The settlement was already a fishing village in the Árpád era. Its inhabitants were fish transporters for the royal court of Moson. During the 11th century, King Solomon fled to the castle of Moson during the Wars of the Throne. There are many legends about the Salamon dűlő on the outskirts of the settlement. Halász received its charter of privilege from King Ferdinand I in 1550. In the 17th century its inhabitants converted to Protestantism. The Reformed pastor János Máté Samarjai was the bishop of the Dunamelléki diocese from 1622 to 1652. The church, dedicated to St. Martin after the Reconversion, was built in 1755 in late Baroque style with a frontal tower and a semicircular nave. Its high altar is decorated with a painting by Maulbertsch's disciples. In the centre of the composition, which depicts the miracles of Saint Martin in a painting, the bishop, seated in an episcopal ornate, gives a beggar a coin. The pulpit is carved in the Rococo style.
The village is a renowned place of pilgrimage. According to legend, Christian soldiers retreating from the Turks stopped to rest...
MoreThe first known document mentioning Himod dates back to 1408. In the Middle Ages Himod and the other settlements in the area...
MoreIt is a settlement in the Rába region famous for its woodcarvers. The Roman Catholic church of Bogyoszló, dedicated to Saints...
MoreThe St. Martin's Road runs along the northern edge of the village. The present village was formed by the merger of the villages...
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