Hungarian People - Folklore and Landscape

Folklore and Landscape

  • Hungarians in Southern Transdanubia in Hungary

  • Voivodina Hungarians women's national costume

  • Csárdás folk dance in Skorenovac, Vojvodina, Serbia

  • Kalotaszeg folk Costume in Transylvania, Romania

  • Budapest, the Hungarian capital

  • Hungarian National Museum

  • Pécs, the Hungarian city was the European Capital of Culture in 2010

  • Sopron, "The Most Loyal Town"

  • Eszterháza, the "Hungarian Versailles"

  • A Hungarian town, Eger

  • Hollókő, Hungarian village part of the World Heritage.

  • Hungarian romanesque church (Pécs)

  • Hungarian round-church at Öskü

  • Hungarian church from Dârjiu, Romania

  • Typical Hungarian Church in Văleni (Magyarvalkó), Romania

  • Traditionally Hungarian house from Balatonfelvidék, Hungary

  • Traditionally Hungarian house from Transdanubia, Hungary

  • Rimetea, majoritary Hungarian village in Transylvania, Romania

  • The Hungarian Puszta

  • A Székely village in Covasna County, Romania

  • The Turul, the mythical bird of the origin myth of the Hungarian people

  • The "Tree of Life" on an ancient Magyar sabertache (tarsoly) plate

  • Hungarian Church at Óföldeák

  • Gothic church of Košice (Kassa), Slovakia

  • Festetics palace of Keszthely

  • Gothic St. Michael's Church in Kolozsvár, ], Transylvania Romania.

  • Bojnice Castle, in Slovakia

  • Gothic Matthias Church in Budapest

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Famous quotes containing the words folklore and/or landscape:

    So, too, if, to our surprise, we should meet one of these morons whose remarks are so conspicuous a part of the folklore of the world of the radio—remarks made without using either the tongue or the brain, spouted much like the spoutings of small whales—we should recognize him as below the level of nature but not as below the level of the imagination.
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    In contrast to the flux and muddle of life, art is clarity and enduring presence. In the stream of life, few things are perceived clearly because few things stay put. Every mood or emotion is mixed or diluted by contrary and extraneous elements. The clarity of art—the precise evocation of mood in the novel, or of summer twilight in a painting—is like waking to a bright landscape after a long fitful slumber, or the fragrance of chicken soup after a week of head cold.
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