Nagykanizsa

Nagykanizsa (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈnɒckɒniʒɒ]; Croatian: Velika Kaniža/Velika Kanjiža, or just Kaniža/Kanjiža; German: Großkirchen, Groß-Kanizsa; Italian: Canissa; Slovene: Velika Kaniža; Turkish: Kanije), known colloquially as Kanizsa, is a medium-sized city in Zala County in southwestern Hungary. It is a city with county rights.

Nagykanizsa
City with county rights
Nagykanizsa Megyei Jogú Város
Nagykanizsa
Location of Nagykanizsa
Nagykanizsa
Nagykanizsa (Hungary)
Coordinates: 46°27′18″N 16°59′33″E
Country Hungary
CountyZala
DistrictNagykanizsa
Government
  MayorLászló Balogh (Fidesz-KDNP)
Area
  Total148.40 km2 (57.30 sq mi)
Population
 (2017)[1]
  Total47,349
  Rank20th in Hungary
  Density320/km2 (830/sq mi)
Demonym(s)kanizsai, nagykanizsai
Population by ethnicity
  Hungarians85.1%
  Roma1.3%
  Germans1.0%
  Croats1.0%
  Romanians0.1%
  Others0.6%
Population by religion
  Roman Catholic56.7%
  Greek Catholic0.1%
  Calvinists1.9%
  Lutherans1.7%
  Jews0.1%
  Other0.8%
  Non-religious11.1%
  Unknown27.6%
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
8800
Area code(+36) 93
MotorwaysM7
Distance from Budapest214 km (133 mi) Northeast
Websitewww.nagykanizsa.hu

It lies not far from Lake Balaton at the meeting point of five routes. For centuries the town has been a connecting link. Goods from Slavonia were transported to Graz via Nagykanizsa, and the town played an important role in the trade from the Adriatic Sea to the Alpine region, Vienna, and Budapest.

History

The city's oldest Roman era ruins were uncovered in the 1960s. Later, during the Middle Ages, it became one of the most important strongholds of the Hungarian Kingdom. The fortress had a significant role in the southern shield line of Hungary, keeping the whole of Western Europe safe from the attacks of the Ottoman Empire.

The name Kanizsa was first mentioned in a document in 1245. The Kanizsai family continued building the castle and constructed a rectangular castle with an enclosed back yard on an islet in the River Kanizsa. The town and the castle were in their prime in the first half of the 16th century, when Kanizsa became a centre of trade with Italy and Styria.

Szigetvár and Kanizsa became the most important strongholds in southern Hungary. In 1600, the Turkish army occupied the castle. This castle was the center of an Ottoman eyalet including the sanjaks of Sigetvar, Kopan, Valpuva, Siklos, Nadaj, and Balatin until 1690 (see Ottoman Hungary), when the city was invaded by the Habsburg armies.

In 1601, during the Ottoman-Habsburg War of 1593–1606, a siege began on September 9 and ended on November 18. The Habsburg forces were commanded by Ferdinand the Archduke of Austria, and Tiryaki Hasan Pasha was defending the castle. Hasan Pasha won the fight against the ten times larger army of Austrians with many cunning military ploys, and was raised to the rank of Vizier.

At the beginning of the 18th century, the holder of the castle moved German, Croatian, and Serbian settlers into the deserted town. A particularly mixed ethnic group lived in a suburb called Kiskanizsa. After the Turks were driven out, the town lost its strategic significance, so the Vienna war council demolished the castle in 1702.

Business became lively, trade became important again, and crafts developed significantly. In 1765, elementary and secondary education was begun by the Piarist order supported by Lajos Batthyány, palatine of Hungary. The first business school of Transdanubia was opened in Nagykanizsa, and in 1895 it was made into a college.

Many people who had attended its schools became famous: Benedek Virág, Pál Király, Ferenc Deák, Károly Kaán, Sándor Hevesi, and Ferenc Mező all studied in the ancient buildings of Nagykanizsa's "almae matres".

Nagykanizsa started a new phase of large-scale development in the 1860s. The railway connecting Nagykanizsa with Vienna, Budapest, and Rijeka was constructed at that time. There was rapid development in industry as well. This industrial and business development resulted in the foundation of banks. Besides the four local banks, an Austro-Hungarian and an Anglo-Hungarian bank also opened branch offices in town. Telephone lines were established and the town was connected with a long-distance system in 1895. At the same time, a 70-bed hospital was opened.

During World War I, military barracks were built in the town. This necessitated the construction of a municipal water network. Kanizsa became a modern town; drainage system construction and paving of streets began. World War I caused grave consequences. Kanizsa became isolated and lost its markets in the south and west.

Oil helped the town to survive. After successful exploration by the American corporation Eurogasco, Hungarian-American Oil Inc. was formed. Nagykanizsa became the centre of the Hungarian oil industry. Near the end of World War II, the Nagykanizsa oil fields were the last remaining in German hands, and to protect these fields the last German offensive of the war, Operation Spring Awakening, was launched. This failed and the town soon fell to the Soviet Nagykanizsa–Körmend Offensive.

Beer brewed in Kanizsa Brewery regained its reputation as one of the best Hungarian beers, carrying off the palm at more and more international competitions – at the beginning of the century the brewery was closed as demand for beer fell drastically. Kanizsa Trend Ltd. grew out of the company, with its furniture products gaining a high reputation all over Europe. The predecessor of the present day Tungsram Plc, now belonging to General Electric, was opened in 1965. It is now one of the biggest light bulb factories in the world.

Károlyi Park, City Park, and large squares like Kossuth, Eötvös, and Erzsébet squares were extended after 1962. A boating lake was formed, becoming a popular recreation centre. In the 2010s Nagykanizsa attracts thousands of dental tourists.

Education

High schools

Batthyány Lajos High School [2]

Politics

The current mayor of Nagykanizsa is László Balogh (Fidesz-KDNP).

The local Municipal Assembly, elected at the 2019 local government elections, is made up of 15 members (1 Mayor, 10 individual ward members and 4 compensation-list members) divided into these political parties and alliances:[3]

Party Seats Current Municipal Assembly
  Opposition coalition[lower-alpha 1] 8                
  Fidesz-KDNP 7 M              

Sport

  • Nagykanizsa FC, association football club

Notable people

  • Kanijeli Siyavuş Paşa, Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
  • Edmund Gutmann, known Hungarian-Croatian wholesaler and industrialist
  • Elizabeth Jaranyi, Holocaust survivor and author
  • Leopold Wittelshöfer (1818–1889), physician
  • Ferenc Fejtő, journalist and political scientist
  • Kornél Dávid, NBA player
  • Lajos Balázsovits, Hungarian film actor
  • Győző Zemplén, physicist
  • Ferenc Farkas, composer
  • Szabina Tálosi, football player
  • Ferenc Mező, olympic gold medalist
  • János Rózsás, writer, Gulag survivor and later expert
  • Johann Schnitzler, Austrian Jewish laryngologist
  • Gyula Wlassics, Hungarian Minister of Religion and Education between 1895 and 1903

Twin towns – sister cities

Nagykanizsa is twinned with:[4]

  • Acre, Israel
  • Bihać, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Čakovec, Croatia
  • Covasna, Romania
  • Gleisdorf, Austria
  • Kanjiža, Serbia
  • Kazanlak, Bulgaria
  • Puchheim, Germany
  • Salo, Finland
  • Shijiazhuang, China
  • Tolyatti, Russia

Bibliography

  • Claire Norton, "The Remembrance of the Sieges of Kanije in the Construction of Late Ottoman and Modern Turkish Nationalist Identities," Parergon, 21,1 (2004), 133–154.

References

  1. Nagykanizsa, KSH
  2. http://blg.hu/
  3. "Városi közgyűlés tagjai 2019-2024 - Nagykanizsa (Zala megye)". valasztas.hu. Retrieved November 24, 2019.
  4. "Testvérvárosok". nagykanizsa.hu (in Hungarian). Nagykanizsa. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
Notes
  1. Coalition of ÉVE-DK-Jobbik-MSZP-LMP-Momentum.
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