Vágújhely (Nové Mesto nad Váhom) Nové Mesto nad Váhom (German: Neustadt an der Waag, Neustadtl, Waag-Neustadtl, Waagneustadtl, Waag-Neustadt; Hungarian: Vágújhely, Vág-Újhely) is a town in the Trenčín Region of Slovakia.

Started by Private User on Friday, January 15, 2016
Problem with this page?

Participants:

  • Private User
    Geni member

Profiles Mentioned:

Showing all 5 posts
Private User
1/15/2016 at 7:47 AM

District town located at the northern edge of the Danubian Hills at the foothills of the northern end of the White Carpathians, on the Váh river. Other mountains nearby are the White Carpathians and the Považský Inovec. It is situated 27 km from Trenčín and 100 km from Bratislava and has a population of 21,629 (1996) with an area of 32.583 km². the Town parts: Mnešice, Izbice, Javorinaská, Hájovky, Samoty, Luka, Centrum, Rajková(northern city), Záhumenice.
Places of interest
This article is in a list format that may be better presented using prose. You can help by converting this article to prose, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (February 2010)

Zelená voda Lakes 1 km - watersports, windurfing, fishing, sports centre, camping area, disco and music festival place
Čachtice Castle 6 km - home of Elizabeth Báthory
Beckov Castle 5 km -
Tematin Castle 12 km
the most famous Slovak Spa town Piešťany 18 km
Trenčín 22 km
Veľká Javorina Mountain (SK-CZ border) 15 km
Ski Resort Kálnica 7 km
Ducové - the Great Moravian Empire settlement 16 km
Romanesque church in Haluzice 12 km

History

Lands in the place of today's Nové Mesto nad Váhom were inhabited in the prehistoric ages, as many artefacts from the Stone and Bronze Ages were discovered. In the local part Mnešice a prehistoric settlement was discovered.

The first written record about Nové Mesto nad Váhom was in 1263, when King Béla IV of Hungary granted freedoms for the loyalty during the Mongol invasions. It belonged to the Benedictine order, later to Matthew III Csák and others. It received its town privileges in 1550. Industry developed in the 19th century and was mainly focused at processing agricultural products.
Monuments

Fortified Roman-Reneissance-Baroque Church of Virgin Mary
Renaissance Vicariage Building
Renaissance church fortification
Renaissance-Baroque Ghillanys´ Palace (17th Century)
Renaissance Nadasdys´ Palace (16th Century)
Protestant Church (1787)
St. Ondrej Church (1643)
Baroque Chapel in Hurbanova St. (18th Century)
Baroque St. Rochus Chapel (18th Century)
Plague Memorial on the main square (1696)
St. Florian Statue (1762)

Demographics

According to the 2001 census, the town had 21,327 inhabitants. 98.1% of inhabitants were Slovaks, 1.1% Czechs 0.6% Roma.[1] The religious make-up was 56% Roman Catholics, 23.3% people with no religious affiliation, and 13.8% Lutherans.[1]
People

Stibor of Stiboricz (ca. 1348–1414) and his wife the Dutchess Dobrochna
the Duke Ctibor II.
David ben Menachem Mandel Deutsch (1760–1830), rabbi, Talmudist[2]
Ede Horn (de) (German: Eduard Horn), born Ignacz Einhorn (1825–1875), a Hungarian Jewish economist, politician
Leopold Donath (1845–1876), rabbi[3]
Salomon Stricker (1834–1898), Jewish pathologist[4]
Ernest Nagel (1901–1985), philosopher of science
Jela Špitková (born 1947); (de)
Anička Jurkovičová - the 1st Slovak actress
Jakub Haško
Ľudmila Podjavorinská
Peter Matejka - artist, painter
Markovič brothers - politicians
Dominik Štubňa Zámostský - novelist

Transportation

railway - the town lies on the most important trans-Slovak railway joining Bratislava and Kosice and the local railways branch joins Nové Mesto nad Váhom with Veselí na Moravě in the Czech Republic; EXPRESS TRAIN SERVICE from the train station - Bratislava-Kosice every 1-2h frequency, regional trains to Bratislava, Žilina, Veselí na Moravě aprx. 10 times a day
road - main motorway D1 Bratislava - Zilina, local roads to Piešťany Spa, Trenčín, Stará Turá, Strání (SK-CZ border)
public transport in the town - the blue local busses stop at all the stops in the town area; public transport bus service RED BUS line 1 (Hajovky-Centrum-Railway station/Bus station - Industrial zone/MILEX) and line 2 (Railway station/Bus station - Centrum - Mnešice)
buses - the blue local buses "SAD" join the town with all the villages in the Nove Mesto district; the bus station is just right at the train station about 10 mins walking from the town centre; long-haul bus services join the town with all the important towns is Slovakia and Czech Republic
airport - the nearest airport Piešťany Spa Airport (PZY); Bratislava M.R. Stefanik Airport (BTS) (100 km southwest, 55min. drive by motorway D1)
TAXI service - TAXI stand at Railway Station/Bus station; or on request by phone
Municipalities of Nové Mesto nad Váhom District

Nové Mesto nad Váhom Stará Turá

Beckov Bošáca Brunovce Bzince pod Javorinou Čachtice Častkovce Dolné Srnie Haluzice Horná Streda Hôrka nad Váhom Hrádok Hrachovište Kálnica Kočovce Lubina Lúka Modrová Modrovka Moravské Lieskové Nová Bošáca Nová Lehota Nová Ves nad Váhom Očkov Pobedim Podolie Potvorice Považany Stará Lehota Trenčianske Bohuslavice Vaďovce Višňové Zemianske Podhradie

Private User
1/15/2016 at 8:26 AM

Born in Vágújhely (Nové Mesto nad Váhom) Nové Mesto nad Váhom (German: Neustadt an der Waag, Neustadtl, Waag-Neustadtl, Waagneustadtl, Waag-Neustadt; Hungarian: Vágújhely, Vág-Újhely)

Ábrahám / Adolf Stricker
Jakab Gyula Stricker
Sándor Alexander Striker
Roza Rosenberg
Jakab Donáth

Private User
1/17/2016 at 12:05 PM
Private User
7/15/2016 at 9:37 AM
Private User
9/7/2016 at 12:29 PM

Adolf Baiersdorf de Erdős Adelstitel: 1884 ungarischer Adelsstand für Adolf Baiersdorf (mit »erdősi« oder »de/von Erdős«) (1826–1890), Holzindustrieller in Wien etc. und Gutsbesitzer in Sósd (bei Temesvár); 1907 Übertragung des Adelsstands auf Josef Richard (1875–1915) und Ferdinand Emanuel Baiersdorf (1880–1921), Cousins und Adoptivsöhne von Emil Baiersdorf de Erdős (1854–1924), Holzgroßhändler in Wien

Die Nachkommen des Adelserwerbers ließen sich teilweise katholisch taufen, so sein Sohn Emil (wohl um 1912, in welchem Jahr er aus dem Judentum austrat [1]). Die Familie gehörte zu den bedeutendsten Holzindustriellen Österreich-Ungarns.

Showing all 5 posts

Create a free account or login to participate in this discussion