Miskolc (IPA: , approximate pronunciaton: "Mishkolts"; in Slovak Miškovec, in Polish Miszkolc) is a city in North-East Hungary, mainly with heavy industrial background. With a population close to 180,000 (2001) Miskolc is the third-largest city of Hungary (behind Budapest and Debrecen; second-largest with agglomeration.) It is also the county capital of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén and the regional centre of Northern Hungary.
The city lies at the meeting point of different geographical regions – east from the Bükk mountains, in the valley of the river Sajó and the streams Hejő and Szinva. According to the 2001 Census the city has a total area of 236.68 km². The ground level is gradually rising, the difference between the highest and lowest area is around 800 meters.
The lowest areas are the banks of the river Sajó, with an altitude of 110-120 m. This belongs to the Great Plain region and is made up of sedimentary rocks. Between the Avas hill and Diósgyőr lays the hilly area of the Lower Bükk (250-300 m) consisting of sandstone, marl, clay, layers of coal, from the tertiary period, and Volcanis rocks from the Miocene.
Between Diósgyőr and Lillafüred lays the hilly Central Bükk with an altitude between 400 and 600 meters. This is made up mostly of limestone, slate, dolomite and other rocks from the Triassic period. The surface was formed mostly by karstic erosions.
The highest area, the 600-900 meters high Higher Bükk or Bükk Highlands begin at Lillafüred. This mostly consists of sea sediments (limestone, slate, dolomite) from the Paleozoic and Mesozoic, and volcanic rocks like diabase and porphyry. Several caves can be found in the area.
Miskolc was elevated to the rank of oppidum (market town) in 1365 by King Louis I. He also had the castle of the nearby town Diósgyőr (now a district of Miskolc) transformed into a Gothic fortress. The city developed in a dynamic way, but during the Ottoman occupation of most of Hungary the development of Miskolc was brought to a standstill. The Turks burnt Miskolc in 1544 and the city had to pay heavy taxes until 1687. It was during these years that Miskolc became an important centre of winegrowing. By the end of the 17th century the population of the city was as large as that of Kassa, and 13 guilds have been founded.
During the war of independence against Habsburg rule in the early 18th century Prince Francis II Rákóczi, the leader of the Hungarians put his headquarters in Miskolc. The imperial forces sacked and burnt the city in 1707. Four years later half of the population fell victim of a cholera epidemic. Miskolc recovered quickly and an age of prosperity began again. In 1724 Miskolc was chosen to be the city where the county hall of Borsod county would be built. Many other significant buildings were built in the 18th and 19th centuries, including the city hall, schools, churches, the synagogue, and the theatre. The theatre is commonly regarded as the first stone-built theatre of Hungary, but the first one was actually built in Kolozsvár (then a part of Hungary, now Cluj-Napoca, Romania). According to the first nationally held census (1786) the city had a population of 14.719, and 2414 houses.
These years brought prosperity, but the cholera epidemic of 1873 and the flood of 1878 took many lives. Several buildings were destroyed by the flood, but bigger and more beautiful buildings were built in their places. World War I did not affect the city directly, but many people died, either from warfare or from the cholera epidemic.
After the Treaty of Trianon, Hungary lost Kassa (Kosice, Slovakia) and Miskolc became the sole regional center of Northern Hungary. This was one of the reasons for the enormous growth of the city during the 1930s and 1940s. The preparation for World War II established Miskolc as the national centre of heavy industry, a position the city maintained until the 1990s. Although Miskolc suffered a lot during the last year of the war, it recovered quickly and by absorbing the surrounding villages it became the second-largest city of Hungary with more than 200.000 inhabitants. In 1949 the University of Miskolc was founded (as a successor of the Academy of Mining, formerly in Selmecbánya, which is now Banská Štiavnica, Slovakia).
During its long history Miskolc survived fires, floods, plagues and foreign invasions but maintained its position as centre of North-East Hungary. The 1990s brought a crisis in the iron industry with a decline in the population. Currently Debrecen is leading in the race for being the second-largest city, while Nyíregyháza is fast becoming a rival for the role of the most important city of the area.
Miskolc is now trying to become known as a cultural place and festival city instead of an industrial one. Among the various cultural events one of the most important ones is the International Opera Festival, held in every summer.
The most popular tourist destinations of Miskolc are Tapolca, Lillafüred and Felsőhámor. Tapolca has a beautiful park with a boating pond and the famous and unique Cave Spa. Lillafüred and Felsőhámor are pretty villages in a valley surrounded by mountains and forests, their most famous sights are the Hotel Palace on the shore of the Lake Hámori, the "Fátyol-vízesés" (Veil Waterfalls, the highest waterfalls of the country) of the Szalajka valley, the Anna Cave and the István Cave.
| Year | Population | Comments | 1786 | 14,179 inhabitants |
|---|---|---|
| 1850 | 16,345 inhabitants | |
| 1870 | 21,199 inhabitants | |
| 1891 | 30,408 inhabitants | population of Diósgyőr: 6537, Görömböly: 1482 |
| 1930 | 61,559 inhabitants | 12th largest city of Hungary before 1920; 6th largest after 1920. Population of Diósgyőr: 20,854 |
| 1941 | 77,362 inhabitants | |
| 1950 | cca. 100,000 inhabitants, | united with Diósgyőr in 1945 // 2nd largest city of the country since 1949 |
| 1960 | 144,217 inhabitants | |
| 1965 | 163,600 inhabitants | |
| 1985 | 211,600 inhabitants | population record |
| 1996 | 191,885 inhabitants | |
| 2001 | 180,282 inhabitants | continuing decrease of population (likewise in all Hungary) |
Miskolc was already an important market town in the Middle Ages, mostly due to its proximity to the main trade routes of the region. I regards of economy, real development started only after the Otoman occupation. In the 18th century the town already had a lumber mill, a paper manufacture, a brewery, a gunpowder factory and fifteen mills on the Szinva stream. The glassworks manufactures and iron furnaces appeared in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The first iron furnace, built by Henrik Fazola around 1770, hasn't survived, but the second one, built in 1813, can still be visited. Several new settlements were formed in the Bükk mountains to provide dwelling to the workers of glassworks manufactures and furnaces. Many of them – including Alsóhámor, Felsőhámor, Ómassa and Bükkszentlászló – are now parts of Miskolc.
Development quickened from the second half of the 19th century, partly because of the political situation (after the Ausgleich) and partly because of the newly constructed railway line. A large furnace (second largest in the country) was built in Diósgyőr, and several other factories were built. The mining industry became more and more important, too. Within forty years the population doubled. The industrialization led to the forming of Greater Miskolc with the unification of Miskolc and Diósgyőr (1945) and several nearby towns and villages (between 1950 and 1981). The unification was only the first step in Miskolc being developed into an industrial centre. Development reached its highest point in the 1980s, when the metal factory had more than 18.000 workers and production was over one million tons per year. The population hit all-time record (over 200.000 inhabitants), 2/3 of the working people worked in heavy industry.
The economical recession after the end of the Socialist era hit the industrial cities of Northern Hungary the hardest. The unemployment rate rose until it became one of the highest in the country, the population of Miskolc dramatically decreased (not only because of unemployment though, but also due to suburbanization which became prevalent nationwide). The economical situation of the city went through a change, smaller enterprises appeared in place of the large state-owned companies.
By the early 2000s the decade of changes was over, and the city got through the recession successfully. International companies and hypermarkets appeared in the area. The local government is trying to strengthen the city's role in culture and tourism. By the end of 2004 the highway M3 reached the city.
The Lillafüred Forest State Railway connects Diósgyőr to Lillafüred. It is mainly a tourist attraction.
The city has two railway stations (Tiszai and Gömöri) and a small unpaved airport, which is not open to the public, used mainly as a sports facility and has no role in public transport since 1963. Miskolc is fortunately now connected to Budapest by a bullet train which obtains a maximum speed of 175 kilometers per hour and gets a passenger from Budapest to Miskolc in an hour and forty minutes non-stop.
Twin towns of Miskolc are:
Miskolc | Cities, towns and villages in Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén county
Мишколц | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miškolca | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miszkolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | Мишкольц | Miskolc | Miskolc | Miskolc | 米什科尔茨