Žilina | |
Settlement Type: | City |
Motto: | Žilina,the City with face |
Nickname: | Komix City, Pearl of Vah |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type2: | Region |
Subdivision Name2: | Žilina |
Subdivision Type3: | District |
Subdivision Name3: | Žilina |
Pushpin Map: | Slovakia Žilina Region#Slovakia |
Pushpin Relief: | 1 |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Slovakia |
Coordinates: | 49.2228°N 18.74°W |
Leader Title: | Mayor |
Leader Name: | Peter Fiabáne |
Established Title: | First mentioned |
Established Date: | 1208 |
Area Footnotes: | [1] |
Area Total Km2: | 80.04 |
Elevation M: | 378[2] |
Elevation Ft: | 1,240 |
Population Footnotes: | [3] |
Population Total: | 81219 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Demonym: | (m)Žilinčan/(f)Žilinčanka |
Timezone1: | CET |
Utc Offset1: | +1 |
Timezone1 Dst: | CEST |
Utc Offset1 Dst: | +2 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 010 01 |
Area Code: | +421 41 |
Blank Name: | Car plate |
Blank Info: | ZA |
Website: | www.zilina.sk |
Population Metro: | 160000 |
Population Urban: | 108000 |
Postal2 Code: | 010 03, 010 04, 010 07, 010 08, 010 09, 010 14, 010 15 |
Population Rank: | 4th |
Area Note: |
Žilina (pronounced as /sk/; Hungarian: Zsolna pronounced as /hu/; German: Sillein pronounced as /de/; Polish: Żylina pronounced as /pl/; names in other languages) is a city in north-western Slovakia, around 170km (110miles) from the capital Bratislava, close to both the Czech and Polish borders. It is the fourth largest city of Slovakia with a population of approximately 80,000, an important industrial center, the largest city on the Váh river, and the seat of a kraj (Žilina Region) and of an okres (Žilina District). It belongs to the Upper Váh region of tourism.
The name is derived from Slavic/Slovak word žila - a "(river) vein".[4] [5] Žilina means "a place with many watercourses". Alternatively, it is a secondary name derived from Žilinka river or from the name of the local people, Žilín/Žiliňane.[4]
The area around today's Žilina was inhabited in the late Stone Age (about 20,000 BC). In the 5th century, Slavs started to move into the area. However, the first written reference to Žilina was in 1208 as terra de Selinan. From the second half of the 10th century until 1918, it was part of the Kingdom of Hungary.
In the middle of the 13th century, terra Sylna was the property of the Cseszneky de Milvány family.[6] The city started to develop around 1300, and, according to records in 1312, it was already a town. In 1321, King Charles I made Žilina a free royal town. On 7 May 1381, King Louis I issued Privilegium pro Slavis, which made the Slav inhabitants equal to the Germans by allocating half of the seats at the city council to Slavs.[7] The town was burned in 1431 by the Hussites.
During the 17th century, Žilina gained position as a center of manufacturing, trade, and education, and, during the Baroque age, many monasteries and churches, as well as the Budatín Castle, were built. In the Revolutions of 1848, Slovak volunteers, part of the Imperial Army, won a battle near the city against Hungarian honveds and gardists.
The city boomed in the second half of the 19th century as new railway tracks were built: the Kassa Oderberg Railway was finished in 1872 and the railway to Bratislava (Pozsony in Hungarian) in 1883, and new factories started to spring up, such as the drapery factory Slovena (1891) and the Považie chemical works (1892).
It was one of the first municipalities to sign the Martin Declaration (30 October 1918), and until March 1919, it was the seat of the Slovak government. On 6 October 1938, shortly after the Munich Agreement, the autonomy of Slovakia within Czechoslovakia was declared in Žilina.
During the Holocaust in Slovakia, tens of thousands of Jews were deported from Žilina.[8] Žilina was captured on 30 April 1945 by Czechoslovak and Soviet troops of the 4th Ukrainian Front, after which it again became part of Czechoslovakia. After the war, the city continued its development with many new factories, schools and housing projects being built. It was the seat of the Žilina Region from 1949 to 1960 and again since 1996.
Today, Žilina is the fourth largest city in Slovakia, the third most important industrial center and the seat of a university, the Žilinská univerzita (founded in 1953). Since 1990 the historical center of the city has been largely restored and the city has built trolleybus lines.
Žilina lies at an altitude of 342m (1,122feet) above sea level and covers an area of 80.03km2.[9] It is located in the Upper Váh region (Slovak: Horné Považie) at the confluence of three rivers: Váh, flowing from the east into the south-west, Kysuca, flowing from the north and Rajčanka rivers from the south, in the Žilina Basin. The city is surrounded by these mountain ranges: Malá Fatra, Súľovské vrchy, Javorníky and Kysucká vrchovina. Protected areas nearby include the Strážov Mountains Protected Landscape Area, the Kysuce Protected Landscape Area, and the Malá Fatra National Park. There are two hydroelectric dams on the Váh river around Žilina: the Žilina dam in the east and the Hričov dam in the west.
Žilina lies in the north temperate zone and has a continental climate with four distinct seasons. It is characterized by a significant variation between hot summers and cold, snowy winters. The average temperature in July is 18C, in January, -4C. The average annual rainfall is 600-; most of the rainfall occurs in June and in the first half of July. Snow cover lasts from 60 to 80 days per year.
The coat of arms of Žilina is a golden double-cross (so-called cross of Lorraine) with roots and two golden stars on an olive-green background. The double-cross is of Byzantine origin and stems from Cyrillic-methodic tradition. This is one of the oldest municipal coat of arms, not only in Slovakia, but in Europe. It has been used as the city's symbol since 1378.
Municipality | Urban | Metro | |
---|---|---|---|
Žilina | 85,302 | 85,302 | |
Kysucké Nové Mesto | - | 16,420 | |
Varín | - | 3,537 | |
Teplička nad Váhom | 3,502 | 3,502 | |
Belá | - | 3,361 | |
Rajecké Teplice | - | 2,950 | |
Rosina | 2,925 | 2,925 | |
Strečno | - | 2,661 | |
Višňové | 2,610 | 2,610 | |
Divina | - | 2,483 | |
Dlhé Pole | - | 2,029 | |
Turie | 1,981 | 1,981 | |
Kamenná Poruba | - | 1,826 | |
Stráňavy | - | 1,822 | |
Lietavská Lúčka | 1,786 | 1,786 | |
Rudina | - | 1,669 | |
Lietavská Svinná - Babkov | - | 1,596 | |
Lietava | 1,422 | 1,422 | |
Radoľa | - | 1,391 | |
Konská | - | 1,393 | |
Dolná Tižiná | - | 1,243 | |
Gbeľany | 1,239 | 1,239 | |
Krasňany | 1,223 | 1,223 | |
Snežnica | - | 1,013 | |
Svederník | 1,003 | 1,003 | |
Kunerad | - | 949 | |
Nededza | 927 | 927 | |
Divinka | - | 882 | |
Lysica | - | 864 | |
Lutiše | - | 795 | |
Podhorie | - | 781 | |
Horný Hričov | - | 763 | |
Dolný Hričov | 1,506 | 1,506 | |
Hričovské Podhradie | - | 374 | |
Hôrky | 635 | 635 | |
Bitarová | 630 | 630 | |
Ovčiarsko | 511 | 511 | |
Brezany | 462 | 462 | |
Mojš | 450 | 450 | |
Porúbka | - | 447 | |
Rudinka | - | 384 | |
Nezbudská Lúčka | - | 366 | |
Total | 108,114 | 159,729 |
Žilina is the main industrial hub of the upper Váh river basin region, with a fast-growing economy as north-west Slovakia's business center with large retail and construction sectors.
By far the biggest and most important employer is Korean car maker Kia Motors. By 2009, the plant produced 300,000 cars a year and had up to 3,000 employees. Kia Motors' direct investment in the Žilina car plant amounts to over 1.5 billion USD. In 2009 the Žilina car plant produced Kia Cee'd, Kia Sportage and Hyundai ix35 car models. Kia Motors is further upgrading its capacity to be ready to produce engines for a sister company, Hyundai, located at Nošovice in the Czech Republic with a planned investment of US$200 million.
Žilina is also the seat of the biggest Slovak construction and transportation engineering company, Vahostav. The chemical industry is represented by Považské chemické závody and Tento, a paper mill company. Siemens Mobility also has an engineering center in Žilina.[10]
The historical center of the city, reconstructed in the early 1990s is protected as a city monument reserve (Slovak: Mestská pamiatková rezervácia). It is centered on the Mariánske námestie and Andrej Hlinka squares. The Mariánske námestie square has 106 arcade passages and 44 burgher houses along the whole square.[11] It is dominated by the Church of St. Paul the Apostle, the old building of the city council, and the baroque statue of the Virgin Mary. Nearby is the Church of the Holy Trinity, a sacral building built around 1400, which is since February 2008 the cathedral of the Diocese of Žilina.
The Church of Saint Stephen the King (Slovak: Kostol Sv. Štefana kráľa) is the oldest architectural relic of town Zilina,[12] located just 1km (01miles) southwest from the center. It is one of the first Romanesque churches in Slovakia,[13] dating back to the years 1200–1250, by the experts. The legend goes that the Hungarian King István I himself ordered to build it. Valuable is the inner decoration of the church. Wall paintings originate from approximately 1260; in 1950 they were discovered and later on restored by the Žilina fine artist Mojmír Vlkoláček.[14] Nowadays it is a popular place for wedding ceremonies.
Other landmarks around the city include:
The city is a starting point for various locations of western and eastern Slovakia, including hiking trails into the Lesser Fatra and Greater Fatra mountains. Other locations of interest include Bojnice Castle, Strečno, Orava region, and the villages of Čičmany and Vlkolínec.
Žilina is candidate city for the title of European Capital of Culture 2026.
Žilina host several cultural institutions:
open-air museum Čičmany, manor-house in Divinka
Žilina is also home of two multi 3D digital theaters, in Mirage Shopping Centre - Ster Century Cinemas and Cinemax MAX in Max Shopping Centre OC Max Solinky.
The city host also several cultural events:
Football (soccer) club MŠK Žilina plays in the top Slovak division Fortuna liga and is one of the most successful teams in recent years, having won five domestic titles and been runners-up three times between 2001 and 2010. The team's colors are the yellow and green, taken from the city's flag. Home games are played at the Stadium Pod Dubňom which is situated at the edge of city center in the neighborhood of the ice hockey stadium. They played in the 2010-11 UEFA Champions League in the group stage for the first time in their history.
Ice hockey club MsHK Žilina plays in the Slovak Extraliga. They have won one domestic title so far.
Slovak professional road bicycle racer for World Tour team Bora-Hansgrohe, three-time world champion Peter Sagan, was born in Žilina in 1990, and is considered one of cycling's most promising young talents, having earned many prestigious victories in his early twenties. He was the winner of the points classification in the Tour de France in 2012 through 2016; as a result, Sagan became the first rider to win the classification in his first five attempts. In 2015, he was also the first Slovak cyclist to win the UCI Road World Championships.
The city is governed by a mayor (Slovak: primátor) and a city council (Slovak: mestské zastupiteľstvo). The mayor is the head of the city and its chief executive, with a four-year term of office. The current mayor is Peter Fiabáne . The council is the city's legislative body, with 31 councillors. The last municipal election was held in 2014 and councillors are elected to four-year terms, concurrent with the mayor's. Žilina is divided into eight electoral districts, consisting of the following neighborhoods:[15]
Žilina is the capital of one of eight considerably autonomous Regions of Slovakia.[16] It is also the capital of a smaller district. The Žilina District (Slovak: okres Žilina) is nested within the Žilina Region.
The city also hosts a regional branch of the National Bank of Slovakia.
The city is home to the University of Žilina, which has seven faculties and 12,402 students, including 625 doctoral students.[17]
There are 18 public primary schools, one private primary school, and three church primary schools.[18] Overall, they enroll 7,484 pupils.[18] The city's system of secondary education (some middle schools and all high schools) consists of eight gymnasia with 3,514 students,[19] ten specialized high schools with 3,696 students,[20] and nine vocational schools with 4,870 students.[21] [22]
The city is an important international road junction, and Žilina railway station is a major rail junction.
Roads and railways connect the city with Bratislava and Prievidza in the south, Čadca in the north, and Martin in the east. The construction of the D1, and D3 motorways and their feeders continues towards Žilina.
The city is also served by international Žilina Airport, which is about 10km (10miles) away from the city center.
Public transport within the city is operated by DPMZ[23] and consists of buses (since 1949) and trolleybuses (since 1994).
Night bus services started in Žilina in 1970 with the introduction of one route, the 50,[24] which continues to operate as the sole night bus in the city, operating from 22:55 to 04:22.[25] [26] Route 50 makes a circuitous route of all major residential areas, and includes a stop at Železničná stanica, the principal railway station.[27]
See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Slovakia. Žilina is twinned with:[28]