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Zalaegerszeg (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈzɒlɒɛɡɛrsɛɡ] ⓘ; Croatian: Jegersek; Slovene: Jageršek; German: Egersee) is the administrative center of Zala county in western Hungary. Location [ edit ]
Zala (Hungarian: Zala vármegye, pronounced; Croatian: Zalska županija; županija Zala) is an administrative county (comitatus or vármegye) in south-western Hungary.It is named after the Zala River.
Zalaegerszeg (Hungarian: Zalaegerszegi járás) is a district in northern part of Zala County. Zalaegerszeg is also the name of the town where the district seat is found. The district is located in the Western Transdanubia Statistical Region .
A small part of former Vas county, north of Zalaegerszeg, went to Zala County. The part of Zala county north of Lake Balaton went to Veszprém County . Since 1991, when Slovenia and Croatia became independent from Yugoslavia , most of Međimurje is part of Croatia (mostly in Međimurje County ; Legrad is in Koprivnica-Križevci County ...
Zalaegerszegi Torna Egylet Football Club ([ˈzɒlɒɛɡɛrsɛɡi ˈtornɒ ˈɛɟlɛt]), commonly known as Zalaegerszegi TE, Zalaegerszeg or ZTE, is a Hungarian professional football club based in Zalaegerszeg. Zalaegerszeg has won one Hungarian League title in 2002 and one Magyar Kupa title in 2023.
Here, European route E65, a local road connecting to Zalaegerszeg-Sárhida-Bak, and the Zalaegerszeg-Rédics railway provide convenient access to the rest of the region. Bocfölde is part of Göcsej , a geographic, historical, architectural, and ethnographic unit, that maintained elements of a unique agricultural culture until the 1950s and ...
ZTE Arena is a stadium in Zalaegerszeg, Hungary. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Zalaegerszegi TE . The stadium is able to hold 11,200 people.
Work on the building of the theatre began in the late 1950s, with the original goal to house cultural and artistic events for the working class - it was then known as Worker's Home of Trade Unions of Zalaegerszeg (Szakszervezetek Zalaegerszegi Munkásotthona). It opened with the play Bánk bán by József Katona on 28 January 1968.