The settlement was mentioned in 1396 as Suuenzad (Hedge Sew). In the early 1700s, settlers from Bavaria arrived in the village, which used to be entirely Hungarian. In 1946, the ethnic Germans - about 60 percent of the village's population - were resettled in Germany.
The church of St. John the Baptist was built in 1720 and is decorated in Baroque style. The Laendler mansion dates from around 1879.
On the outskirts of the settlement, archaeologists have found the remains of a Roman limes. Its first church, dedicated to Saint...
MoreLocated along the main road 86. The village has several "peasant baroque" houses, a small 19th century manor house and a...
MoreThe parish church of Saints Peter and Paul was built in the 12th century. Its lined doorway, built around 1230, is an...
MoreNemeskér is one of the centres of evangelicalism in Western Transdanubia. The village was declared an articular village in 1681,...
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