Claudia and I were were supposed to go to Győr this weekend but she got the flu and was unable to go. It was too late to cancel the bus ticket and the hotel was already paid for so I called Pavel to see if he was up for a free, last-minute trip to Hungary. Luckily he was and we were off. It's almost four hours by Student Agency bus from Brno to Győr (pronounced jyeur).Győr is Hungary's 6th largest city and is half way between Vienna and Budapest. The town sits where the Mosoni-Danube, Rába and Rábca rivers meet up.
The city hall is easily the town's most recognizable building. It looks like a palace or something. The building has been used as the town hall since the 16th century.
Bésci Kapu Tér is one of the town's main historical squares. The primary attraction here is the 18th century Carmelite church, built between 1713 and 1725. It was modeled after the Carmelite church in Rome making it one of the few Italian Baroque examples found in Hungary.
The neo-Romanesque synagogue was built between 1868 and 1870. It is no longer a functioning synagogue. Today it is used as a municipal gallery.





