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  1. Bratislava Castle (Slovak: Bratislavský hrad, IPA: [ˈbracislawskiː ˈɦrat] ⓘ; German: Pressburger Burg; Hungarian: Pozsonyi vár) is the main castle of Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia. The massive rectangular building with four corner towers stands on an isolated rocky hill of the Little Carpathians , directly above the Danube river ...

  2. Location of Bratislava within the Bratislava Region and within Slovakia Bratislava's highest point, Devínska Kobyla, part of the Little Carpathians mountain range. Bratislava, the capital city of Slovakia, is situated in Central Europe and it is located in the extreme south-west within Slovakia.

  3. Bratislava, city, capital of Slovakia. It lies in the extreme southwestern part of the country, along the Danube where that river has cut a gorge in the Little Carpathian Mountains near the meeting point of the frontiers of Slovakia, Austria, and Hungary. Vienna is 35 miles (56 km) west. Learn more about Bratislava.

  4. Bratislava je hlavným, najľudnatejším a rozlohou najväčším mestom Slovenska a sídlom Bratislavského samosprávneho kraja. Má rozlohu 367,584 km², žije tu 431-tisíc obyvateľov. Má rozlohu 367,584 km², žije tu 431-tisíc obyvateľov.

  5. The most populous district is Bratislava V with 121,259 inhabitants, followed by Bratislava II with 108,139, Bratislava IV with 93,058, Bratislava III with 61,418 and Bratislava I with 44,798. [2] The largest ethnic groups in 2001 were Slovaks with 391,767 inhabitants (91.37% of the city population), followed by Hungarians with 16,541 (3.84% ...

  6. Bratislava (německy Pressburg, maďarsky Pozsony, do roku 1919 slovensky Prešporok / Prešporek, do roku 1919 česky Prešpurk) je hlavní a největší město Slovenska, centrum Bratislavského kraje a historická metropole někdejších žup Prešpurské a Bratislavské. [2]

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › articlesBratislava - Wikiwand

    Bratislava is 57th largest city in the European Union and 19th-richest region of the European Union by GDP per capita. [10] GDP at purchasing power parity is about three times higher than in other Slovak regions. [11] [12] Bratislava receives around one million tourists every year, mostly from the Czech Republic, Germany, and Austria. [13]

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