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The Busójárás (Hungarian, meaning "Busó-walking"; in Croatian: Pohod bušara [1]) is an annual celebration of the Šokci living in the town of Mohács, Hungary, held at the end of the Carnival season ("Farsang"), ending the day before Ash Wednesday.
Buso may refer to: Buso (Philippine mythology), a generic term for demons or evil spirits in the folklore of the Bagobo peoples; Busójárás, a Hungarian festival; BüSo, short for Bürgerrechtsbewegung Solidarität, a German political party; Buso Renkin, Japanese magna series; Busō Shinki, alternative spelling of Busou Shinki, media mix ...
Šajtinac is a laureate of several major literary prizes, such as the Biljana Jovanović Award 2007 for Walk on!, the Ivo Andrić Award 2014 for Banatorium, the European Union Prize for Literature 2014 for his novel Quite Modest Gifts, and the Isidora Sekulić Award 2017 for his collected short stories The Woman from Juárez, which contain ...
Francesco Illy (Hungarian: Illy Ferenc; 7 October 1892 in Timișoara, Banat, Transylvania, Austro-Hungary – 1956 in Trieste, Italy) was a Hungarian accountant, bookkeeper, businessman, philanthropist. He founded Illy and invented various coffee machinery.
This list of notable coffeehouse chains catalogues the spread and markets share of coffeehouses world-wide. This list excludes the many companies which operate coffeeshops within retail establishments, notably bookstores and department stores, or restaurants or convenience stores which also serve coffee.
In Prague, Budapest, Sarajevo, Krakow, Trieste and Lviv and other cities of the Austro-Hungarian empire there were also many coffee houses according to the Viennese model. The Viennese coffee house culture then spread throughout Central Europe and created a special multicultural climate. Because here writers, artists, musicians, intellectuals ...
Years later, the king, on a walk, takes notice of the boy and adopts him, which was consented by the miller. When the prince comes to court, the cook convinces the boy to search for "the bird that drinks from the golden and silver water, and whose singing can be heard from miles", the mirror that can see the whole world and the Maiden of the Sea.
The Stud Farm (Hungarian: A ménesgazda) is a 1978 Hungarian drama film directed by András Kovács. It was entered into the 29th Berlin International Film Festival.