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Hungary's Geography is Weird

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The geography of Hungary was permanently hollowed out in 1920. Following the Treaty of Trianon, the nation lost over 70% of its land area, stripping away the rugged, protective barrier of the Carpathian Mountains and the deep mineral basins that once defined its outer perimeter. Compressed into the flat, low floor of the Pannonian Basin, modern Hungary was left entirely exposed, lacking natural borders, domestic energy sources, or a coastline.

In this flattened landscape, two massive river systems running uninterrupted from north to south—the Danube and the Tisza—became the most critical defining lines on the map. This physical split effectively slices the country into three distinct territories: the industrial, well-connected hills of Transdanubia; the densely populated sandy corridor of the Interfluve; and the low-lying, climate-vulnerable plains of the Trans-Tisza region.

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 The Internal Borders of a Landlocked Nation
00:46 The Two Rivers Splitting it Apart
02:04 Hungary Used To Be Bigger
03:41 The Losses of Triannon
05:40 Transdanubia: The Western Economic Engine
07:14 The Roman Border: Inside the Sandy Interfluve
10:19 Transtisza: The Calvinist Rome & The Marsh Buffer
15:37 The Exposed Plain: Living Without Natural Barriers
16:38 The Permanent Vulnerability of Modern Hungary

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