Hello everyone!
Welcome to another adventure in Budapest. I may have become bored with Budapest, but what can I do, it has captivated me, and I find it interesting to write and at the same time look at the photos I took. And these photos I took when I visited the bastion are different, as you can see. I took them with my old camera, a Canon Powershot A2400.
#### Enjoy the tour :D

Imagine standing high above the Danube, while the wind rustles through the seven white towers, and below you a view of the most beautiful face of Budapest, the Parliament, the bridges and the wide streets of Pest. It's not a fairy tale, it's reality. Welcome to Fisherman Bastion, one of the most romantic and photogenic places in Hungary, where the view is breathtaking.


Although it looks like a medieval fortress from a movie, Fisherman Bastion is actually quite "young". It was built between 1895 and 1902, as part of major works on the beautification of Buda, on the occasion of the celebration of the thousandth anniversary of the arrival of the Hungarians in the Pannonian Plain. It was designed by architect Frigyes Schulek, a man who didn't just want to build, he wanted to create art in stone.
At that time, Budapest was proud of its modernization, trams ran, bridges connected the coasts, and the city was transformed from a dream under the Turks and Habsburgs into a metropolis. Schulek knew that a city should not only live, it should also dream. That's how Fisherman Bastion was born.



Why is it called "Fishermen's Bastion"? The answer is not entirely clear, but the most common story is that in the Middle Ages, fishermen from the nearby settlement, Halász, were in charge of guarding that part of the ramparts in case of an attack. This legend is unconfirmed, but that's the beauty of Fisherman Bastion, it loves stories, even unverified ones.

The seven slender, lacy towers symbolize the seven Hungarian tribes that united under the leadership of Árpád and settled in their new homeland in 896. Each tower is like a guardian of memory, they are not towers of defense, but towers of honor, memory and identity.





Fisherman Bastion is not just a viewpoint, it is a theater for the soul. Its style is a combination of neo-Romanesque and Gothic architecture, with its arches, columns, staircases and balconies that seem to lead from nowhere to eternity. In the evening, under the lights, it looks like a castle from a fairy tale, and during the day like an open gallery under the sky.
And right next to it, Matthias Church, one of the most beautiful in Budapest, which was also restored by Schulek. Together they form the heart of Old Budim, a place that never stops telling stories.



During the Second World War, Budapest was the scene of terrible battles. Fisherman Bastion was badly damaged, but not gone. Like a phoenix, it rose again in the 1950s, thanks to the son of its original creator, János Schulek, who restored his father's work. A difficult, emotional moment in history, when heritage was not only preserved, but literally resurrected from the ruins.




Today, the Fisherman's Bastion is one of the most visited places in Budapest. Tourists come to capture the frame, couples in love get engaged under the towers, and locals come to remember how beautiful their city is. Entrance is free to most of the terraces, and only the highest towers charge a small symbolic price.



But the real gem of this place is not what you see, but how it feels. It’s as if you’re standing on the border between past and present, with the Danube flowing through your view, aiming for the whole of Budapest.
If your journey takes you to Budapest, don’t just stop and take pictures. Walk slowly through the bastion. Feel the stone under your feet. Look into the distance. Maybe, just then, you’ll hear the quiet footsteps of the fishermen who once guarded the walls, or the echo of the old bell from the tower, calling for memory to never die.


Every photo was taken by me with Canon PowerShot A2400

I hope you enjoyed reading and looking at the photos. I enjoyed making this blog, I hope you did too. Until next time, "Regards!"
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