Nyúl is a village of more than 400 inhabitants in the Pannonhalmi wine region, in the vicinity of Győr, in the Sokoró hills. The settlement has been inhabited since the Bronze Age, the earliest written records date back to the time of St. Stephen.
Above the settlement is one of Europe's largest rain-carved sandstone gorge valleys, 650 metres long, 40-60 metres wide and 20-30 metres deep in places.
The steep walls of the 'Szurdik' in the Nyúli tempted the people of the past to build cellars. Some of the sandstone cellars are hundreds of years old. In the cellars, the wines are aged in wooden barrels in an optimal climate.
The Mithraic Sanctuary or Mithraic Cave (Latin: Mithraeum) is a Roman monument in Győr-Moson-Sopron County, a former ritual site...
MoreThe late Baroque church dedicated to Saint Martin was built in 1777 by Archduchess Maria Cristina.
MoreIn 9 AD, the future emperor Tiberius conquered Pannonia, and a military camp and civilian settlement were established in the...
MoreComing from Tényő, we leave the village and the spring is on the right side of the forestry road. On the spring reservation is...
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