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Coat of arms of Lázár family. The House of Lázár or Lázár de Szárhegy was a Hungarian noble family originating in the 15th century. The origins of the family come from a commune of people known as the Székely people or colloquially as the Gyergyószárhegys which were living in Transylvania within the medieval Kingdom of Hungary.
Hungary has ten national parks which cover approximately 10 percent of the country's ... Danube-Ipoly National Park: 1997: 606.760 km 2 (234.271 sq mi) Budapest and
Millenniumi emlékmű (Millennium Monument) by Zala György at the Hősök tere (Heroes' Square) with seven equestrians of the seven Magyar tribes leaders: Árpád, Előd, Ond, Kond, Tas, Huba, and Töhötöm (Tétény), 1894-1929.
Tabula Hungariae (also Lázár's map [1]) is the earliest surviving printed map of Hungary, which has supposedly been made by Hungarian Lázár deák before 1528. It was inscribed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2007. [2]
The first Kurultáj in Hungary was held in 2008. These events contributed much to the revival of the Altaic self-awareness. [1] Kurultáj is a widely attended event for professional horsemen and fans of horse riding. Each Kurultáj holds the parade of horsemen, horse races, traditional horsemen wrestling, and various tournaments.
Equestrian monument of Jan Žižka by Bohumil Kafka in Žižkov - 9 m tall. Equestrian monument of Francis I by Josef Max on the Vltava bank, 1850. Equestrian statue of Jaroslav Hašek near the pubs where he wrote his works in Žižkov by Karel Nepraš and Karolína Neprašová, 2005; Equestrian statue of Saint George in 3rd courtyard of Prague ...
Monument of Hungarian Grand Prince Árpád. The Ópusztaszer National Heritage Park is an open-air museum of Hungarian history in Ópusztaszer, Hungary.It was established in 1982 and is most famous for being the location of the Feszty Panorama, a cyclorama by Árpád Feszty and his assistants, depicting the beginning of the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin in 895.
Alfréd Artúr Béla Drasche-Lázár was born on 15 June 1875 in the town of Dorog in the Kingdom of Hungary. [1] His father, Arthur Drasche (1850–1940), was a successful Flemish industrialist, and his mother, Ilona Lázár, was of Transylvanian descent. [3] [4]