Hungary's Mediterranean

Interwoven with intrigue and drama, the tapestry of Hungarian history also glistens with two distinctly civilized pleasures: fine art and great wine.
Throughout Hungary you'll find these two things in abundance. Budapest offers cultural treasures literally at every turn. Although vineyards may no longer be found in the capital, you can get acquainted with the full range of homegrown wines at the House of Hungarian Wines, located in the historic area near Buda Castle. Here you can explore exhibits about the 22 wine growing regions of Hungary and sample some of the 400 wines they produce.
Pécs: City of Culture
At the foot of the Mecsek Hills, just two-and-one-half hours by train south of Budapest, is Pécs (pronounced PAYCH), Hungary's fifth largest town. Even if it were not graced with a Mediterranean climate, the genuine warmth of Pécs would win you over. It may be 2,000 years old, with the ancient Roman burial vaults to prove it, but this is an easygoing place. Student life animates the city, which is fitting when you consider that Hungary's first university was founded here - in 1367. A richly textured past suffuses the city with a gentle sophistication, from its delightful shops and restaurants to its wealth of cultural treasures.
Founded by Romans under the name of Sopianae, the town became the largest in the Roman province Pannonia Inferior. In 1009, nine years after he converted the pagan Magyars to Christianity, King Stephen founded a bishopric in Pécs. This led to the city's rise as a religious and cultural centre. The Turks occupied the city for a century and a half, and afterward a mix of Schwabian Germans, Serbs and Croats filtered in. This multicultural city earned the UNESCO Peace Prize in 1998 for the harmony that comes so naturally to it.
With its atmospheric winding streets, lined with Baroque edifices, open squares and red tiled buildings, Pécs is a beautiful city. Its heart is Széchenyi Square - at once stately and exotic, one of the most attractive city squares in Hungary. On the northern side, the imposing Pasha Gazi Kassim Mosque, the largest Turkish structure still standing in Hungary, is now used as a church. A row of fig bushes in front amplifies the Mediterranean atmosphere. At the opposite side of the square you'll find the unusual Zsolnay Fountain, an Art Nouveau civic masterpiece of locally made Zsolnay porcelain. It features the distinctive iridescent glaze called eosin, named, appropriately enough, for the ancient Greek goddess of dawn. Pause for a pastry and coffee in café Virág, facing the square. Then make your way to Király utca, the pedestrian main shopping street in Pécs. The street may be bustling, but there's no need to rush. A short walk in the opposite direction brings you to the mosque of Jakovali Hassan, with its minaret still intact. Built in the mid-1500s, the mosque now houses a museum of Turkish artwork and artifacts.
A Street of Museums
Leave ample time to explore Pécs' "street of museums", Káptalan utca. A short walk north of Széchenyi Square, this quiet, leafy avenue is packed with an eclectic array of fine art museums housed in a series of rambling, pastel-colored medieval houses. In the Zsolnay Museum, housed in a 14th century Gothic residence, you'll find displays of some of the finest pieces of award-winning Zsolnay porcelain, which has been produced in Pécs since 1853. If it whets your appetite for more, check out the Zsolnay boutique in Pécs, just off Széchenyi Square.
The Vasarely Museum boasts a formidable collection of works by Victor Vasarely, the Pécs native who pioneered op-art. Nearby, the Csontváry Museum houses a sizeable collection of works by Tivadar Csontváry, who Picasso once called "the other artistic genius of the twentieth century". Csontváry's paintings are like a mirror of Central Europe's past, fusing expressionism, symbolism and romanticism into a colorful but haunting vision - evidenced in such master works as the "Lonely Cedar Tree". As you approach the nearby Modern Hungarian Art Gallery, you'll see the striking sculptures of Pierre Székely. Inside, there are works by important 19th and 20th century Hungarian painters. Another museum showcases artifacts from Renaissance Pécs. Other museums on Káptalan utca include the Martyn Ferenc Collection, featuring the works of this abstract painter, the surrealist paintings of Endre Nemes, and the sculptures and ceramics of Amerigo Tot. Give yourself a day or two to absorb it all, then another day to explore the 11th century cathedral and the eerily elegant late Roman sepulchres - which contain 104 Roman graves and two separate burial vaults.
Time for Wine - and Surprises
You may wish to stay at one of the charming after stimulating your senses with history and fine art, indulge them with an excursion to Hungary's scenic southernmost wine country: the Villány-Siklós Wine Route. Villány-Siklós is located 40 minutes south of Pécs, a pastoral paradise of gentle green hills, oak forests and the scent of juniper interlaced with historic cities and villages.
Romans produced wine in this scenic pocket of Europe 2,000 years ago, and today over 5,000 vineyards yield some of the finest wines in Hungary. The mild Mediterranean-like climate of the region, along with its fertile soil, helps endow the wines with their sunny southern flavour. Villány and Villánykövesd are known for their ruby-toned red wines, including Blue Franc, Blue Portuguese, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. Siklós is best known for its white wines, such as Italian and Rhine Riesling, Chardonnay and Traminer.
You may wish to make your headquarters one of the charming wine pensions, such as the Cabernet, Gere or Polgár, nestled next to a dramatic double row of tiny white houses, each with its own wine cellar. Cabernet's kitchen in Villánykövesd turns out unforgettable treats, such as homestyle chicken vegetable soup and poppyseed cherry strudel. Down the road the Kocsi Csárda, a convivial tavern-like setting, is a wonderful place to enjoy an apricot or strawberry palacsinta (pancake) dessert and a shot or two of fruity, fiery pálinka, a robust Hungarian spirit. In Villány, pay a visit to the Wine Museum or, even better, an actual winery.
All along the Wine Route cellars and country wine bars await travelers. Cellars throughout the villages are open to anyone interested in tasting, and many of the cellars are home to charming and supremely affordable bed-and-breakfast style accommodations. Among the best are Bock, Tiffán, Gere and Polgár wineries. Taste some of their award winning wines: Blue Portuguese, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. Which will be your favorite? Only a thorough tasting will tell.
In Siklós, visit the medieval Batthyány Castle, a fortress that has resolutely stood its ground since 1190. Cross the drawbridge and enter another era as you ramble over to the 500-year-old web-vaulted chapel or survey the vineyards from atop the castle battlements. Not far from the castle gates stands another reminder of the area's past: a small but beautifully restored Turkish mosque.
All is not ancient on the Villány-Siklós Wine Route though. Just a few minutes from Siklós you'll come across the village of Nagyharsány, an unlikely setting perhaps for a dramatic sculpture park of international renown. The park is spread out over one side of the Szársomlyó Hill beneath a striking 90-feet tall cliff.
As you look out across the lush vineyards, listen to the sounds the sculptors make as they chisel fine art out of solid rock: one can almost conjure Charles of Lorraine' soldiers battling the Turks in the valley below, centuries ago. The Southern Transdanubian landscape stirs the imagination as readily as it calms the soul - whether your tastes turn to wine, art, history or all of the above.
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