If you wish to break away from your studies and fill up with energy, indoor training can be a perfect choice for you: it saves time, low cost and you can do it any time. Here you can find some useful tips if you want to keep active without leaving your home.
Traditions are building blocks of communities. Although some of them can’t fulfill their original intentions anymore, there are a handful of Hungarian traditions that are still alive to this day, and even adapted to a more hectic city life routine. Springtime traditions are often centered around the renewal of nature and love. Today we are revealing the origins and meaning of the most colorful tradition of Hungarian springtime: May trees.
As a Central European country, Hungarian cuisine has the unique feature of being influenced by dishes of surrounding cultures while maintaining its original roots and characteristics. Historically speaking, Hungarian cuisine is very meat-oriented: the effect of the nomadic lifestyle of Magyar tribes at the beginning of the 10th century is palpable on even the modern Hungarian dishes.
Hungarians have always been great at finding innovative ways to solve problems, often leading to the invention of objects that now surround us every day. Spend a day with famous Hungarian scientific and technological inventions.
Imagine studying for a valuable EU degree, in a vibrant, international milieu in one of the most stunning historical regions of Hungary. Read our article about the University of Pécs, and get inspired!
In these very strange times, our well-being is more important than ever, for which a balanced diet, fitness and healthy lifestyle are all key elements. The importance of vitamins in our health has long been well-known, but it wasn’t until the 1930s that Hungarian scientist, Albert Szent-Györgyi discovered the chemical ascorbic acid—also known as vitamin C. His discovery has become the foundations of modern nutrition for which he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.