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Map of diplomatic missions in Hungary. This article lists diplomatic missions resident in Hungary.At present, the capital city of Budapest hosts 91 embassies. Several other countries have honorary consuls to provide emergency services to their citizens and several countries have non-resident embassies accredited from other capitals, such as Vienna and Berlin.
Hungary has a wide network of diplomatic missions, having redefined itself as a medium-sized power in Central Europe, and recently has joined NATO (1999) [1] and the European Union (2004). [2] Its network of embassies and consulates abroad reflect its foreign policy priorities in Western Europe, and in neighbouring countries that share historic ...
In 1914, Austria-Hungary had thirty-four diplomatic missions of which ten were embassies, twenty-two were legations and two were diplomatic agencies. Of the ten embassies, only two, the ones in the United States and Japan were outside Europe and these had also been the last missions that had been raised to an embassy. [2]
The Embassy of Germany in Budapest is Germany's diplomatic mission to Hungary.It is located at Úri utca 64–66, in the I. Várkerület district.. The building has been listed as UNESCO World Heritage and became the site of the German embassy in 1993, as a result of returning the former site of the Hungarian embassy in Berlin to the state of Hungary.
Germany is Hungary's most important foreign trade partner, both as a customer and as a supplier. [18] Germany is one of the countries with which Hungary has a trade balance surplus. [3] German aid to Hungary between 1990 and 1995 totaled DM 5 billion, loans and aid reflected privileged treatment of Hungary in the region. [19]
A diplomatic mission to Prussia was established in 1665; raised to an embassy of the German Empire in 1871; included also Brunswick (from 1892), Hanseatic cities (Hamburg, Bremen and Lübeck) (from 1893), Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Oldenburg. 10.12.1871–03.11.1878 Alois Graf Károlyi von Nagykároly (1825–1889)
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Under Joachim von Ribbentrop the Reich Foreign Ministry grew from 2,665 officers in 1938 to a peak of 6,458 in 1943, despite missions abroad closing as a consequence of the Second World War. Germany's post-war diplomatic network started as early as 1949 with a mission in Paris to the newly formed Organisation for Economic Co-operation and ...