Táncsics Prison In Budapest To Open For Public For Two Days

  • 3 Oct 2014 9:04 AM
Táncsics Prison In Budapest To Open For Public For Two Days
The former Táncsics Prison, which held the writer and politician Mihály Táncsics, one of the heroes of the 1848 Hungarian Revolution, will be open to the public after more than six decades on October 5 and 6. The compound in the Buda Castle was returned by the United States, which owned it since 1948, in a formal ceremony in June, László L Simon, cabinet parliamentary state secretary, noted on Thursday.

 Tamás Gabor Nagy, the mayor of the district where the complex is located in Táncsics Street 9, said visitors will be guided through the site and shown former prison chambers and the threestory, rectangular high-roofed building called the Powder House.

From the courtyard they can also take in a spectacular view of the city, he said. On October 6, a commemoration will be held in memory of martyrs executed on this day in 1849 after the quelling of the revolution, he added.

Táncsics was imprisoned for his radical political views in 1846 and freed on March 15, 1848, on the day the revolution broke out.

Lajos Kossuth, the regent-president of Hungary in 1849, was also imprisoned within the compound in 1837-40.

Other statesmen and politicians jailed within the compound’s wall included Miklós Wesselényi in 1839-40 and Lajos Batthyány, from 1849 until his execution.

Source www.hungarymatters.hu

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