Gellért Hill
Gellért Hill is one of Budapest’s most iconic natural and historical landmarks, rising above the city and shaping the Danube panorama. At its summit stand the Citadella and the Liberty Statue, key elements of the Buda skyline.
The hill takes its name from Saint Gellért, who according to tradition was thrown to his death from its slopes in the 11th century. The site thus became part of the city’s historical memory at an early stage. The fortress built in the 1850s reflects the military presence after the defeat of the Hungarian War of Independence, while the Liberty Statue – erected in 1947 as a Soviet “liberation” memorial – later took on a broader, more universal meaning after the political changes.
The steep paths and promenades create a sequence of scenic viewpoints. From here, the panorama of Buda Castle, Parliament, inner Pest, and the Danube bridges unfolds. Gellért Hill is not only a popular hiking destination, but also a vantage point from which the structure of the city can be clearly understood.
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Rock Chapel on Gellért Hill #2445 -
Liberty Bridge in spring from Gellért Hill #1165 -
Tourists on Gellért Hill #4900 -
Statue of Liberty on an autumn morning #6508 -
Statue of a Girl with a Foal on Gellért Hill #4906 -
View from the Petőfi Bridge at sunset #1312 -
Gellért statue pagan and Budapest skyline #3590 -
At the foot of Gellért Hill in winter #2207 -
Evening view of Budapest from the Gellért Statue with drone #693 -
Snow-covered Gellért Hill with the Elizabeth Bridge #2222 -
Gellért Statue from Buda Castle #4809 -
Tram 2 on the snowy Dunakorzó #2227 -
Liberty Bridge from Gellért Hill in autumn #1171 -
Tourists on Gellért Hill #4895 -
Liberty Bridge from Gellért Hill #1134 -
At the foot of Gellért Hill in winter #2209 -
Sunset from the Castle District #3551 -
Elizabeth Bridge and the Gellért Statue Pagan #1102 -
Window of the rock chapel on Gellért Hill #2444 -
Gellért Hill in autumn #3506 -
Cross on Gellért Hill at sunrise #1385