Budapest: One City Two Names

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
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    SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
    Compound Nouns: grammar.yourdi...
    Compound Noun Examples: www.turtlediar...
    Budapest Population & Size: worldpopulation...
    Facts About Budapest: visitbudapest.t...
    Budapest On Etymonline: www.etymonline...
    Facts About The Danube: justfunfacts.co...
    The Name Of The Danube: www.danube-rive...
    Aquincum: www.aviewoncit...
    Buda Or Pest?: theculturetrip...
    Buda Vs Pest: edition.cnn.co...
    Buda: en.wikipedia.o...
    Pest: en.wikipedia.o...
    Where The names Buda & Pest Come From: findery.com/mi...
    House Of Habsburg: www.britannica...
    Budapest - A Quick History: free-budapest-...

Комментарии • 447

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  4 года назад +119

    If you live in the city (or have visited it) which do you prefer? Buda or Pest?

    • @Murgablodazor69
      @Murgablodazor69 4 года назад +10

      I dont like to go there, because the traffic is bad

    • @mellow1821
      @mellow1821 4 года назад +14

      I like Pest more because of the festivals and stuff like that, but Buda is a great place for families to visit!

    • @Bourbon7.62
      @Bourbon7.62 4 года назад +22

      Buda definitly, its much calmer and in my opinion, nicer

    • @XmartiHUNx
      @XmartiHUNx 4 года назад +21

      All people I know just call it 'Pest for short when referring to the capital. Also gotta love whenever it's mixed with Bucharest.

    • @worldofgreenhell
      @worldofgreenhell 4 года назад

      Buda

  • @punkodie
    @punkodie 4 года назад +447

    As a Hungarian, can I just correct all of you foreigners saying Budapest with an english S sound, and tell you it is actually BudapeSHt with an English SH sound? :)

    • @sohopedeco
      @sohopedeco 4 года назад +36

      So, like the Portuguese and people from Rio intuitively speak. Hahaha

    • @jenniferharrell7818
      @jenniferharrell7818 4 года назад +10

      Thank u, I'd have never known otherwise.

    • @ФилипКовачевић-н9и
      @ФилипКовачевић-н9и 4 года назад +8

      Like it is in Serbian

    • @rommul1389
      @rommul1389 4 года назад +21

      I love in Subotica (szabadka) in Serbia on the Hungarian border in Serbia we call Budapest "budimpešta" (budimpeshta)

    • @rommul1389
      @rommul1389 4 года назад +3

      Live*

  • @lauraoe3974
    @lauraoe3974 4 года назад +33

    I can 100% recommend visiting Budapest, the nightlife, the history, the baths, the people I absolutely fell in love with the city

  • @olayo53
    @olayo53 4 года назад +59

    Bruh when he split the words apart I read it as newsrail and paperroad even

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 4 года назад +181

    The name of Pest is actually pronounced Pesht.

    • @gayvideos3808
      @gayvideos3808 4 года назад +4

      In english it's [pɛst]

    • @q2yogurt
      @q2yogurt 4 года назад +7

      @@gayvideos3808 So it's... wrong.

    • @Joe-ok8ql
      @Joe-ok8ql 4 года назад +8

      @@q2yogurt Hardly. You wouldn't go around telling the French that it's Deutschland and not Allemagne or telling Anglophones that it's München and not Munich.

    • @RRansomSmith
      @RRansomSmith 4 года назад +1

      @@Joe-ok8ql spelling doesn't change with those

    • @Joe-ok8ql
      @Joe-ok8ql 4 года назад

      @@RRansomSmith Spelling doesn't change with what?

  • @bigfoottim446
    @bigfoottim446 4 года назад +9

    My mum was raised in Hungary in Budapest and she was actually a worker on the childrens railway and when we visited and went on the train she kept pointing out strange things that I wouldn’t have even noticed Just thought that was quite cool

  • @HUNVilly
    @HUNVilly 4 года назад +13

    Message me when you visit, dude! - A fan from Hungary
    In the 19th century it was often referred as Pest-Buda, but had they kept that name, "Pest" would have been written over Buda and vice versa on the map.

    • @abradolflincler726
      @abradolflincler726 4 года назад +1

      Budapest etymology actually comes from the Romanian slang word for toilet (Budă) and the English word pest. So yes, it means a pest infested Budă.

    • @liltinglullaby3282
      @liltinglullaby3282 3 года назад

      @@abradolflincler726 And Bukarest comes from Hungarian word bukni, which means to fail, so yeah, Bucharest really means the capital of a failed nation.

  • @matecsikos6181
    @matecsikos6181 4 года назад +49

    As a hungarian I always wondered what Pest could mean. But for Buda, theres a myth, that I always adored!
    In short, it goes like this: Buda was the older brother of Attila the Hun, with whom Buda had some family issues, and in the end, the brothers settled it in the old way. But, as Attila was quite remorseful, he named Buda after his dead brother.

    • @MrDoobla
      @MrDoobla 4 года назад +2

      Moon Man that would be a nice story but there is 1000 year gap between the city being founded and Atillia the Hun

    • @misaka3468
      @misaka3468 4 года назад +3

      His name was Beda and he was real

    • @attilaedem101
      @attilaedem101 4 года назад +3

      @@MrDoobla Yeah, but when the magyars came into the Carpathian Basin the europeans thought we have (and maybe we have, or maybe not) some kind of relationship with the huns and Attila the Hun - thats why we are called HUNgarians in english (but to be fair: germans call us "ungarn", not hungarian, so it can be different from language to language). One of our first chronicle, the "Gesta Hungarorum" - aka. the Deeds of the Hungarians (or something like that) even try to strenghten this theory (and try to connect the house Árpád's bloodline with Attila himself) - the Gesta Hungarorum writen somewhere between the 12-13th century - in the exact same period when Buda castle was built. Furhtermore, Buda was under the hungarian king direct control, it was built in he's own field (so it was not controlled by a vassal or other noble's) - which can easily mean the king named the castle to propagate the Árpád's relation with Attila and the Huns.

    • @sskspartan
      @sskspartan 4 года назад

      @@attilaedem101 Dumbass, Ungarn is the same as Hungary, who cares the H is silent, it often is in many languages

    • @Tytoalba777
      @Tytoalba777 4 года назад +1

      @@attilaedem101 The term you're looking for here is "Convergent Etymology." Ungarn comes from an older term for the Hungarians (I believe is meant "confederation" or something like that), and when these horse-riding nomads from the steppe came in and settled the same region the Huns encamped, it wasn't hard to note the similarities, even when purely coincidental. It's probably partially why the H was added to Ungarn, because of the association with Huns (also Latin translation rules)

  • @heinolvendahl8167
    @heinolvendahl8167 4 года назад +50

    I've heard that Pest should come from the hot springs like in that part of town

    • @abradolflincler726
      @abradolflincler726 4 года назад +1

      Budapest etymology actually comes from the Romanian slang word for toilet (Budă) and the English word pest. So yes, it means a pest infested Budă.

    • @tamaszlav
      @tamaszlav 4 года назад +5

      @@abradolflincler726 Makes sense how Romanians think of toilet when they are in Buda, being the shits they are.

    • @liltinglullaby3282
      @liltinglullaby3282 4 года назад +1

      @@abradolflincler726 so this is why you feel home when you are in Budapest, because you are just a little turd.

  • @earicsohtun7202
    @earicsohtun7202 4 года назад +14

    Buda-from water
    Pest-from fire (furnace etc)
    Budapest-The City of Water and Fire 🤯
    (I’m not from Budapest or Hungary)

  • @marcc375
    @marcc375 4 года назад +5

    Széchenyi actually wrote that when he was coming up with the name for this new city he eventually narrowed down to Budapest and Pestbuda. He states that the reasons for choosing the first one are the following: Pestbuda would have a collision of consonants in the middle making it difficult to pronounce. If Pestbuda would have been written on a north-south map it would have been exactly the other way around as the old cities, Buda being on the left side, coming first, and Pest on the right side, coming second. He came up with interesting ideas actually, some of them are:"Buda is, Pest is" - loosely translates to "Buda as well as Pest". The problem with this was that the word Pestis is actually the name of the black death in hungarian so he gave up this idea. Another one was "Honderű". This means something like "brightness of the motherland". He actually setlled for this solution at first but somebody let him know that in french it would mean honte (shame) rues (streets). So he finally decided that Budapest would be the best name. Guess he was right.

  • @brodaclop
    @brodaclop 4 года назад +2

    Budapest is objectively easier to pronounce than Pest-Buda, as it doesn't contain a three consonant pile-up.
    Also, if you're wondering why nobody had built a (permanent) bridge before the 19th century, the river is pretty wide. Lánchíd is AFAIK currently the second shortest bridge in Budapest, and it's still longer than Waterloo Bridge, the longest in London.
    Before that there had of course been temporary pontoon bridges and ferries, but sometimes in the winter they had to stop using them because of the ice. However, if the ice sheet became thick enough, they'd use it as ice bridges.

  • @victoria.12.03.
    @victoria.12.03. 4 года назад +3

    It is my birthday, and I live in Budapest. How awesome is that! 😊

    • @Radek494
      @Radek494 4 года назад +3

      Happy Birthday! You are so lucky because Budapest is beautiful. Greetings from Poland!

  • @WUStLBear82
    @WUStLBear82 4 года назад +4

    If you read older books and papers, at least in English, pre-WWII and especially 19th-century, the united city was often explicitly hyphenated Buda-Pest, which is how I realized that it was originally two cities. As time went on this became less frequent; it may have been a style guide issue where some newspapers continued an increasingly archaic usage while others updated to newer practice. Certainly the earlier Pest-Buda is an easier construction in English when the hyphen is included.

  • @worldofgreenhell
    @worldofgreenhell 4 года назад +46

    Buda (408? - 445) is the name of the brother of Attila the hun. The city have its name after him, according to chronicles.
    The Pest theory is more likely accurate.
    Also I know these are different languages, but Pest you pronounce "pesht".

    • @cesarperezargota
      @cesarperezargota 4 года назад +4

      erriynx You really find that ambiguous?

    • @macaroon_nuggets8008
      @macaroon_nuggets8008 4 года назад +1

      @erriynx pronunce the S with an SH sound. SH as in SHould.

    • @novvain495
      @novvain495 4 года назад

      @erriynx I'm sure they mean as in [pɛʃt],as Hungarian only has post-alveolar fricatives,no alveolo-palatals nor reteoflex sibilants,even though it has [ɲ c ɟ ʎ] as well.

    • @cesarperezargota
      @cesarperezargota 4 года назад

      @erriynx I'm pretty sure he wasn't directing his comment at little kids.

    • @cesarperezargota
      @cesarperezargota 4 года назад

      erriynx I can *guarantee* you that if a preschool teacher used an IPA chart to teach their students, no student would learn a single thing.

  • @ActualGoatUnicorn
    @ActualGoatUnicorn 4 года назад +134

    Imagine a Buddhist first hearing about 'Pestbuda', their beloved god turned into a symbol of disease

    • @hailgiratinathetruegod7564
      @hailgiratinathetruegod7564 4 года назад +11

      Not God, weird dude ignoring death, while doing literally nothing under trees.

    • @Anton-V
      @Anton-V 4 года назад +13

      @@hailgiratinathetruegod7564 not a god in theory, but some buddhist treat him like that, which I think is sad, it's supposed to be a godless religion yet they had to have one

    • @Minecraftassasin77
      @Minecraftassasin77 4 года назад +14

      Alfonso Estrada Actually Buddhist do not treat Buddha as if he is a god, yes we do pray to him but we do not still see him as a god. He is a normal human being and his teaching is about trying to escape suffering, not entirely ignoring it. The teaching is to accept that there is suffering and death, So make the best of your life and find inner piece. Of course I’m not trying to convert anyone here, just informing you what it is. There’s actually more to then what I said but that’s the best I can say in a RUclips comment haha.

    • @ok-op8lg
      @ok-op8lg 4 года назад +1

      they wouldnt, because its pronounce peshtbuda

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 4 года назад

      @@Minecraftassasin77 you need Jesus. He is the only way. you dont need balance, you need complete light. just a little bit of darkness and youll end up in hell.

  • @krepper710
    @krepper710 4 года назад +9

    Óbuda was pretty much the "successor" to Aquincum, it just grew much larger.

  • @StarlightNightflame
    @StarlightNightflame 4 года назад +2

    I've been there a couple of times and I loved it. Definitely recommend anyone that hasn't to go visit. I personally liked the museum at the castle on the Buda side most of all, but there are also a lot of cool things on the Pest side like the huge marketplace and of course many restaurants etc. Also, visiting those roman ruins mentioned in the video is a definite treat.

  • @mellow1821
    @mellow1821 4 года назад +14

    I'm a simple person, I see Name Explain/Hungary and I click

  • @Sandra.Molchanova
    @Sandra.Molchanova 4 года назад +31

    I kind of hoped you'd mention other two-part place names too, like Jerusalem (Ierus + Salem)... oh well, maybe next time

    • @johnjosephaldecoa6282
      @johnjosephaldecoa6282 4 года назад +2

      Александра Молчанова yeah! Manila is actually called May + Nilad = Manila 😊

    • @rateeightx
      @rateeightx 4 года назад

      Ierus Salem Means "Abode Of Peace", Right?

    • @Sandra.Molchanova
      @Sandra.Molchanova 4 года назад

      @@rateeightx Dunno about the meaning, but that's where the name for Salem and its witches comes from 😁

    • @ZoltanHoppar
      @ZoltanHoppar 4 года назад

      Jerusalem is actually was the city of the scythians, and comes from Hierosolima....

    • @BertGrink
      @BertGrink 4 года назад

      Minneapolis-St.Paul

  • @dittrichszabolcs2011
    @dittrichszabolcs2011 4 года назад +6

    U have actually missed something that i didn't even know till' i had my final exam on the astro-hungarian-empire, The actuall city had been created around the "Milenium" (the 1000th anniversary of the conquest to controll the carpatia) And it was made up of THREE cities, Buda, Pest, and Óbuda! Óbuda is the old city that was if i remember correctly made by the romans for an easy way to get fresh water. And the other thing is that while in the 18 hundreds it was only that 3 cities, now it has basicaly eaten up more then 15 smaller towns, and it continues to grow

  • @Skyjy10
    @Skyjy10 4 года назад +4

    I have a Buda, I have a Pest.
    Ugh!!! Budapest!
    (sorry, I really want to do PPAP, anyway)

  • @peteroltyan465
    @peteroltyan465 4 года назад +2

    Hey, I live in Budapest and I worked at children's railway! It's awesome, you should wisit it!

  • @RyuuTenno
    @RyuuTenno 4 года назад +2

    You and I remember Budapest very differently.
    That's actually pretty cool hearing how it was originally 2 cities. Plus the bridge was pretty awesome too

    • @Siddif
      @Siddif 4 года назад +1

      I came to make this reference too but I knew someone would have beat me.

  • @Zoliqa
    @Zoliqa 4 года назад +2

    As someone who was born and lives in Budapest i can say that you did a good job.
    But only pest's inner city is the club region (few districts). The outer city is quiet.

  • @laci0298
    @laci0298 4 года назад

    Best wishes from Budapest!
    Thanks the video!

  • @martinschmiedt3075
    @martinschmiedt3075 4 года назад +1

    Hűvösvölgy is just one of many kids-themed train routes of the country
    The usual thing with these is to let the kids have a fun journey while going sightseeing around the rural or mountainous parts of Hungary on school trips.I remember fondly when we put the money together to it (a small fee of about 1-2000 forints per kid,which is about 4-8 dollars) and in the middle of winter we went up over there-everything covered in snow,it was so beautiful it sends me chills down my spine even now when i'm typing about it.

  • @mattihp
    @mattihp 4 года назад +3

    I've always heard the city was formed from three cities. óbuda(old Buda), Buda and Pest.

  • @csgy2037
    @csgy2037 4 года назад +12

    “Not many people choose to live on the Pest side” false. The nightclub part is a very small area and actually most people live in Pest since its at least twice the size of Buda.

    • @Debre.
      @Debre. 4 года назад +1

      Yup, once you look beyond the "Körút" Pest becomes a lot duller.

    • @khymaaren
      @khymaaren 4 года назад +3

      Well, if you want to debate semantics: I bet that many people living on the Pest side would gladly "choose" to move to Buda. They just can't afford it. generally speaking.

    • @sodapop83
      @sodapop83 4 года назад

      @@Debre. speak for yourself only

  • @aniseedus
    @aniseedus 4 года назад +2

    Visited Budapest this summer and it's my favourite city in central Europe. Gorgeous and pocket friendly. As a tourist it's difficult to see difference between Buda and Pest in a few days though.

  • @mariesabolova2360
    @mariesabolova2360 4 года назад +4

    I was there like a month ago and I think Budapest is beautiful when Buda and Pest are together and it would be sad if not. I really recommend visiting this wonderful city. But that languague, let's say it's...interesting.

  • @BMiklos
    @BMiklos 4 года назад +2

    I prefer Buda as I was born there, even my name is Budai (from Buda), it is much more beautiful and less dangerous, but it's a beautiful city. And it isn't called Óbudapest because that would mean Old Budapest. Nice video, although the s is pronounced as an š sound (ш in Cyrillic)

    • @ynntari2775
      @ynntari2775 4 года назад

      Another reason to confuse it with Bucarești, great

  • @a.balazs4413
    @a.balazs4413 4 года назад +1

    Yay, you did a video about Hunagry 🇭🇺! Your content is great, keep it up.

  • @peterkaposvari7627
    @peterkaposvari7627 4 года назад +1

    If you are in Budapest you should visit the castle of Buda, the parliament, the Danube river, Margit island

  • @alexhaynes7983
    @alexhaynes7983 4 года назад

    I love this channel because it makes me think of names in a whole entire new perspective. Keep up the good work!

  • @decorn2542
    @decorn2542 4 года назад +1

    According to some theories, Slavs used to burn chalk or some other material on the east side of the Danube to process it and that is why it comes from the word furnace.

  • @patrikszabo7966
    @patrikszabo7966 4 года назад +1

    9:38 as to why the name Budapest championed over Pest-Buda, the reason is probably the conventional way of drawing maps where the west is to the left and the east is to the right. So of course Buda will be on the left and Pest on the right. It would create confusion to label the map as Pest-Buda with Pest writen over Buda and Buda over Pest.

  • @fixnoamoi
    @fixnoamoi 4 года назад

    Another interesting factoid is that the German (Austrian) name for Buda is actually "Ofen", which is German for "oven". According to Wikipedia that name was originally used für Pest (which makes more sense), but was later carried over to the other side of the Danube during the evacuation of the people in Pest in 1241.

  • @fuguwatt
    @fuguwatt 4 года назад +5

    A lot of people here in Hungary will say they are going "pestre", so "to pest" and omit the Buda part of the word, I don't know for what reasons but it seems like that is the vernacular, even if the cities are joined!

    • @Heizler
      @Heizler 4 года назад +1

      Yes, that's true. Many Hungarians living in other cities refer to the whole capital city as Pest. One reason of that might be that most of the time they come to the Pest side of the city, which is bigger and there are more stuff to do and there are more flats to rent.

    • @gergelygalvacsy2251
      @gergelygalvacsy2251 4 года назад +1

      Yes, generally speaking, only BP citizens make a distinction when mentioning the two halves of the city. For Hungarians outside, the whole city is often referred to as just “Pest”.

    • @abradolflincler726
      @abradolflincler726 4 года назад

      Budapest etymology actually comes from the Romanian slang word for toilet (Budă) and the English word pest. So yes, it means a pest infested Budă.

  • @HUNdAntae
    @HUNdAntae 4 года назад +2

    1. Béla is not Buda. Both are ancient male names and not related at all. Buda was the brother of King Atilla, and it is said that he established a town in the area along with a necropolis in the nearby Pilis-mountains. And so Buda is the city of Buda (as opposed to the city of Atilla whichwas supposedly somewhere on the Hungarian Plains close to the Tisza river).
    2. Aquincum is literally under/near Óbuda.
    3. The Hungarian language doesn't like consonant clusters (as opposed to slavic languages), which is why the original name Pest-Buda was flipped around: it obeys the v-c-v-c rhythm of the language.
    Trust me, im born-and-bread Budapestian 😉

  • @TexasGI47life
    @TexasGI47life 4 года назад

    5:41 Ever heard of Buda, Texas? According to the Buda tourism website, In 1887, at the request of the post office department, the name of the town was changed to Buda. The common explanation for the new name is that it derives from Spanish word viuda, which translates to widow. The town had gained a reputation as a popular eating and rest stop for rail travelers.The growing town is just south of Austin, the capital of Texas.

  • @X1ma_
    @X1ma_ 4 года назад +6

    2:18 there is actually one in my hometown of Tyumen in Siberia

  • @smith2354
    @smith2354 4 года назад +2

    My favorite compound word is Breakfast, never really thought of it as "breaking" a "fast"

    • @mazajee
      @mazajee 4 года назад

      oHHHHHHH dude that's cool I never knew that

  • @conorallan8251
    @conorallan8251 4 года назад +1

    Although your pronunciation was wrong for BudapeSHt I am glad to see ‘Obuda mentioned as it appears not many people know this was it’s own city at one point

  • @kulloslaszlo9978
    @kulloslaszlo9978 10 месяцев назад

    The name Buda denoted a settlement built on the site of Aquincum in the early Árpád period, which was only referred to as Óbuda after the Tatar invasion, after the construction of Buda Castle (Újbuda). Our medieval chronicles tell us

  • @Bartaaron04
    @Bartaaron04 4 года назад +2

    Yay, you made a video of my home city, thank you 😍😍😍
    Edit: also included a photo of my favourite nightclub 😂😂😂😂

    • @lydiahitch9408
      @lydiahitch9408 4 года назад

      Áron Barta my favourite is instant

    • @Bartaaron04
      @Bartaaron04 4 года назад

      Lydia Hitch I think that’s the one at 4:48 on the right, it’s my favourite too

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 4 года назад +6

    I miss the red star on the Hungarian Parliament

  • @DanTheCaptain
    @DanTheCaptain 4 года назад

    The Children's Railway (Gyermekvasút) was established during the soviet occupation of Hungary and was set up to help the children of the time to do an adults job. The Children's Railway is the worlds longest and most well kept and established children's Railway in the world. It is run much like scouts and every position besides the train driver's and mechanics are children from the age of 10-14. They are supervised by adults, are trained and live in housing on and off for a period of the year.
    It's a fun little day trip you can do as it brings you around the forested hills of Buda and is accessible by Budapest's amazing public transport. There are also tonnes of hiking trails and look out point and parks, and even castle ruins.

  • @markgarcia8253
    @markgarcia8253 4 года назад +1

    I visited in the Spring and I stayed next to St Matthias’ Cathedral in the Buda side. So much more cozy and relaxing than Pest but Pest has more important sites of the Cities

  • @gyorokpeter
    @gyorokpeter 4 года назад +1

    I see what you did with the reference to George Ezra.
    While I live in London now I still have my home in Budapest, it's in Buda but in the flat section (the university area). I don't have a preference between the two sides, although I prefer the flat areas so I don't get tired from walking. Also there should always be trams in sight.

  • @sandernista6499
    @sandernista6499 4 года назад +1

    The best city in Europe (probably not to live, but to visit), affordable and great architecture. 😌

  • @Pouya-
    @Pouya- 4 года назад

    I miss this city, full of memories. Szerelték Budapest.

  • @WaterShowsProd
    @WaterShowsProd 4 года назад +2

    Everyday is a compound word that’s an adjective. Though every day I see people make the everyday mistake of using “everyday” instead of “every day”.

    • @sphynx7242
      @sphynx7242 4 года назад

      native speakers never make mistakes
      if they make a mistake they don't

  • @almerindaromeira8352
    @almerindaromeira8352 4 года назад

    If you are reading it on a map from left to right, you will see two very close cities: buda and pest. When they united I'm sure they were already used to saying Budapest instead of pestbuda

  • @alonk1060
    @alonk1060 4 года назад +1

    The name order probably has to do with the names positioning on the map. Buda is left of Pest so it would look like Budapest.

  • @adrienplazas554
    @adrienplazas554 4 года назад +3

    A whooole new wooord~

  • @szilveszterdravai8990
    @szilveszterdravai8990 4 года назад +1

    Buda is actually older than Pest, Buda was a fortress in the border of the roman empire and Pest started of as the living quarters for the defenders families. Buda is also on a big hill, but Pest really flat.

    • @JohnDoe-be5td
      @JohnDoe-be5td 4 года назад

      Buda was not a fortress in the roman empire. The place you are talking about is Aquincum (i hope i spelt that right) wich is located in modern day Óbuda wich as he stated was historically a different city form Buda

  • @ZoltanHoppar
    @ZoltanHoppar 4 года назад +1

    Old hungarian language was more related to turki languages, and "Buda" in those languages are meaning mountain, and "pest" is flat ground...and if you see the two sides, you gonna agree with. NO slavic related names "oven". Also actually Budapest is 3 city instead of 2. The old district called Óbuda, Pest, and Buda. First two district were unified, but Pest was the heart of the city - that's why Pest-Buda happened, and then after the Budapest name. Similarly the name of our lake Balaton comes from an old name Bolatin - what is translated as big water....and this has been confirmed inside the Tihany abbey papers....

    • @tamaszlav
      @tamaszlav 4 года назад

      There is no such thing as old Hungarian language, there is only 1 Hungarian language, which was related to, is related now, and a 1000 years ago will be related to Uralic languages. And no, there is not one Turkic language, where Buda means mountain, and Pest means flat terrain. See how easy is to refute idiots like you?

    • @ZoltanHoppar
      @ZoltanHoppar 4 года назад

      @@tamaszlav Gratulálok a hozzászólásodhoz, ha lenne rálátásod, akkor nem a bebiflázott könyveid fújnád, és ismernéd a történelmet, ami Volga Bulgáriáig vezetett. Úgy válaszolsz, mintha a magyar nyelvnek nem lett volna evolúciója, és a nyelvújjítással nem próbálkoztak volna a miénket is szétverni. Esetleg ha gondolod, vannak régi irataim, amiben a magyar nyelv kicsit másképp néz ki, mint amit tanítanak, ha pedig nem lenne elég, akkor elmondom neked a többit is, ha normálisan tudsz társalogni. Rajtad áll, hogy megkérdezed, vagy fröcsögsz tovább, és csak annyit írsz hogy milyen könnyű cáfolni....

  • @gergelygalvacsy2251
    @gergelygalvacsy2251 4 года назад +1

    I believe Pest-Buda was dropped because the consonant-cluster in the middle of the word is icky to pronounce.

  • @baganatube
    @baganatube 4 года назад +4

    "I'm Budda, this is Pest". Where did I remember this line from? _The Expendables_ ?

  • @peterbaan9671
    @peterbaan9671 4 года назад

    Well, I think you got a couple things wrong here..
    Buda is smaller both in size and population compared to Pest, so it can't really be a residential area... It's a posh area, that's all, it also have it's fair share of night clubs and pubs. Pest is also not filled with night clubs, they are mostly in the inner city, so people can and will raise their children in Pest :)
    The thing about the naming, Buda, according to the chronicles, named after Attila's brother. At least that's what they teach at school. Sure it could get it's name from voda and the monks just retconned Attila into the story, but still, I think it's worth mentioning.
    About the establishment of the two cities. Buda and Pest are almost the same age, both places were inhabited as far as we know from the Roman era continously. Also both places had stone-age remains in the ground. So Buda wasn't just placed there in the 13th century. When the castle was built, it was called New-Buda and Acuinqum was became Old-Buda.
    Also, Budapest was originally Buda-Pest and before that, it was referred to as Pest-Buda before the official unification. The name is Budapest now, because otherwise it wouldn't sound really Hungarian, because of consonant congestion.

  • @Heizler
    @Heizler 4 года назад

    Once a turist asked me where is the Buddha Bar. And I answered her that I don't know the place but I guess you should cross the river because this is Pest side.

  • @DanyMcDonald
    @DanyMcDonald 4 года назад

    Population of Budapest decreased since its peak in the 80s because in the 90s people started moving out of the city to the suburbs. Greater Budapest today has about 0.5 million more residents than it had in 1989. Technically the number of people living in the city of Budapest is unlikely to grow higher than the current approx. 1.8 million any time soon, however Greater Budapest has been growing rapidly for decades.

  • @oliverracz8092
    @oliverracz8092 4 года назад

    I was born in Pest but raised and now live in Buda. For me Bp is the city B is my part P is where my granny lived. People from other parts of the country call the city shortly as Pest though. So when I went to university I made friends from the country who asked me if I was from Pest. I answered, No Im from Buda. Then I got odd looks and lectures how arrogant and snobbish this answer was. :D

  • @kapilbusawah7169
    @kapilbusawah7169 4 года назад +2

    7:02 I'll tell you. Because it was lit back then too 🔥🔥🔥
    12th century party!!!

  • @RichO1701e
    @RichO1701e 4 года назад

    James May of Top Gear fame, 1st told me about Buda-pest being a compound name.
    Name Explain expounded on that information, well done!

  • @risannd
    @risannd 4 года назад

    Combining city names has ever happened in Indonesia. It's the capital city of Lampung Province.
    It originally consists of two cities, "Teluk Betung", which facing the bay (teluk means "bay" in Indonesian), and "Tanjung Karang", just north of Teluk Betung. When this two cities combined, they took the name..
    "Tanjungkarang-Telukbetung", combined, with a hyphen in the middle.
    Then the government realized it's a bad idea and renamed the city to "Bandar Lampung".
    Back to Budapest, how one city means water and one means fire, creates unique balance. Hope can go there someday.

  • @namenamename390
    @namenamename390 4 года назад +2

    4:09 you say you're naming the countries the danube flows through from east to west and then proceed to name them from west to east.

  • @danielcheetham6710
    @danielcheetham6710 4 года назад +1

    I've been to Budapest but wasn't in the city for long I was only there for sziget festival so wasn't even in the main bit of the city except for a day before the festival

  • @JurassicLion2049
    @JurassicLion2049 4 года назад +1

    Man what are the odds Name Explain would post this the same day as the Black Widow trailer?

  • @jesseberg3271
    @jesseberg3271 4 года назад +1

    I certainly assumed it meant something like, "City of the Buddha" the first time I heard it referred to. It's funny, now, knowing that it's a European city, but it made sense at the time.

  • @eemelisaurila9940
    @eemelisaurila9940 4 года назад

    I like to think it was called budapest simply because buda is on the left and pest is on the right side(on a map) so even older maps could be used since the names of the cities would be in that order already

  • @theforgotten1213
    @theforgotten1213 4 года назад +3

    I go to school in Óbuda.

  • @New_Wave_Nancy
    @New_Wave_Nancy 4 года назад +1

    Funny, Windows 10 recently gave me a log in page with a photo from Budapest and a mention of it being a compound word.

  • @marcellkiss-redey8451
    @marcellkiss-redey8451 4 года назад +1

    8:36 There have been bridges before, but the Chain Bridge was the first permanent bridge.

  • @FoxBoi69
    @FoxBoi69 4 года назад +15

    we hear all this "it comes from an old latin/greek/whatever word meaning" but where do those old words come from?

    • @lucaventinove3151
      @lucaventinove3151 4 года назад +4

      If we take the "water theory" for Buda, then of course the word voda comes from Proto-Slavic. Pest seems to be an Hungarian word, so it has an Uralic origin, not related to Indo-european

    • @FoxBoi69
      @FoxBoi69 4 года назад +1

      @erriynx and where does that come from? xD

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 4 года назад

      from Proto-Indo-European, a language created by God as part of the scamble-up in Babel.

    • @rateeightx
      @rateeightx 4 года назад

      Sometimes PIE, Sometimes Other Languages, Sometimes Nowhere.

    • @rateeightx
      @rateeightx 4 года назад

      @erriynx Please Tell Me That's A Joke.

  • @gregorybrian
    @gregorybrian 4 года назад

    I have noticed quite a few people use the term “connected together.“ That is not correct grammar. It should simply be “connected.“ It’s not necessary to use the word “together“ because that is implied through the connection!

  • @BloodManticore24
    @BloodManticore24 4 года назад

    It is cool that possible meanings might be Water for Buda, and Fire for Pest. Is like a Pokemón Generation Game should take it as the next logic step after Sword and Shield

  • @marcellkiss-redey8451
    @marcellkiss-redey8451 4 года назад

    My guess is that Budapest was chosen over Pest-Buda because it didn't have the consonant cluster the latter had.

  • @BobbinMcferry
    @BobbinMcferry 4 года назад

    Park for free in the hills of Buda, walk past the pretty fort and spend the day in the best part of town, Pest.

  • @pauljones3017
    @pauljones3017 4 года назад +2

    Why does it sound so simillar to Bucharest (capital of Romania)? If there's a reason at all, of course.

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan 4 года назад +3

      Coincidence. This is particularly the case since Bucharest is an exonym. It s just the way english speakers call bucharest. it is NOT the actual name of the city, the actual name in romanian is Bucureşti.

    • @abrissimon914
      @abrissimon914 4 года назад +1

      It's kind of funny how the capitals of these nations who hate each other so much have so similarly sounding capitals. And no there's no connection between the names of thes two cities

  • @Benimation
    @Benimation 4 года назад +1

    It's probably a coincidence that the Black Widow trailer was just released..

  • @Nightey
    @Nightey 4 года назад

    Pest = furnace? The most logical explanation would be because of the hot springs. A place where water is naturally heated? A furnace.

  • @combrade-t
    @combrade-t 4 года назад +7

    I see i was "early" to a video for once.

  • @aggrobernd
    @aggrobernd 4 года назад +1

    7:35 THE HABSBURGS ARE NOT GERMAN, BUT AUSTRIAN! Sorry. Had to get that off my chest as a German. They led the Holy Roman Empire for a long time and after the Prussians won decisively at Königgratz in 1866 to win the German War (called "Deutsch-Deutscher Krieg" in Germany). The Hungarians were still quite unrestful because of stuff that happened after 1848 (try to get through any European states history without a revolution in 1848) and the execution of a Hungarian Prime Minister and 13 martyrs so they created the dual-monarchy of Austria-Hungary in 1867 as compensation.

    • @tamaszlav
      @tamaszlav 4 года назад

      Austrian is not an ethnicity, there are German, like the rest of you.

    • @aggrobernd
      @aggrobernd 4 года назад

      @@tamaszlav neither is german an ethnicity. German, like Austrian, Britain, American, French, are nationalities and cultures. You may say that there are many similarities between the perceived Austrian and German cultures but in fact, until 1871 there was no thing such as a unified centralized German state.

  • @ultrabot2122
    @ultrabot2122 4 года назад +1

    What about Innsbruck?

  • @michaelzheng5250
    @michaelzheng5250 4 года назад +1

    One should know this if they played any CK2 or EU4

  • @hwinangkoso
    @hwinangkoso 4 года назад

    i know this isn’t related to names, but the etymology of “spell” is quite odd for me, in german it is “Buchstabieren”, in french is “orthographier” (if goole translate is correct). Would you consider making a video on this?

  • @colleeneyre6588
    @colleeneyre6588 4 года назад

    I live in texas near two citys, one being named Bryan and the other College Station. They are right together and far from anything else and are often referred to as Bryan College Station, or sometimes BCS.

  • @dyingearth
    @dyingearth 4 года назад

    Steven Brust (an Hungarian American novelist) Phoenix Guards on Bengloarafurd:
    What followed was ten years of almost constant war between the Dragonlords of the Empire and the Easterners, during which the Easterners occupied the area and fought from the surrounding mountains. The Serioli, who departed the area to avoid any of the unfortunate incidents that war can produce, left only their name for the place, which was "Ben," meaning "ford" in their language. The Easterners called the place "Ben Ford," or, in the Eastern tongue, "Ben gazlo."
    After ten years of fierce battle, the Imperial Army won a great victory on the spot, driving the Easterners well back into the mountains. The Dragonlords who had found the place, then, began calling it "Bengazlo Ford." The Dragons, wishing to waste as little time on speech as possible, shortened this to Benglo Ford, or in the tongue of the Dragon, which was still in use at the time, "Benglo ara." Eventually, over the course of the millenia, the tongue of the Dragon fell out of use, and the Northwestern language gained preeminence, which rendered the location Bengloara Ford, which was eventually shortened to Bengloarafurd. The river crossing became the Bengloarafurd Ford, which name it held until after the Interregnum when the river was dredged and the Bengloarafurd Bridge was built. Should anyone be interested in finding this delightful city, it still stands, but the city was renamed Troe after the engineer who built the bridge, either because the citizens were proud of their new landmark, or because the engineer's name was short.

    • @heronimousbrapson863
      @heronimousbrapson863 4 года назад

      Even Tolkien couldn't tell an account as exciting as this one.

    • @dyingearth
      @dyingearth 4 года назад

      @@heronimousbrapson863 I think Brust did this as some of the Italian place that went through initial local name, Roman Republic/Empire Latin, and finally modern Italian. Each iteration of the name just assume the previous name have some special meaning.

  • @cipherhex3600
    @cipherhex3600 4 года назад +1

    Name Explain should have piggy backed off of the Black Widow trailer released, which heavily features Budapest. Ride that algorithm :D

  • @eeshsinger
    @eeshsinger 4 года назад +1

    I always thought that the name Budapest was named after buddha went to the land that's now Hungary and started a festival there and they named it buddha fest after buddha but buddha says let's change the spelling to Budapest insteaf

  • @fermintenava5911
    @fermintenava5911 4 года назад

    A lot of this remind me of Terry Pratchett's Ankh-Morpork - build-up from the river-related, peaceful and young Ankh and the old, impoverished and dirty Morpork with the exciting nightlife.

  • @Tytoalba777
    @Tytoalba777 4 года назад

    7:00 If I were to guess, it comes from the hot springs that the city of Budapest is well known for

  • @MarkFilipAnthony
    @MarkFilipAnthony 4 года назад +1

    You and I remember PastBuda quite differently

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl 4 года назад

    Hungary is so supportive of liberating young people.

  • @honybee3501
    @honybee3501 4 года назад

    ⭐🌟💫✨thanks for making informative video

  • @souljaryanboy
    @souljaryanboy 4 года назад +1

    Was hotdog a troll?

  • @maxrutc09
    @maxrutc09 4 года назад

    Budapest sounds better than Pestbuda because of which syllables are accented. Things roll of the tongue when they alternate accented and unaccented syllables, like in iambic pentameter.

  • @ynntari2775
    @ynntari2775 4 года назад

    Now I want to know about the one I always confuse with Budapest, Bucarești