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Country SLOVAK REPUBLIC

SLOVAKIA

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BRATISLAVA (regional info)
> Tourism & Travel Guide: Bratislava
Acc-Nifos BARONKA hotel
Acc-Nifos PREMIUM hotel
Acc-Nifos SET hotel
Antares Hotel
ATEL HRADNA BRANA
BEST WESTERN HOTEL WEST
City hotel Bratislava
City Hotel Bratislava
Devin Hotel
HOTEL CLUB
Hotel Kamila
Hotel Kyjev
Hotel Marrol's
IBIS BRATISLAVA CENTRUM
Mamaison Residence Sulekova
MAMAISON SUITE HOTEL SULEKOVA
Meydan Hotel Danube
Radisson SAS Carlton Hotel

HIGH TATRAS
GRAND HOTEL
HUBERT HOTEL
PATRIA HOTEL

LUCENEC SLOVAKIA
BEST WESTERN HOTEL REDUTA

PIESTANY
MAGNOLIA PIESTANY

POPRAD
POPRAD HOTEL
SATEL HOTEL

TRENCIN
TATRA HOTEL

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Explore Slovakia 

The republic of Slovakia (Slovensko) - independent since 1993 - consists of the long, narrow strip of 
land which stretches from the fertile plains of the Danube basin up to the peaks of the High Tatras - perhaps 
Europe's most exhilarating mountain range outside of the Alps. The country's numerous mountains have long 
formed barriers to industrialization and modernization, and parts of the country remain surprisingly rural and 
unspoilt, some to the point of neglect. 

There was only one independent Slovak state before 1993, when the country operated as a German protectorate 
during World War II - a period which remains a blot on the nation's history . Before 1918, current-day Slovakia was 
known as the region of Upper Hungary and lay under Magyar rule for roughly a millennium; Bratislava even became 
the Hungarian capital when the rest of Hungary was occupied by the Turks. However, in 1918, the Slovaks threw their 
lot in with their Slav neighbours, the Czechs, forming Czechoslovakia. This lasted 75 years until the country's "velvet 
divorce" took place in 1993. Although many Slovaks were ready to go it alone, it has to be said that others had 
major reservations about this, and none was given the chance to decide in a referendum. Political corruption, 
nationalism and slow-moving reforms put off overseas investors until a change of government in 1998, since when 
the country's economic prospects under Prime Minister Dzurinda have brightened and firm steps towards joining the 
European Union have begun. 

For the first-time visitor, perhaps the most striking cultural difference from the Czechs is the Slovak attitude to religion. 
Catholicism is much stronger here than in the Czech Republic, and the churches are often full to overflowing on Sundays. 
The republic also has a much more diverse population, with over half a million ethnic Hungarians in the south, as well as 
thousands of Romanies (gypsies), who live a fairly miserable existence throughout the country, and several thousand 
Ruthenians (Rusyns) in the east. Bratislava , the capital, is potentially disappointing, especially for those who arrive 
expecting a Slovak Prague. Taken on its own terms, however, the city is a rewarding, lively place with a compact old 
town. Poprad provides the transport hub for the High Tatras , the most spectacular of Slovakia's many mountain ranges, 
and is also the starting point for exploring the intriguing medieval towns of the Spis region, east Slovakia's architectural 
high point. Further east still, Presov is the cultural centre of the Ruthenian minority, while Kosice , Slovakia's vibrant 
second city, boasts a fine Gothic cathedral, ethnic diversity and a lively independence from much of the rest of Slovakia. 

 Read the full travel guide about travelling to Slovakia here




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