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The border between the Hungary and Slovakia (Hungarian: magyar–szlovák államhatár; Slovak: Maďarská-slovensko štátne hranice) is the international border between the Hungary and Slovakia. It forms a 679 kilometres (422 mi) [ 1 ] arc extending from the tripoint with Austria at the west to the tripoint with Ukraine at the east.
Bratislava is the only capital city in the world which is located at a tripoint: Slovakia, Hungary, and Austria. The city's administrative area extends to the tripoint, but the point lies outside of urban Bratislava itself. Some historic tripoints: the historic Three Emperors' Corner of Austria-Hungary, the Russian Empire, and German Empire
As of 2023, 5 border crossings are operating, all of which have passenger traffic. Abandoned track near Zajta Railway lines in Bácska and Banat (1920) Note that all of these railway lines were built in Austria-Hungary and became border crossings after the Treaty of Trianon in 1920. Zajta - Peleș (1898-1920, 1940-1945) (track dismantled)
In 2002, the institution, now called the Austrian Cultural Forum, moved into a new building at the location of its former townhouse. [3] ACFNY is a division of the Austrian consulate in New York. Susanne Keppler-Schlesinger has held the position of Director of the Austrian Cultural Forum New York since September 2022. [1]
Border tripoint between Italy, Slovenia and Austria, at an altitude of 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) Border tripoint between Austria, Hungary, and Slovenia. The Austrian–Slovenian border is a 330-kilometre (210 mi) [1] land border between the Republic of Austria and the Republic of Slovenia.
Slovakia began conducting traffic checks on its border with neighboring Hungary on Thursday amid what it says is a dramatic rise in migrants crossing onto its territory. The policy joins a flurry ...
The joint project was intended to cover the entire 150 km stretch of the Danube as it forms the border between Slovakia and Hungary, from the upstream, western, end at Čunovo, Slovakia, to Nagymaros, Hungary, in the east. Construction started when the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, but only on the Slovak side.
In May 1989, Hegyeshalom became one of the many sites of the fall of the Iron Curtain when Hungarian border guards tore down sections of barbed wire fences that separated Hungary and Austria. [3] Until 21 December 2007, at 00:00 CET, Hegyeshalom was an important border crossing and control point between Austria, Slovakia and Hungary.