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Budapest Puppet Theatre

Puppet theatersPuppetry in HungaryTheatres in BudapestWikipedia references cleanup from February 2020
Listed Neo Renaissance palace. Former Art Gallery. Budapest District VI. Andrássy Ave 69
Listed Neo Renaissance palace. Former Art Gallery. Budapest District VI. Andrássy Ave 69

The Budapest Puppet Theater (Hungarian: Budapest Bábszínház) has been open since 1949, with its primary venue currently situated at 69 Andrássy út, Budapest. Since then, both children and adults are warmly welcome to their performances, because they have a motto that “the puppet is not the matter of age, but a genre.”

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Budapest Puppet Theatre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Budapest Puppet Theatre
Andrássy út, Budapest Terézváros

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Wikipedia: Budapest Puppet TheatreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.50728 ° E 19.06694 °
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Address

Magyar Képzőművészeti Egyetem

Andrássy út 69-71
1062 Budapest, Terézváros
Hungary
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Phone number

call+3613421738

Website
mke.hu

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Listed Neo Renaissance palace. Former Art Gallery. Budapest District VI. Andrássy Ave 69
Listed Neo Renaissance palace. Former Art Gallery. Budapest District VI. Andrássy Ave 69
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Nearby Places

Kodály körönd
Kodály körönd

Kodály körönd is a circus in Budapest, Hungary, at the intersection of Andrássy Avenue and Felsőerdősor u., with beautifully painted old buildings and statues of four of Hungary's great heroes in each corner. It is also a station on the yellow M1 (Millennium Underground) line of the Budapest Metro. The four heroes are: György Szondy (1500–1552) - Hero against the Ottoman invasion who, on July 9, 1552, with his troops, stood his ground against Ali Pasha when those in neighboring castles fled. Miklós Zrínyi (1508–1566) - Defender of the Kingdom of Hungary against the Ottomans. Bálint Balassi (1554–1594) - Celebrated poet during the same war against the Ottomans, giving voice to love and honor. János Bottyán (1643–1709) – "Blind Bottyán" – popular name of Bottyán János, who fought against the Ottomans under the Habsburgs, liberating Buda, but who later became a general in the war of independence against the Habsburgs under Francis II Rákóczi, 1705. He is "blind" because he lost an eye while fighting the Ottomans.The four buildings on the square form a full circle, with Andrássy út and Szinyei Merse utca intersecting in the middle. There are no turns at the intersection, but one can use a surrounding rotary instead, and the heroes are in each pie-quarter cut out by the intersection and the rotary. The circus was named Körönd (circus) from the 1890s, Hitler Adolf tér (Adolf Hitler square) from 1938, renamed Körönd in 1945, then, in 1971, named after Zoltán Kodály who once lived in one of the buildings there. Körönd and its renaming in the 1930s play a central role in Vilmos Kondor's 2012 novel Budapest Noir.