Heroes' Square
Heroes' Square is Budapest's grand ceremonial plaza, built for Hungary's 1000th anniversary in 1896.
About Heroes' Square
Heroes' Square is Budapest's grand ceremonial plaza, built for Hungary's 1000th anniversary in 1896. You'll see the towering Millennium Monument with Archangel Gabriel at the top and seven bronze Magyar chieftains on horseback at the base, including Árpád who led the conquest of Hungary in 895. The curved colonnades behind hold statues of 14 Hungarian kings and leaders, while the Museum of Fine Arts (3,200 HUF) and contemporary Műcsarnok (1,800 HUF) flank the square.
The space feels genuinely monumental when you emerge from the M1 metro directly underneath. Tour groups cluster around the central monument for photos while locals cut straight through toward City Park. The bronze figures are impressively detailed up close, and the colonnades create dramatic shadows in morning light. State ceremonies happen here regularly, so you might catch wreath laying at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in front.
Most people snap photos and leave, but the Museum of Fine Arts is genuinely world class with exceptional French Impressionists and Spanish masters. Skip the contemporary hall unless there's a blockbuster exhibition. The square itself is free and always open, perfect for early morning visits before the tour buses arrive around 10am. Pair it with Széchenyi Baths or Vajdahunyad Castle since you're already in City Park.
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