Skip to main content
20 Years of LibraryThingLibraryThing Home LibraryThing Home
HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Home Groups Talk More Zeitgeist
Sign in / Join EnglishHelp
Search Site
  • Sign in / Join
  • English
  • Help
    Overview
    Overview

    Work

    ReviewsRecommendationsCoversCommunityClassificationDescriptionsEditionsHelper Hub

    Heroes' square Budapest: Hungary's history in stone and bronze

    by András Gerő

    8 Members

    On This Page

    Tags
    Members
    Author Information
    Classifications
    Statistics
    Quick Facts

    Tags

    caves of buda (1) non-fiction (1) travel (1)
    More Tags

    Members

    Recently Added By
    rkimbell236, Biblio-Ortenburg, John_Blakey, colleila, WienerStaatsoper, prussia_cove, lrcutter
    All Members

    Author Information

    András Gerő
    15+ Works 33 Members

    Classifications

    Genres
    Nonfiction, History
    DDC/MDS
    943.9 — History & geography History of Europe Central Europe: Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Czech, Poland, Hungary Hungary
    LCC
    DB993.7 .E97 .G47 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Austria – Liechtenstein – Hungary – Czechoslovakia History of Austria. Liechtenstein. Hungary. Czechoslovakia Hungary Local history and description Budapest
    More Classifications

    Statistics

    Members
    8
    Popularity
    2,495,984
    Languages
    English, German
    Media
    Paper
    ISBNs
    2
    ASINs
    2

    Quick Facts

    Published
    1990
    Genres
    Nonfiction, History
    DDC/MDS
    943.9
    LCC
    DB993.7 .E97 .G47

    Author

    Picture of author.
    András Gerő
    15+ Works 33 Members

    Popular Covers

    All Covers 

    Find It

    More 

    Links

    No links

    Helpers

    Helper Hub 
    Change StyleDesktop ViewMobile View
    HomeAboutContactPrivacyHelp
    BlogWikiThingCommon KnowledgeEarly ReviewersLegacy LibrariesLocalAPIsTinyCat
    20 Years of LibraryThing
    Verdana StandardVerdana SmallThe LoraxSystem StandardSystem LargeGeorgiaLarge TextAtkinson