total population of Szarvas was 16,954, of whom there were 14,325 Hungarians, 1,822 Slovaks, 489 Romani and 75 Germans by ethnicity. 15.4% did not declare their ethnicity, excluding these people Hungarians made up 99.9% of the total population. In Hungary people can declare more than one ethnicity, so some people declared a minority one along with Hungarian.In 2011 there were 4,531 Lutheran, 2,601 Roman Catholic and 708 Hungarian Reformed in Szarvas. 4,087 people were irreligious and 200 Atheist, while 4,601 people did not declare their religion.
Sights
- Szarvas Botanical Garden
- Bolza Castle
- Dry Mill
- Sámuel Tessedik Muzeum
- Szarvas Spa
- Csáky Castle
- Mitrovszky Castle
- György Ruzicskay Art House
- Lutheran Old Church
- New Lutheran Church
- Slovak Country House
Notable people
- Roland Lipcsei, Hungarian football player
- Éva Novodomszky, Hungarian journalist and presenter
- Endre Bajcsy-Zsilinszky, Hungarian politician
- Jon Urbanchek, Hungarian American swimming coach