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Coordinates: 48°43′N 21°15′E / 48.717°N 21.250°E / 48.717; 21.250
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[[File:Fő utcza, Kassa - 1902 (1).tif|thumb|Main Street – 1902]]
[[File:Fő utcza, Kassa - 1902 (1).tif|thumb|Main Street – 1902]]


The significance and wealth of the city in the end of the 14th century was mirrored by the decision to build a completely new church on the grounds of the previously destroyed smaller St. Elisabeth Church. The construction of the biggest cathedral in the Kingdom of Hungary – [[St. Elisabeth Cathedral]] – was supported by the Emperor [[Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor|Sigismund]], and by the [[apostolic see]] itself. Since the beginning of the 15th century, the city played a leading role in the [[Pentapolitana]] – the [[league of towns]] of five most important cities in [[Upper Hungary]] ([[Bardejov|Bártfa]], [[Levoča|Locse]], Kassa, [[Prešov|Eperjes]], and [[Sabinov|Kisszeben]]). During the reign of King [[Matthias Corvinus of Hungary|Hunyadi Mátyás]] the city reached its medieval population peak. With an estimated 10,000 Hungarian inhabitants, it was among the largest medieval cities in Europe.<ref>R.O.Halaga: Právny, územný a populačný vývoj mesta Košíc, Košice 1967, p.54</ref>
The significance and wealth of the city in the end of the 14th century was mirrored by the decision to build a completely new church on the grounds of the previously destroyed smaller St. Elisabeth Church. The construction of the biggest cathedral in the Kingdom of Hungary – [[St. Elisabeth Cathedral]] – was supported by the Emperor [[Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor|Sigismund]], and by the [[apostolic see]] itself. Since the beginning of the 15th century, the city played a leading role in the [[Pentapolitana]] – the [[league of towns]] of five most important cities in [[Upper Hungary]] ([[Bardejov|Bártfa]], [[Levoča|Locse]], Kassa, [[Prešov|Eperjes]], and [[Sabinov|Kisszeben]]). During the reign of King [[Matthias Corvinus of Hungary|Hunyadi Mátyás]] the city reached its medieval population peak. With an estimated 10,000 inhabitants, it was among the largest medieval cities in Europe.<ref>R.O.Halaga: Právny, územný a populačný vývoj mesta Košíc, Košice 1967, p.54</ref>


The history of Kassa was heavily influenced by the dynastic disputes over the Hungarian throne, which together with the decline of the continental trade brought the city into stagnation. [[Władysław III of Poland|Vladislaus III of Varna]] failed to capture the city in 1441. [[John Jiskra]]'s mercenaries from [[Bohemia]] defeated Tamás Székely's Hungarian army in 1449. [[John I Albert of Poland|John I Albert]], Prince of Poland, could not capture the city during a six-month-long siege in 1491. In 1526, the city homaged for [[Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor]]. [[John Zápolya]] captured the city in 1536 but Ferdinand I reconquered the city in 1551.<ref>{{cite web |publisher= City of Kassa |url= http://mek.oszk.hu/00000/00060/html/055/pc005582.html|title= Pallas Nagy Lexikona |accessdate= February 10, 2008 |language= Hungarian}}</ref> In 1554, the settlement became the seat of the [[Captaincies of the Kingdom of Hungary#Captaincy of Upper Hungary|Captaincy of Upper Hungary]].
The history of Kassa was heavily influenced by the dynastic disputes over the Hungarian throne, which together with the decline of the continental trade brought the city into stagnation. [[Władysław III of Poland|Vladislaus III of Varna]] failed to capture the city in 1441. [[John Jiskra]]'s mercenaries from [[Bohemia]] defeated Tamás Székely's Hungarian army in 1449. [[John I Albert of Poland|John I Albert]], Prince of Poland, could not capture the city during a six-month-long siege in 1491. In 1526, the city homaged for [[Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor]]. [[John Zápolya]] captured the city in 1536 but Ferdinand I reconquered the city in 1551.<ref>{{cite web |publisher= City of Kassa |url= http://mek.oszk.hu/00000/00060/html/055/pc005582.html|title= Pallas Nagy Lexikona |accessdate= February 10, 2008 |language= Hungarian}}</ref> In 1554, the settlement became the seat of the [[Captaincies of the Kingdom of Hungary#Captaincy of Upper Hungary|Captaincy of Upper Hungary]].

Revision as of 19:55, 28 May 2019

Košice
View of Hlavná ulica (Main Street) from St. Elisabeth Cathedral, with the State Theatre Košice building in the center
View of Hlavná ulica (Main Street) from St. Elisabeth Cathedral, with the State Theatre Košice building in the center
Nickname: 
City of tolerance[1]
Košice is located in Slovakia
Košice
Košice
Location in Slovakia
Košice is located in Košice Region
Košice
Košice
Košice (Košice Region)
Coordinates: 48°43′N 21°15′E / 48.717°N 21.250°E / 48.717; 21.250
CountrySlovakia
RegionKošice Self-governing Region
First mentioned1230
Government
 • MayorJaroslav Polaček
Area
 • Total242.768 km2 (93.733 sq mi)
Elevation
206 m (676 ft)
Population
 (2018-12-31[2])
 • Total238,757
 • Density980/km2 (2,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
040 00
Area code+421-55
Car plateKE
Websitehttps://www.kosice.sk

Košice (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈkɔʃitsɛ]) is the largest city in eastern Slovakia and in 2013 was the European Capital of Culture (together with Marseille, France). It is situated on the river Hornád at the eastern reaches of the Slovak Ore Mountains, near the border with Hungary. With a population of approximately 240,000 Košice is the second largest city in Slovakia after the capital Bratislava.

Being the economic and cultural centre of eastern Slovakia, Košice is the seat of the Košice Region and Košice Self-governing Region, the Slovak Constitutional Court, three universities, various dioceses, and many museums, galleries, and theatres. Košice is an important industrial centre of Slovakia, and the U.S. Steel Košice steel mill is the largest employer in the city. The town has extensive railway connections and an international airport.

The city has a well-preserved historical centre, which is the largest among Slovak towns. There are many heritage protected buildings in Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, and Art Nouveau styles with Slovakia's largest church: the St. Elisabeth Cathedral. The long main street, rimmed with aristocratic palaces, Catholic churches, and townsfolk's houses, is a thriving pedestrian zone with many boutiques, cafés, and restaurants. The city is well known as the first settlement in Europe to be granted its own coat-of-arms.[3]

Etymology

The first written mention of the city was in 1230 as "Villa Cassa".[4] The Slovak name of the city comes from the Slavic personal name Koša with the patronymic Slavic suffix "-ice".[5] The city may derive its name from Old Slovak kosa, "clearing", related to modern Slovak kosiť, "to reap".[6] Though according to other sources the city name may derive from an old Hungarian[7] first name which begins with "Ko".[8]

Historically, the city has been known as Kaschau in German, Kassa in Hungarian ([ˈkɒʃʃɒ] ), Kaşa in Turkish, Cassovia in Latin, Cassovie in French, Cașovia in Romanian, Кошице (Košice) in Russian, Koszyce in Polish and קאשוי Kashoy in Yiddish (see here for more names). Below is a chronology of the various names:[9][10][11][12]

Year Name Year Name
1230 Villa Cassa 1420 Caschowia
1257 Cassa 1441 Cassovia, Kassa, Kaschau, Košice
1261 Cassa, Cassa-Superior 1613–1684 Cassovia, Kassa, Kaşa, Kossicze
1282 Kossa 1773 Cassovia, Kassa, Kaschau, Kossicze
1300 Cossa 1786 Cassovia, Kascha, Kaschau, Kossice
1307 Cascha 1808 Cassovia, Kaschau, Kassa, Kossice
1324 Casschaw 1863–1913 Kassa
1342 Kassa 1920–1938 Košice
1388 Cassa-Cassouia 1938–1945 Kassa
1394 Cassow 1945– Košice

History

Historical affiliations

Kingdom of Hungary 1000 – 1526
Kingdom of Hungary 1526 – 1804
John Zápolya's Eastern Hungarian Kingdom 1526 – 1551 (Ottoman vassal)
Hajduk rebels of István Bocskai 1604 – 1606 (Ottoman-backed)
Principality of Transylvania (Ottoman vassal) 1619 – 1629, 1644 – 1648
] Kuruc rebellion 1672 – 1682 (Ottoman-backed)
] Imre Thököly's Principality of Upper Hungary (Ottoman vassal) 1682 – 1686
] Francis II Rákóczi's insurrection 1703 – 1711
Kingdom of Hungary (crownland of the Austrian Empire) 1804 – 1867
Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867 – 1918
 Czechoslovakia 1918–1938
Kingdom of Hungary 1938 – 1945
 Czechoslovakia 1945–1992
 Slovakia 1993–present

Eastern Hungarian Kingdom around 1550, including Košice shown as 'Kassa'
Part of the Ottoman Empire in 1683, including the Principality of Upper Hungary, based around Košice shown as 'Kassa'

The first evidence of inhabitance can be traced back to the end of the Paleolithic era. The first written reference to the Hungarian town of Kassa (as the royal village – Villa Cassa) comes from 1230. After the Mongol invasion in 1241, King Béla IV of Hungary invited German colonists to fill the gaps in population. The city was in the historic Abauj County of the Kingdom of Hungary.

The city was made of two independent settlements: Lower Kassa and Upper Kassa, amalgamated in the 13th century around the long lens-formed ring, of today's Main Street. The first known town privileges come from 1290.[13] The city grew quickly because of its strategic location on an international trade route from agriculturally rich central Hungary to central Poland, itself along a greater route connecting the Balkans and the Adriatic and Aegean seas to the Baltic Sea. The privileges given by the king were helpful in developing crafts, business, increasing importance (seat of the royal chamber for Upper Hungary), and for building its strong fortifications.[4] In 1307, the first guild regulations were registered here and were the oldest in Kingdom of Hungary.[14]

As a Hungarian free royal town, Kassa reinforced the king's troops in the crucial moment of the bloody Battle of Rozgony in 1312 against the strong aristocratic Palatine Amadé Aba (family).[15][16] In 1347, it became the second place city in the hierarchy of the Hungarian free royal towns with the same rights as the capital Buda. In 1369, it received its own coat of arms from Louis I of Hungary.[13] The Diet convened by Louis I in Kassa decided that women could inherit the Hungarian throne.

"Cassovia: Superioris Hungariae Civitas Primaria",[17] the prospect from Civitates orbis terrarum. Cassovia (Slovak: Košice, German: Kaschau, Hungarian: Kassa), the "capital" of Upper Hungary in 1617.
The military base in Košice at the end of the 18th century
National Theater built in 1899
Main Street – 1902

The significance and wealth of the city in the end of the 14th century was mirrored by the decision to build a completely new church on the grounds of the previously destroyed smaller St. Elisabeth Church. The construction of the biggest cathedral in the Kingdom of Hungary – St. Elisabeth Cathedral – was supported by the Emperor Sigismund, and by the apostolic see itself. Since the beginning of the 15th century, the city played a leading role in the Pentapolitana – the league of towns of five most important cities in Upper Hungary (Bártfa, Locse, Kassa, Eperjes, and Kisszeben). During the reign of King Hunyadi Mátyás the city reached its medieval population peak. With an estimated 10,000 inhabitants, it was among the largest medieval cities in Europe.[18]

The history of Kassa was heavily influenced by the dynastic disputes over the Hungarian throne, which together with the decline of the continental trade brought the city into stagnation. Vladislaus III of Varna failed to capture the city in 1441. John Jiskra's mercenaries from Bohemia defeated Tamás Székely's Hungarian army in 1449. John I Albert, Prince of Poland, could not capture the city during a six-month-long siege in 1491. In 1526, the city homaged for Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor. John Zápolya captured the city in 1536 but Ferdinand I reconquered the city in 1551.[19] In 1554, the settlement became the seat of the Captaincy of Upper Hungary.

In 1604, Catholics seized the Lutheran church in Kassa.[20] The Calvinist Stephen Bocskay then occupied Kassa during his Protestant, Ottoman-backed insurrection against the Habsburg dynasty. The future George I Rákóczi joined him as a military commander there. Giorgio Basta, commander of the Habsburg forces, failed in his attempt to capture the city. At the Treaty of Vienna (1606), in return for giving territory including Kassa back, the rebels won the Habsburg concession of religious toleration for the Magyar nobility and brokered an Austrian-Turkish peace treaty. Stephen Bocskay died in Kassa on December 29, 1606 and was interred there.

For some decades during the 17th century Kassa was part of the Principality of Transylvania, and consequently a part of the Ottoman Empire and was referred to as Kaşa in Turkish.[12] On September 5, 1619, the prince of Transylvania, Gabriel Bethlen captured Kassa with the assistance of the future George I Rákóczi in another anti-Habsburg insurrection. By the Peace of Nikolsburg in 1621, the Habsburgs restored the religious toleration agreement of 1606 and recognized Transylvanian rule over the seven Partium countries: Ugocsa, Bereg, Zemplén, Borsod, Szabolcs, Szatmár and Abaúj (including Kassa).[21] Bethlen married Catherine von Hohenzollern, of Johann Sigismund Kurfürst von Brandenburg, in Kassa in 1626.[22]

Bethlen married Catherine von Hohenzollern, of Johann Sigismund Kurfürst von Brandenburg, in Košice in 1626.[22]

Kassa and the rest of the Partium were returned to the Habsburgs after Bethlen's death, which took place in 1629.[21]

On January 18, 1644, the Diet in Kassa elected George I Rákóczi the prince of Hungary. He took the whole of Upper Hungary and joined the Swedish army besieging Brno for a projected march against Vienna. However, his nominal overlord, the Ottoman Sultan, ordered him to end the campaign but he did so with gains. In the Treaty of Linz (1645), Kassa returned to Transylvania again as the Habsburgs recognized George's rule over the seven counties of the Partium.[21] He died in 1648, and Kassa was returned to the Habsburgs once more.[23]

Kassa became a center of the Counter-Reformation. In 1657, a printing house and university were founded by the Jesuits, funded by Emperor Leopold I. The 1664 Peace of Vasvár at the end of the Austro-Turkish War (1663-1664) awarded Szabolcs and Szatmár counties to the Habsburgs,[24] which put Kassa further inside the border of Royal Hungary again. A modern pentagonal fortress (citadel) was built by the Habsburgs south of the city in the 1670s. The city was besieged by Kuruc armies several times in the 1670s and it revolted against the Habsburg emperor. The rebel leaders were massacred by emperor's soldiers on November 26, 1677.

Another rebel leader, Imre Thököly captured the city in 1682, making Kaşa once again a vassal territory of Ottoman Empire under Principality of Upper Hungary until 1686. The Austrian field marshal Aeneas de Caprara got Kassa back from Ottoman Turks on late-1685. In 1704–1711 Prince of Transylvania Francis II Rákóczi made Košice the main base in his War for Independence. The fortress was demolished by 1713.

When not under Ottoman suzerainty, Kassa was the seat of the Habsburg "Captaincy of Upper Hungary" and the seat of the Chamber of Szepes County (Spiš, Zips), which was a subsidiary of the supreme financial agency in Vienna responsible for Upper Hungary). Due to Ottoman occupation of Eger, Kassa was the residence of Eger's archbishop from 1596 to 1700.[25]

From 1657, it was the seat of the historic Royal University of Kassa (Universitas Cassoviensis), founded by Bishop Benedict Kishdy. The university was transformed into a Royal Academy in 1777, then into a Law Academy in the 19th century. It ceased to exist in the turbulent year of 1921. After the end of the anti-Habsburg uprisings in 1711 the victorious Austrian armies drove the Ottoman forces back to the south and this major territorial change created new trade routes which circumvented Košice. The city began to decay and turned from a rich medieval town into a provincial town known for its military base and dependent mainly on agriculture.[26]

In 1723, the Immaculata statue was erected in the place of a former gallows at Hlavná ulica (Main Street) commemorating the plague from the years 1710–1711.[27] This was one of the centers of the Hungarian language regenerate movement which published the first Hungarian language periodical called the Magyar Museum in Hungary in 1788.[28] The city's walls were demolished step by step from the early 19th century to 1856; only the Executioner's Bastion remained with few parts of the wall. The city became the seat of its own bishopric in 1802. The city's surroundings became a theater of war again during the Revolutions of 1848, when the Imperial cavalry general Franz Schlik defeated the Hungarian army on December 8, 1848 and January 4, 1849. The city was captured by the Hungarian army on February 15, 1849, but the Russian troops drove them back on June 24, 1849.[29]

In 1828, there were three manufacturers and 460 workshops.[30] The first factories were established in the 1840s (sugar and nail factories). The first telegram message arrived in 1856 and the railway connected the city to Miskolc in 1860. In 1873, there were already connections to Eperjes, Zsolna, and Csop (in today's Ukraine). The city gained a public transit system in 1891 when track was laid down for a horse-drawn tramway. The traction was electrified in 1914.[30] In 1906, Francis II Rákóczi's house of Rodostó was reproduced in Kassa and his remains were buried in the St. Elisabeth Cathedral.[31]

After World War I and during the gradual break-up of Austria-Hungary, the city at first became a part of the transient "Eastern Slovak Republic", declared on December 11, 1918 in Košice and earlier in Prešov under the protection of Hungary. On December 29, 1918, the Czechoslovak Legions entered the city, making it part of the newly established Czechoslovakia. However, in June 1919, Košice was occupied again, as part of the Slovak Soviet Republic, a proletarian puppet state of Hungary. The Czechoslovak troops secured the city for Czechoslovakia in July 1919,[32] which was later upheld under the terms of the Treaty of Trianon in 1920.

Fate of Košice Jews

Jews had lived in Košice since the 16th century but were not allowed to settle permanently. There is a document identifying the local coiner in 1524 as a Jew and claiming that his predecessor was a Jew as well. Jews were allowed to enter the city during the town fair, but were forced to leave it by night, and lived mostly in nearby Rozunfaca. In 1840 the ban was removed, and before that there were a few Jews living in the town, among them a widow who ran a small Kosher restaurant for the Jewish merchants passing through the town.

Košice was ceded to Hungary, by the First Vienna Award, from 1938 until early 1945. The town was bombarded on June 26, 1941 by a still unidentified aircraft,[33] in what became a pretext for the Hungarian government to declare war on the Soviet Union a day later.

The German occupation of Hungary led to the deportation of Košice's entire Jewish population of 12,000 and an additional 2,000 from surrounding areas via cattle cars to the concentration camps.

In 1946, after the war, Košice was the site of an orthodox Zionist revival, with a Mizrachi convention and a Bnei Akiva Yeshiva (school) for refugees, which, later that year, moved with its students to Israel.[34]

Today[when?] there are only 8 men who pray at the synagogue regularly, and they are assisted by Jewish students predominantly studying medicine at the city's universities, from Israel.[citation needed]

The Soviets and Czechoslovakia

The town was captured by the Soviets in January 1945 and for a short time it became a temporary capital city of the restored Czechoslovak Republic until the Soviet Red Army reached Prague. Among other acts, the Košice Government Program was declared on April 5, 1945.[32]

At that time a large population of ethnic Germans in the area were expelled and sent on foot to Germany or to the Russian border.[35]

After the Communist Party seized power in Czechoslovakia in February 1948, the city became part of the Eastern Bloc. Several present day cultural institutions were founded and large residential areas around the city were built. The construction and expansion of the East Slovak Ironworks caused the population to grow from 60,700 in 1950 to 235,000 in 1991. Before the breakup of Czechoslovakia (1993), it was the fifth largest city in the federation.

Under Slovakia

Following the Velvet Divorce and creation of the Slovak Republic, Košice became the second largest city in the country and became a seat of a constitutional court. Since 1995, it has been the seat of the Archdiocese of Košice.

Geography

Košice lies at an altitude of 206 metres (676 ft) above sea level and covers an area of 242.77 square kilometres (93.7 sq mi).[36] It is located in eastern Slovakia, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from the Hungarian, 80 kilometres (50 mi) from the Ukrainian, and 90 kilometres (56 mi) from the Polish borders. It is about 400 kilometres (249 mi) east of Slovakia's capital Bratislava and a chain of villages connects it to Prešov which is about 36 kilometres (22 mi) to the north.

Košice is on the Hornád River in the Košice Basin, at the easternmost reaches of the Slovak Ore Mountains. More precisely, it is a subdivision of the Čierna hora mountains in the northwest and Volovské vrchy mountains in the southwest. The basin is met on the east by the Slanské vrchy mountains.

Climate

Košice has a humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb), as the city lies in the north temperate zone. The city has four distinct seasons. Precipitation varies little throughout the year with abundance precipitation that falls during summer and only few during winter. The coldest month is January, with an average temperature of −2.6 °C (27.3 °F), and the hottest month is July, with an average temperature of 19.3 °C (66.7 °F).[citation needed]

Climate data for Košice, Slovakia
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 0.5
(32.9)
3.2
(37.8)
9.3
(48.7)
15.0
(59.0)
20.3
(68.5)
23.2
(73.8)
25.1
(77.2)
25.1
(77.2)
20.3
(68.5)
14.3
(57.7)
6.2
(43.2)
1.4
(34.5)
13.7
(56.6)
Daily mean °C (°F) −2.6
(27.3)
−0.4
(31.3)
4.5
(40.1)
9.6
(49.3)
14.6
(58.3)
17.5
(63.5)
19.3
(66.7)
19.1
(66.4)
14.8
(58.6)
9.4
(48.9)
3.0
(37.4)
−1.3
(29.7)
9.0
(48.1)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −5.6
(21.9)
−3.9
(25.0)
−0.4
(31.3)
4.2
(39.6)
8.9
(48.0)
11.8
(53.2)
13.4
(56.1)
13.1
(55.6)
9.2
(48.6)
4.5
(40.1)
−0.2
(31.6)
−3.9
(25.0)
4.3
(39.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 25
(1.0)
24
(0.9)
26
(1.0)
49
(1.9)
70
(2.8)
86
(3.4)
83
(3.3)
70
(2.8)
53
(2.1)
47
(1.9)
42
(1.7)
33
(1.3)
608
(24.1)
Average precipitation days 13 11 10 12 14 14 13 11 10 10 13 14 145
Source: World Meteorological Organisation[37]

Demographics

Hlavná ulica (Main Street) in historical downtown
Statue of Košice's coat of arms, the first municipal coat of arms in Europe

Košice has a population of 240,688 (December 31, 2011). According to the 2011 census, 73.8% of its inhabitants were Slovaks, 2.65% Hungarians, 2% Romani, 0.65% Czechs, 0.68% Rusyns, 0.3% Ukrainians, and 0.13% Germans. 19% of Košice's population did not declare their ethnic affiliation in the 2011 census.[38]

The religious makeup was 45% Roman Catholics, 16.6% people with no religious affiliation, 6.12% Greek Catholics, and 2.33% Lutherans, 2% Calvinists and 0.11% Jews.[39]

Historical demographics

According to the researchers the town had a German majority until the mid-16th century,[40] and by 1650, 72.5 percent of the population may have been Hungarians,[note 1] 13.2 percent was German, 14.3 percent was Slovak or of uncertain origin.[40] The Ottoman Turkish traveler Evliya Çelebi mentioned that, the city was inhabited by "Hungarians, Germans, Upper Hungarians" in 1661 when the city was under suzerainty of Ottoman Empire and under Turkish control.[40]

The linguistic makeup of the town's population underwent historical changes that alternated between a growth of the ratio of those who claimed Hungarian and those who claimed Slovak as their language. With a population of 28,884 in 1891, just under half (49.9%) of the inhabitants of Košice declared the then official Hungarian language as their main means of communication, 33.6% Slovak, and 13.5% German; 72.2% were Roman Catholics, 11.4% Jews, 7.3% Lutherans, 6.7% Greek Catholics, and 4.3% Calvinists.[41] The results of this census are questioned by some historians[42] by claiming that they were manipulated, in order to increase the percentage of the Magyar population in the period of Magyarization. This is disputed.

By the 1910 census, which is sometimes accused of being manipulated by the ruling Hungarian bureaucracy,[43] 75.4% of the 44,211 inhabitants claimed Hungarian, 14.8% Slovak, 7.2% German, and 1.8% Polish.[44] The Jews were split among other groups by the 1910 census, as only the most frequently used language and not ethnicity was registered.[45] The population (around 1910) is multidenominational and multiethnical, and the differences in the level of education mirrors the stratification of society, following these facts. http://mek.oszk.hu/16900/16992 The linguistic balance within the town limits began to shift towards Slovak after World War I with Slovakization in the newly established Czechoslovakia.[citation needed] As a consequence of the First and Second Vienna Awards, Košice was ceded to Hungary. During the German occupation of Hungary towards the end of World War II, approximately 10,000 Jews were deported by the Arrow Cross Party and the Nazis, and killed in Auschwitz.[46] The ethnic makeup of the town was dramatically changed by persecution of the town's large Hungarian majority (population exchanges between Hungary and Slovakia and slovakization) and by mass immigration of Slovaks into newly built communist-block-microdistricts, which increased the population of Košice four-times by 1989 and made it the fastest growing city in Czechoslovakia.[47]

Culture

Kasárne Kulturpark
Kunsthalle
SPOT Važecká

Performing arts

There are several theatres in Košice. The Košice State Theater was founded in 1945 (then under the name of the East Slovak National Theater). It consists of three ensembles: drama, opera, and ballet. Other theatres include the Marionette Theatre and the Old Town Theatre (Staromestské divadlo). The presence of Hungarian and Roma minorities makes it also host the Hungarian "Thália" theatre and the professional Roma theatre "Romathan".[48]

Košice is the home of the State Philharmonic Košice (Štátna filharmónia Košice), established in 1968 as the second professional symphonic orchestra in Slovakia. It organizes festivals such as the Košice Music Spring Festival, the International Organ Music Festival, and the Festival of Contemporary art.[49]

Museums and galleries

Some of the museums and galleries based in the city include the East Slovak Museum (Vychodoslovenské múzeum), originally established in 1872 under the name of the Upper Hungarian Museum. The Slovak Technical Museum (Slovenské technické múzeum) with planetarium, established in 1947, is the only museum in the technical category in Slovakia that specializes in the history and traditions of science and technology.[50] The East Slovak Gallery (Východoslovenská galéria) was established in 1951 as the first regional gallery with the aim to document artistic life in present-day eastern Slovakia.[51]

European Capital of Culture

In 2008 Košice won the competition among Slovak cities to hold the prestigious title European Capital of Culture 2013. Project Interface aims at transformation of Košice from a centre of heavy industry to a postindustrial city with creative potential and new cultural infrastructure. Project authors bring to Košice a concept of creative economy – merging of economy and industry with arts, where transformed urban space encourages development of certain fields of creative industry (design, media, architecture, music and film production, IT technologies, creative tourism). The artistic and cultural program stems from a conception of sustained maintainable activities with long-lasting effects on cultural life in Košice and its region. The main project venues are:

  • Kasárne Kulturpark – 19th-century military barracks turned into new urban space with a centre of contemporary art, exhibition and concert halls and workshops for creative industry.[citation needed]
  • Kunsthalle – a 1960s disused swimming pool turned into the first Kunsthalle in Slovakia.
  • SPOTs – 1970s and 1980s disused heat exchangers turned into cultural "spots" in Communist-Era-block-of-flats districts.
  • City park, Park Komenského and Mojzesova – revitalisation of urban spaces.
  • Castle of Košice, Amfiteáter, Mansion of Krásna, Handicrafts Street – reconstruction.
  • Tabačka – a 19th-century tobacco factory turned into a centre of independent culture.

Media

The first and the oldest international festival of local TV broadcasters (founded in 1995) – The Golden Beggar, takes place every year in June in Košice.

The oldest evening newspaper is the Košický večer. The daily paper in Košice is Korzár. Recently, the daily paper Košice:Dnes (Košice:Today) came into existence.

TV stations based in Košice: TV Naša, TV Region and public TV broadcaster RTVS Televízne štúdio Košice.

Radio stations based in Košice: Rádio Košice, Dobré rádio, Rádio Kiss, Rádio Šport, and the public broadcaster RTVS Rádio Regina Košice

Economy

Aupark Shopping Centre

Košice is the economic hub of eastern Slovakia. It accounts for about 9% of the Slovak gross domestic product.[citation needed] The steel mill, U.S. Steel Košice with 13,500 employees, is the largest employer in the city and the largest private employer in the country.[52] The second-largest employer in the east of the country is T-Systems Slovakia. It was established and has been based in Košice since 2006. T-Systems Slovakia had 3,850 employees in Košice at the end of 2016, which makes it the second-largest shared service center in Slovakia and one of the top fifteen largest employers in Slovakia. As part of the growing ICT field, Košice IT Valley association was established in 2007 as a joint initiative of educational institutions, government and leading IT companies. In 2012 it was transformed into the cluster. In 2018 the cluster was for the second time certified for “Cluster Management Excellence Label GOLD” as the first in central Europe and is one of three certified clusters in the area of information and communication technologies.Other major sectors include mechanical engineering, food industry, services, and trade.[53] GDP per capita in 2001 was €4,004, which was below Slovakia's average of €4,400.[53] The unemployment rate was 8.32% in November 2015, which was below the country's average 10.77% at that time.[54]

The city has a balanced budget of 2.78 billion Slovak korunas (almost €83 million, as of 2007) with a small surplus of 25 million korunas. The budget for the year 2008 consisted of projects with total spending of 2.82 billion korunas.[55]

Sights

St. Elisabeth Cathedral in Košice is Slovakia's largest church

The city centre, and most historical monuments, are located in or around the Main Street (Hlavná ulica) and the town has the largest number of protected historical monuments in Slovakia.[56] The most dominant historical monument of the city is Slovakia's largest church, the 14th century Gothic St. Elisabeth Cathedral; it is the easternmost cathedral of western style Gothic architecture in Central Europe,[56] and is the cathedral of the Archdiocese of Košice. In addition to St. Elisabeth, there is the 14th century St. Michael Chapel, the St. Urban Tower, and the Neo-baroque State Theater in the center of town.

The Executioner's Bastion and the Mill Bastion are the remains of the city's previous fortification system. The Church of the Virgin Mary's Birth is the cathedral for the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Košice. Other monuments and buildings of cultural and historical interest are; the old Town Hall, the Old University, the Captain's Palace, Liberation Square, as well as a number of galleries (the East Slovak Gallery) and museums (the East Slovak Museum). There is a Municipal Park located between the historical city centre and the main railway station. The city also has a zoo located northwest of the city, within the borough of Kavečany.

Places of worship

Late Renaissance, early Baroque Jesuits Church
Empire style Pongrác-Forgács Palace
Historicism style Jakab's Palace
Neo-Renaissance Andrássy Palace
Art Nouveau style coffeehouse Slávia

Government

Divizia – seat of the Košice Self-Governing Region
The seat of the Slovak Constitutional Court

Košice is the seat of the Košice Region and since 2002 it is the seat of the autonomous Košice Self-governing Region. Additionally, it is the seat of the Slovak Constitutional Court. The city hosts a regional branch of the National Bank of Slovakia (Národná banka Slovenska) and consulates of Hungary, Belgium, Spain, Russia and Turkey.

The local government is composed of a mayor (Slovak: primátor), a city council (mestské zastupiteľstvo), a city board (mestská rada), city commissions (Komisie mestského zastupiteľstva), and a city magistrate's office (magistrát). The directly elected mayor is the head and chief executive of the city. The term of office is four years. The previous mayor, František Knapík, was nominated in 2006 by a coalition of four political parties KDH, SMK, and SDKÚ-DS. In 2010 he finished his term of office.[57] The present mayor is Ing. Jaroslav Polaček. He was inaugurated on December 10, 2018.[58]

Administratively, the city of Košice is divided into four districts: Košice I (covering the center and northern parts), Košice II (covering the southwest), Košice III (east), and Košice IV (south) and further into 22 boroughs (wards):

Administrative division of Košice
District Boroughs
Košice I Džungľa, Kavečany, Sever, Sídlisko Ťahanovce, Staré Mesto, Ťahanovce
Košice II Lorinčík, Luník IX, Myslava, Pereš, Poľov, Sídlisko KVP, Šaca, Západ
Košice III Dargovských hrdinov, Košická Nová Ves
Košice IV Barca, Juh, Krásna, Nad jazerom, Šebastovce, Vyšné Opátske

Education

Košice is the second university town in Slovakia, after Bratislava. The Technical University of Košice is its largest university, with 16,015 students, including 867 doctoral students.[59] A second major university is the Pavol Jozef Šafárik University, with 7,403 students, including 527 doctoral students.[60] Other universities and colleges include the University of Veterinary Medicine in Košice (1,381 students)[61] and the private Security Management College in Košice (1,168 students).[62] Additionally, the University of Economics in Bratislava, the Slovak University of Agriculture in Nitra, and the Catholic University in Ružomberok each have a branch based in the city.

There are 38 public elementary schools, six private elementary schools, and three religious elementary schools.[63] Overall, they enroll 20,158 pupils.[63] The city's system of secondary education (some middle schools and all high schools) consist of 20 gymnasia with 7,692 students,[64] 24 specialized high schools with 8,812 students,[65] and 13 vocational schools with 6,616 students.[66][67]

Notable personalities

Slovak author Jonáš Záborský
Former Mayor and President of the Slovak Republic Rudolf Schuster
Women's tennis player Martina Hingis

Transport

Košice International Airport

Public transport in Košice is managed by Dopravný podnik mesta Košice[68] (literally the Public transport Company of the city of Košice). The municipal mass transit system is the oldest one in present-day Slovakia, with the first horse-car line beginning operation in 1891 (electrified in 1914).[30] Today, the city's public transportation system is composed of buses (in use since the 1950s), trams, and trolleybuses (since 1993).

Košice railway station is a rail hub of eastern Slovakia. The city is connected by rail to Prague, Bratislava, Prešov, Čierna nad Tisou, Humenné, Miskolc (Hungary), and Zvolen. There is a broad gauge track from Ukraine, leading to the steel mill southwest of the city. The D1 motorway connects the city to Prešov and more motorways and roads are planned around the city.[69]

Košice International Airport is located south of the city. Regular direct flights from the airport are available to: London, Doncaster/Sheffield, Bratislava, Vienna, Warsaw, Tel Aviv, Kiev, Istanbul and Prague.[70] Regular flights are provided by Czech Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Danube Wings, Turkish Airlines, LOT Polish Airlines and Wizz Air and in code-share by KLM-Air France, Delta, Lufthansa, United and Etihad. At its peak in year 2008, it served 590,919 passengers but the number has since declined.[71]

Sports

Steel Aréna

The oldest annual marathon in Europe and the third oldest in the entire world, after the Boston Marathon and the Yonkers Marathon. Košice Peace Marathon (founded in 1924.) is run in the historic part of the city organized every year on the first Sunday of October.

Ice hockey club HC Košice is one of the most successful Slovak hockey clubs. It plays in Slovakia's highest league, the Extraliga, and has won eight titles in 1995, 1996, 1999, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, and 2015; and two titles (1986 and 1988) in the former Czechoslovak Extraliga. Since 2006, their home is the Steel Aréna which has a capacity of 8,343 spectators. Football club MFK Košice currently plays in the Corgoň Liga. It was the first club from Slovakia reach the group stages of the UEFA Champions League and is a two times domestic league winner (1998 and 1999). After relegation in 2003, the club returned to the Corgoň Liga in 2005.

Košice, along with Bratislava hosted the 2011 IIHF World Championship in ice hockey.

Košice, became the 2016 European City of Sport[72] by the European Capitals of Sports Association (ACES Europe). The sporting events in 2016 included "the International Peace Marathon, several urban runs, a swimming relay contest, the Košice-Tatry- Košice cycling race, the dance sport world championships, the Basketball Euroleague, Volleyball World League and Water Polo World League".[73]

International relations

The Tree of Partnership on Hlavná Street

Twin towns – sister cities

Košice has several partner towns and sister cities around the world:[74]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Kocsis, Karoly; Kocsis-Hodosi, Eszter (April 1, 2001). "Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin". Simon Publications, Incorporated – via Google Books.

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Bibliography

  • Dreisziger, Nándor F. (1972). "New Twist to an Old Riddle: The Bombing of Kassa (Košice), June 26, 1941". Journal of Modern History. 44 (2): 232–42. doi:10.1086/240751. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
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