Dohány utca explained

Dohány utca (English: "Tobacco Street") is a street in the Erzsébetváros (Elizabeth City), the 7th district of Budapest, Hungary. It runs between Karoly kórüt and Rottenbiller utca, roughly parallel to Rákóczi út and Wesselenyi utca, and is about 1.6 kilometers in length. It contains many of Budapest's significant buildings along its length, including the famed Dohány Street Synagogue at its western end.

History

Only a 300-meter-long section of Dohány Street was first opened in 1802 between today's Síp utca and Kazinczy utca. It was first named after the popular and well-known snuff and tobacco maker Anton Prinder, who originally worked in house 211 on Tabakmacher Gasse (Tobacco Maker Street), but then moved after 1804 into the section between Síp utca and Károly kórüt, often called the Seiten Landstrasse (in German, "Side Highway"). In 1817, this became permanently Tabakgasse, and translated in 1850 to Hungarian, the current Dohány utca. The route of Dohány utca as it exists today was built in the 1820s all the way to the later Rottenbiller utca. The new section built at that time was named Felbergasse (Fűzfa utca from 1850) and was only called Dohány utca as its full present length in 1874.

Since Dohány utca was created, it has served as a significant transport route, the main carriageway connecting the city of Pest with the eastern parts of the country, the relief section of the Hatvani (today Rákóczi) út. As a result, several hostels and restaurants were opened on Dohány utca, such as the hostel called Arany Szita for the Rose of Déryné Széppataki during the flood of Pest in 1838. During the second half of the nineteenth century, a large number of Jews moved here, and in 1859 the first significant synagogue of Pest Jewry was inaugurated at the beginning of the street, now the Dohány Street Synagogue. At the end of the Second World War, the border of the Pest ghetto was located here.

Notable Buildings

(From west to east)

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Látlelet és történelem. Mihály Ráday. Budapest. 2009. 2–6. 2021-07-11. 2018-11-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20181118164917/http://apps.arcanum.hu/app/budapest/view/Budapest_2009/?pg=3&layout=s. dead.