Szekszárd
Szekszárd is a small city in southern Hungary and the capital of Tolna County. By population, Szekszárd is the smallest county capital in Hungary; by area, it is the second-smallest.| Tap on a place to explore it |
Photo: Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0.
- Type: City with 29,700 residents
- Description: city in Hungary and capital of Tolna county
- Also known as: “Szekszard”
Places of Interest
Highlights include Wosinsky Mór County Museum and Inner City Parish Church in Szekszárd.
Szekszárd
- Categories: town in Hungary, city with county rights, and locality
- Location: Tolna County, Southern Transdanubia, Hungary, Central Europe, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
46.3485° or 46° 20′ 55″ northLongitude
18.7017° or 18° 42′ 6″ eastPopulation
29,700Elevation
87 metres (285 feet)United Nations Location Code
HU SZKOpen location code
8FRW8PX2+9MOpenStreetMap ID
node 25553427OpenStreetMap feature
place=city
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Szekszárd from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Arabic to Western Panjabi—“Szekszárd” goes by many names.
- Arabic: “سكسارد”
- Armenian: “Սեկսարդ”
- Azerbaijani: “Seksard”
- Basque: “Szekszárd”
- Belarusian: “Сексард”
- Belarusian: “Сэксард”
- Bengali: “শেকজাদ”
- Bulgarian: “Сексард”
- Catalan: “Szekszárd”
- Cebuano: “Szekszárd”
- Chechen: “Сексард”
- Chinese: “Szekszárd”
- Chinese: “塞克萨德”
- Chinese: “塞克薩德”
- Croatian: “Seksar”
- Croatian: “Szekszárd”
- Czech: “Szekszárd”
- Danish: “Szekszárd”
- Dutch: “Szekszard”
- Dutch: “Szekszárd”
- Esperanto: “Szekszárd”
- Estonian: “Szekszard”
- Estonian: “Szekszárd”
- Finnish: “Szekszárd”
- French: “Szekszard”
- French: “Szekszárd”
- Galician: “Szekszárd”
- German: “Sechsard”
- German: “Sechshard”
- German: “Szekszard”
- German: “Szekszárd”
- Greek: “Σέξαρντ (Σέκσαρντ)”
- Gujarati: “જ઼ેક્સર્ડ”
- Hebrew: “סקסארד”
- Hindi: “सज़एक्सजार्ड”
- Hungarian: “Szegszárd”
- Hungarian: “Szegzárd”
- Hungarian: “Szekszárd”
- Hungarian: “Szexárd”
- Indonesian: “Szekszárd”
- Irish: “Szekszárd”
- Italian: “Szekszárd”
- Japanese: “セクサールド”
- Japanese: “セクサルド”
- Kannada: “ಝೆಕ್ಸ್ಕ್ಸ್ಝರ್ಡ್”
- Korean: “섹사르드”
- Latvian: “Seksārda”
- Lithuanian: “Seksardas”
- Lithuanian: “Szekszárd”
- Lombard: “Szekszárd”
- Lower Sorbian: “Szekszárd”
- Macedo-Romanian: “Szekszárd”
- Macedonian: “Сексард”
- Malay: “Szekszard”
- Malay: “Szekszárd”
- Marathi: “झेकसर्ड”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Szekszárd”
- Mingrelian: “სექსარდი”
- Moksha: “Сэксард”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Szekszárd”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Szekszard”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Szekszárd”
- Norwegian: “Szekszárd”
- Ossetian: “Сексард”
- Ottoman Turkish (1500-1928): “Seksar”
- Persian: “ساکسارد”
- Persian: “سکسارد”
- Polish: “Szekszard”
- Polish: “Szekszárd”
- Portuguese: “Szekszard”
- Portuguese: “Szekszárd”
- Quechua: “Szekszárd”
- Romanian: “Szekszard”
- Romanian: “Szekszárd”
- Russian: “Сексард”
- Scots: “Szekszárd”
- Serbian: “Seksard”
- Serbian: “Szekszárd”
- Serbian: “Сексард”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Szekszárd”
- Sinhala: “සෙක්සාර්ඩ්”
- Slovak: “Szekszárd”
- Slovenian: “Szekszárd”
- Spanish: “Szekszard”
- Spanish: “Szekszárd”
- Swahili: “Szekszárd”
- Swedish: “Szekszard”
- Swedish: “Szekszárd”
- Tamil: “ஸிக்ஸ்ர்டு”
- Telugu: “సెక్జార్డ్”
- Turkish: “Szekszárd”
- Ukrainian: “Сексард”
- Urdu: “زیکسارڈ”
- Veps: “Seksard”
- Vietnamese: “Szekszárd”
- Volapük: “Szekszárd”
- Waray (Philippines): “Szekszárd”
- Welsh: “Szekszárd”
- Western Panjabi: “شیکشارد”
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as Bartina and Bottyánhegy.
Southern Transdanubia: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Pécs, Harkány, Baranya County, and Somogy County.
Explore These Curated Destinations
Discover places selected for their distinct character and enduring appeal.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Szekszárd”. Photo: Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0.