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Zala County
View on WikipediaZala (Hungarian: Zala vármegye, pronounced [ˈzɒlɒ]; Croatian: Zalska županija; županija Zala) is an administrative county (comitatus or vármegye) in south-western Hungary. It is named after the Zala River. It shares borders with Croatia (Koprivnica–Križevci and Međimurje Counties) and Slovenia (Lendava and Moravske Toplice) and the Hungarian counties Vas, Veszprém and Somogy. The seat of Zala County is Zalaegerszeg. Its area is 3,784 square kilometres (1,461 sq mi). Lake Balaton lies partly in the county.
Key Information
History
[edit]
In the tenth century, the Hungarian Nyék tribe occupied the region around Lake Balaton. Their occupation was mainly in the areas known today as Zala and Somogy counties.[3]
Parts of the western territory of the former county of Zala are now part of Slovenia (South-Prekmurje) and Croatia (Međimurje). In 1919 it was part of the unrecognized state of the Republic of Prekmurje, which existed for just six days.
Demographics
[edit]- Roman Catholic (75.8%)
- Calvinistic (3.90%)
- Lutheran (2.10%)
- Other Christian denomination (4.40%)
- Other religion (0.30%)
- Not religious (13.5%)
In 2015, it had a population of 277,290 and the population density was 73 inhabitants per square kilometre (190/sq mi).
| Year | County population[4] | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 1949 | 305,433 | n/a |
| 1960 | 3.83% | |
| 1970 | -4.10% | |
| 1980 | 4.33% | |
| 1990 | -3.44% | |
| 2001 | -2.94% | |
| 2011 | -5.12% | |
| 2015 | -1.76% | |
| 2018 | -2.45% |
Ethnicity
[edit]Besides the Hungarian majority, the main minorities are the Roma (approx. 7,000), Croats (3,500) and Germans (2,000).
Total population (2011 census): 282,179
Ethnic groups (2011 census):[5]
Identified themselves: 255 069 persons:
- Hungarians: 241 408 (94,64%)
- Romani: 6 981 (2,74%)
- Croats: 3 248 (1,27%)
- Others and indefinable: 3 432 (1,35%)
Approx. 38,000 persons in Zala County did not declare their ethnic group at the 2011 census.
Religion
[edit]Religious adherence in the county according to 2011 census:[6]
- Catholic – 177,072 (Roman Catholic – 176,721; Greek Catholic – 313);
- Reformed – 7,000;
- Evangelical – 3,928;
- other religions – 2,463;
- Non-religious – 23,119;
- Atheism – 2,272;
- Undeclared – 66,325.
Regional structure
[edit]
| No. | English and Hungarian names |
Area (km2) |
Population (2011) |
Density (pop./km2) |
Seat | No. of municipalities |
| 1 | Keszthely District Keszthelyi járás |
535.93 | 49,421 | 92 | Keszthely | 30 |
| 2 | Lenti District Lenti járás |
624.12 | 19,789 | 32 | Lenti | 48 |
| 3 | Letenye District Letenyei járás |
388.69 | 16,410 | 42 | Letenye | 27 |
| 4 | Nagykanizsa District Nagykanizsai járás |
907.91 | 78,252 | 86 | Nagykanizsa | 49 |
| 5 | Zalaegerszeg District Zalaegerszegi járás |
1,044.70 | 102,798 | 98 | Zalaegerszeg | 84 |
| 6 | Zalaszentgrót District Zalaszentgróti járás |
282.56 | 15,509 | 55 | Zalaszentgrót | 20 |
| Zala County | 3,784.11 | 287,043 | 77 | Zalaegerszeg | 258 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Politics
[edit]The Zala County Council, elected at the 2014 local government elections, is made up of 15 counselors, with the following party composition:[7]
| Party | Seats | Current County Assembly | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fidesz-KDNP | 9 | ||||||||||
| Movement for a Better Hungary (Jobbik) | 4 | ||||||||||
| Democratic Coalition (DK) | 1 | ||||||||||
| Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) | 1 | ||||||||||
Presidents of the General Assembly
[edit]| List of presidents since 1990[8] | |
|---|---|
| Attila Pál (Fidesz-KDNP) | 2014– |
Municipalities
[edit]Zala County has two urban counties, eight towns, two large villages and 246 villages.
- City with county rights
(ordered by population, as of 2011 census)
Zalaegerszeg (59,499)
Nagykanizsa (49,026)
- Towns
- Villages
- Alibánfa
- Almásháza
- Alsónemesapáti
- Alsópáhok
- Alsórajk
- Alsószenterzsébet
- Babosdöbréte
- Baglad
- Bagod
- Bak
- Baktüttös
- Balatongyörök
- Balatonmagyaród
- Bánokszentgyörgy
- Barlahida
- Batyk
- Bázakerettye
- Becsehely
- Becsvölgye
- Belezna
- Belsősárd
- Bezeréd
- Bocfölde
- Bocska
- Boncodfölde
- Borsfa
- Bókaháza
- Böde
- Bödeháza
- Börzönce
- Búcsúszentlászló
- Bucsuta
- Csapi
- Csatár
- Cserszegtomaj
- Csertalakos
- Csesztreg
- Csonkahegyhát
- Csöde
- Csömödér
- Csörnyeföld
- Dióskál
- Dobri
- Dobronhegy
- Döbröce
- Dötk
- Egeraracsa
- Egervár
- Eszteregnye
- Esztergályhorváti
- Felsőpáhok
- Felsőrajk
- Felsőszenterzsébet
- Fityeház
- Fűzvölgy
- Galambok
- Garabonc
- Gáborjánháza
- Gellénháza
- Gelse
- Gelsesziget
- Gétye
- Gombosszeg
- Gosztola
- Gősfa
- Gutorfölde
- Gyenesdiás

- Gyűrűs
- Hagyárosbörönd
- Hahót
- Hernyék
- Homokkomárom
- Hosszúvölgy
- Hottó
- Iborfia
- Iklódbördőce
- Kacorlak
- Kallósd
- Karmacs
- Kálócfa
- Kányavár
- Kávás
- Kehidakustány
- Kemendollár
- Keménfa
- Kerecseny
- Kerkabarabás
- Kerkafalva
- Kerkakutas
- Kerkaszentkirály
- Kerkateskánd
- Kilimán
- Kisbucsa
- Kiscsehi
- Kisgörbő
- Kiskutas
- Kispáli
- Kisrécse
- Kissziget
- Kistolmács
- Kisvásárhely
- Kozmadombja
- Kustánszeg
- Külsősárd
- Lakhegy
- Lasztonya
- Lendvadedes
- Lendvajakabfa
- Lickóvadamos
- Ligetfalva
- Lispeszentadorján
- Liszó
- Lovászi
- Magyarföld
- Magyarszentmiklós
- Magyarszerdahely
- Maróc
- Márokföld
- Miháld
- Mihályfa
- Mikekarácsonyfa
- Milejszeg
- Misefa
- Molnári
- Murakeresztúr
- Murarátka
- Muraszemenye
- Nagybakónak
- Nagygörbő
- Nagykapornak
- Nagykutas
- Nagylengyel
- Nagypáli
- Nagyrada
- Nagyrécse
- Nemesapáti
- Nemesbük
- Nemeshetés
- Nemesnép
- Nemespátró
- Nemesrádó
- Nemessándorháza
- Nemesszentandrás
- Németfalu
- Nova
- Oltárc
- Orbányosfa
- Ormándlak
- Orosztony
- Ortaháza
- Ozmánbük
- Óhíd
- Padár
- Pakod
- Pat
- Páka
- Pálfiszeg
- Pethőhenye
- Petrikeresztúr
- Petrivente
- Pókaszepetk
- Pórszombat
- Pölöske
- Pölöskefő
- Pördefölde
- Pötréte
- Pusztaapáti
- Pusztaederics
- Pusztamagyaród
- Pusztaszentlászló
- Ramocsa
- Resznek
- Rezi
- Rédics
- Rigyác
- Salomvár
- Sand
- Sárhida
- Sármellék
- Semjénháza
- Sénye
- Sormás
- Söjtör
- Sümegcsehi
- Surd
- Szalapa
- Szécsisziget
- Szentgyörgyvár
- Szentgyörgyvölgy
- Szentkozmadombja
- Szentliszló
- Szentmargitfalva
- Szentpéterfölde
- Szentpéterúr
- Szepetnek
- Szijártóháza
- Szilvágy
- Teskánd
- Tilaj
- Tófej
- Tormafölde
- Tornyiszentmiklós
- Tótszentmárton
- Tótszerdahely
- Türje
- Újudvar
- Valkonya
- Vasboldogasszony
- Vaspör
- Vállus
- Várfölde
- Várvölgy
- Vindornyafok
- Vindornyalak
- Vindornyaszőlős
- Vonyarcvashegy

- Vöckönd
- Zajk
- Zalaapáti
- Zalabaksa
- Zalabér
- Zalaboldogfa
- Zalacsány
- Zalacséb
- Zalaháshágy
- Zalaigrice
- Zalaistvánd
- Zalakomár
- Zalaköveskút
- Zalamerenye
- Zalasárszeg
- Zalaszabar
- Zalaszántó
- Zalaszentbalázs
- Zalaszentgyörgy
- Zalaszentiván
- Zalaszentjakab
- Zalaszentlászló
- Zalaszentlőrinc
- Zalaszentmárton
- Zalaszentmihály
- Zalaszombatfa
- Zalatárnok
- Zalaújlak
- Zalavár
- Zalavég
- Zebecke
Gallery
[edit]-
Zalaegerszeg, the capital of the county
-
River Drava near Drávaszabolcs
-
Hévíz, the largest thermal lake in Europe
-
Batthyány Palace in Zalaszentgrót
-
Castle of Egervár
-
Traditional Hungarian house in Zalalövő
References
[edit]- ^ nepesseg.com, population data of Hungarian settlements
- ^ Regions and Cities > Regional Statistics > Regional Economy > Regional GDP per Capita, OECD.Stats. Accessed on 16 November 2018.
- ^ Béla Kálmán, The world of names: a study in Hungarian onomatology, Akadémiai Kiadó, 1978, p. 134
- ^ népesség.com, "Győr-Moson-Sopron megye népessége 1870-2015"
- ^ 1.1.6. A népesség anyanyelv, nemzetiség és nemek szerint – Frissítve: 2013.04.17.; Hungarian Central Statistical Office (in Hungarian)
- ^ 2011. ÉVI NÉPSZÁMLÁLÁS, 3. Területi adatok, 3.20 Zala megye, (in Hungarian) [1]
- ^ Zala Megyei Közgyűlés, (in Hungarian) [2] Archived 2016-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Önkormányzati választások eredményei (in Hungarian)
External links
[edit]- Official site in Hungarian and German
- Zalai Hírlap (zaol.hu) - The county portal
Zala County
View on GrokipediaZala County (Hungarian: Zala vármegye) is an administrative county in southwestern Hungary, named after the Zala River that flows through it, with Zalaegerszeg serving as its capital and largest city.[1] Covering an area of 3,784 square kilometers, it had a resident population of 260,124 as of January 1, 2024.[2] The county borders Slovenia to the west, Croatia to the south, and the Hungarian counties of Vas to the northwest, Veszprém to the northeast, and Somogy to the east, encompassing a diverse landscape of rolling hills, dense forests, and the southern shores of Lake Balaton.[3] Zala County is notable for its abundant thermal springs, most prominently Lake Hévíz, the world's largest biologically active thermal lake, which attracts visitors for its medicinal properties and supports a significant tourism sector.[4] The local economy centers on agriculture, forestry, and mechanical engineering, supplemented by oil extraction and spa-related services, though it remains one of Hungary's more sparsely populated regions with many small villages.[5] These features define Zala as a area blending natural therapeutic resources with rural traditions, contributing to Hungary's western transdanubian development.[1]
Geography
Location and Borders
Zala County occupies the southwestern extremity of Hungary, forming part of the Western Transdanubia region. It lies between approximately 46°30' and 47°00' north latitude and 16°30' and 17°30' east longitude, encompassing an area of 3,784 square kilometers.[6][7] The county shares international borders with Slovenia to the west, along the Mura River, and with Croatia to the southwest, partially following the Drava River.[8] Within Hungary, it adjoins Vas County to the north, Veszprém County to the northeast, and Somogy County to the southeast.[9][10] These borders reflect both administrative divisions established post-1950 territorial adjustments and natural geographical features, including the Zala River marking much of the northern limit with Vas County and the Balaton Uplands influencing the eastern boundary.[8] The county's position facilitates cross-border connections, with key crossings at places like Rédics to Slovenia and Murakeresztúr to Croatia.[5]Topography and Natural Features
Zala County in southwestern Hungary features a hilly topography shaped by the Transdanubian uplands, including the Zala Hills and Keszthely Mountains, alongside alluvial plains along the Zala River. Elevations are generally modest, with most areas below 200 meters and an average of 182 meters above sea level, characterized by north-south oriented hill ranges, valleys, and loess-covered terrains rising 150 to 280 meters in eastern sections.[11][12][13][14] The county includes the western shore of Lake Balaton, Hungary's largest freshwater lake, and Lake Hévíz, the world's largest biologically active thermal lake, covering 4.4 hectares with water emerging from a 40-meter-deep spring at temperatures of 23–38°C, enriched with sulfates, calcium, and radon for therapeutic use. The Zala River, originating near Szalafő in the northwest hills, flows 138 kilometers southeast, draining the region and supporting riparian habitats before emptying into Lake Balaton.[14][15] Forests cover substantial areas, with Zalaerdő managing 56,000 hectares of predominantly lowland oak, beech, and hornbeam stands below 150 meters elevation, interspersed with scrub and steppe vegetation. Protected natural features encompass parts of the Balaton Uplands National Park, including the Keszthely Hills' dolomite bedrock, caves, volcanic formations like Tátika Hill (494 meters), and landscape reserves such as Vétyem and Oltárc forests; mineral resources include oil deposits near the Croatian border.[13][16][14]Climate and Environmental Conditions
Zala County features a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb) with mild oceanic influences from its proximity to the Adriatic Sea and Lake Balaton, resulting in warmer winters and higher precipitation compared to central Hungary. Annual average temperatures in Zalaegerszeg, the county seat, range from a low of about -3°C (27°F) in January to a high of 27°C (80°F) in July, with extremes rarely exceeding -10°C (14°F) or 32°C (90°F). Precipitation averages 799 mm annually, distributed fairly evenly but peaking in summer months with thunderstorms common due to the region's topography.[17][18] The county's environmental conditions are shaped by diverse ecosystems, including forests covering approximately 29% of its land area with 111,000 hectares of natural forest as of 2020, though recent losses totaled 786 hectares in 2024 due to logging and land use changes, emitting an estimated 343 kt CO₂ equivalent. Zala hosts 79 protected areas, contributing to Hungary's Natura 2000 network and including parts of the Balaton Uplands National Park, which safeguards wetlands, hills, and endemic flora around Lake Balaton's southwestern shore. Thermal springs, such as the unique Lake Hévíz—the world's largest biologically active thermal lake—support specialized aquatic ecosystems but face pressures from tourism and water extraction. Agricultural intensification and historical deforestation have impacted biodiversity, yet the county's favorable conditions for solar and biomass energy production aid sustainable resource management.[19][20][21]History
Ancient and Medieval Periods
The territory encompassing modern Zala County was inhabited during the Late Neolithic period, with archaeological evidence of circular ditch systems—large enclosures associated with the Lengyel culture—identified at seven sites, including Sormás-Török-földek where two such structures overlap, dating to approximately 4800–4500 BCE.[22] These enclosures, detected partly through aerial photography, indicate organized communal activities, possibly ceremonial or defensive, in a landscape of fertile plains and river valleys. Subsequent Bronze Age occupations are attested by numerous Late Bronze Age settlements along the Zala and Mura rivers, featuring urnfield culture artifacts such as pottery and bronze tools, reflecting a period of increased metallurgical activity from around 1300–800 BCE.[23] [24] Under Roman rule, from the 1st century CE, the region formed part of the province of Pannonia, with significant settlements emerging along trade routes like the Amber Road. Gyenesdiás hosted an important Roman center from the 1st century onward, evidenced by fortifications and civilian structures, while thermal springs at sites near Hévíz attracted Roman bathing culture, yielding ruins of villas and aqueducts.[25] [26] Recent excavations in Zalaszentgrót uncovered remnants of Maestriana, a 1st–4th century CE city, including three 2nd-century wells with preserved Gallic-style wooden frameworks and artifacts like pottery shards, indicating a prosperous urban hub with water management infrastructure supporting a population reliant on local agriculture and trade.[27] [28] [29] Roman withdrawal by the 5th century left the area vulnerable to migrations, including Avar incursions in the 6th–8th centuries, which introduced nomadic pastoralism but limited permanent settlements.[25] The early medieval period saw Slavic settlement from the 6th century, followed by the establishment of Mosaburg (later Zalavár) as a Carolingian stronghold around 833 CE under Prince Pribina, serving as the seat of a Slavic county with a bishopric until its transfer to Kocel in 846 CE; fortifications and ecclesiastical structures here underscore Frankish influence amid missionary efforts by figures like Methodius.[30] The Hungarian conquest around 895–900 CE integrated the region into the emerging Kingdom of Hungary, with Árpád dynasty stabilization prompting village foundations along the Zala River ridges, shifting from marsh defenses to agrarian communities.[31] Zala emerged as one of the kingdom's earliest counties (comitatus) by the 11th century, administered from centers like Zalavár, which transitioned into an Árpád-era royal estate with stone churches and mills.[32] By the 14th century, ecclesiastical records document a dense parish network, particularly around Lake Balaton's southern shore, reflecting feudal consolidation with noble estates and fortified manors supporting a mixed economy of farming and viticulture.[33]Early Modern Era and Ottoman Influence
Following the Battle of Mohács in 1526, Zala County, situated in western Transdanubia, remained part of the Habsburg-controlled Royal Hungary, avoiding direct Ottoman annexation unlike central regions. However, its proximity to Ottoman-held territories in the south exposed it to frequent raids and incursions, beginning with the first documented Ottoman campaign through Zala in 1532 via routes from Zákány to Kanizsa and Sárvár. These pressures intensified after the fall of Buda in 1541 and the capture of Szigetvár in 1566, which facilitated deeper advances into Zala and neighboring Somogy, leading to the subjugation (hódolt) of villages through taxation without full occupation. By the mid-16th century, Ottoman tax registers (defters) recorded influence over eastern Zala settlements, with raids from 1575 causing widespread abandonment (deserta) and a shift where subjugated areas rose from 4% in the early 1570s to over 75% by 1578 in key districts like Kapornak.[34][35] The capture of Nagykanizsa Castle on October 22, 1600, after a six-week siege by approximately 20,000 Ottoman troops under Tiryaki Hasan Pasha, marked a pivotal escalation, establishing direct control over southern Zala as the center of the Kanizsa Eyalet and Sanjak. This occupation, lasting until 1690, imposed garrisons, taxation (e.g., averaging 1,175 akçe per settlement in 1579 registers, with portions allocated to military and administrative elites), and further raids, exacerbating depopulation estimated at 50-70% in affected zones through warfare, famine, and displacement. Border defenses proliferated, with 138 documented Ottoman-period fortifications, watchtowers, and fortified palaces across Zala, Vas, and Veszprém counties, including reinforcements at Zalavár in 1553 and local resistances like the 1649 defense near Egerszeg. Failed Habsburg attempts to recapture Kanizsa, such as in 1664 under Miklós Zrínyi, prolonged the frontier status, while alliances with rebels like István Bocskai in 1605 allowed temporary Ottoman-supported incursions deeper into the county.[35][34] Ottoman influence waned during the Great Turkish War (1683-1699), culminating in Kanizsa's liberation on April 13, 1690, by Habsburg forces, which ended the 90-year direct hold and restored county-wide Habsburg authority by the early 18th century. The era's legacy included economic devastation from disrupted agriculture and trade, alongside environmental strain from fortification timber demands and abandoned lands, though cultural exchanges remained minimal, limited to administrative practices in occupied pockets rather than widespread Islamization or settlement. Recovery involved reasserting feudal structures, as seen in the Veszprém bishopric's regain of sites like Zalaegerszeg by 1775, amid persistent poverty and settlement rebuilding.[35][37]19th and 20th Centuries
In the 19th century, Zala County formed part of the Kingdom of Hungary under Habsburg rule, experiencing the political ferment of the reform era and the 1848–49 revolution against Austrian dominance, during which local leaders in Zala, including figures like Ferenc Deák—a native of the county—opposed absolutist policies and advocated for constitutional governance.[38] Following the 1867 Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the county entered a phase of relative stability and economic expansion within the dual monarchy, with infrastructure improvements such as railways facilitating trade; in Nagykanizsa, Jewish merchants drove growth in banking and commerce during the late 19th century's golden age for the town.[39] Zalaegerszeg, the county seat, underwent urban development and the rise of a robust middle class amid the dualist period's prosperity, though it temporarily lost town status in 1870 before regaining administrative momentum.[40] The 20th century brought territorial losses through the 1920 Treaty of Trianon, which ceded the county's southwestern areas—predominantly Croatian-speaking—to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, reducing Zala's extent and disrupting local economies tied to cross-border ties.[32] A pivotal economic development occurred with the oil industry's emergence: initial hydrocarbon traces were detected in Bázakerettye in 1923 by the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, followed by test drillings in the 1930s that enabled commercial extraction starting in 1938, positioning Zala as the cradle of Hungary's petroleum sector and spurring population growth in affected villages from mere dozens to thousands.[41] World War II severely impacted the region, as Allied forces targeted Zala's oil infrastructure; on June 30, 1944, American bombers struck Bázakerettye's gasoline plant with over 700 bombs, killing dozens and halting production temporarily, though wells later supported German operations until 1948.[41] Postwar communist nationalization integrated the oil fields into state control under entities like MAORT, fostering industrial modernization with worker housing and communities through the 1950s–60s, but output waned after the 1960s amid depleting reserves, extending into the 1990s under MOL management.[41] These shifts, alongside Hungary's broader communist-era collectivization and heavy industry push, transformed Zala from agrarian roots toward resource-based manufacturing, though border revisions and wartime destruction imposed lasting demographic and infrastructural strains.Post-Communist Developments
Following the collapse of communist rule in Hungary in 1989, Zala County experienced a rapid shift toward democratic governance and market-oriented reforms, mirroring national trends but shaped by its rural-agricultural base and hydrocarbon resources. Local elections in 1990 marked the first free polls, with opposition parties gaining ground in the county, building on earlier anti-communist sentiments evidenced by Zala's election of non-communist deputies to the final communist parliament in 1989.[42] This transition weakened the county's administrative role under the new decentralized system, as power devolved to municipalities amid national efforts to dismantle centralized planning.[43] Politically, the county saw fluctuating support across center-right and socialist parties through the 1990s and 2000s, stabilizing with Fidesz dominance from 2010 onward, reflecting broader Hungarian shifts toward conservative governance. Economically, the early 1990s brought contraction, with GDP falling nationally by about 20% from 1989 to 1993 due to deindustrialization and subsidy cuts, effects felt acutely in Zala's state-owned farms and extractive industries.[44] Agricultural privatization, initiated via land restitution laws in 1991-1992, fragmented collective farms into over 1 million small private holdings nationwide, reducing efficiency in Zala's fertile plains but enabling family-based farming.[45] In the oil and gas sector, Zala's fields—among Hungary's oldest—saw consolidation under MOL Hungarian Oil and Gas Plc, formed in 1991 from state assets, which maintained production despite declining reserves and shifted toward exploration and partial privatization while retaining majority state influence.[46] Unemployment peaked regionally in the mid-1990s, prompting outmigration from rural areas, though suburbanization around Zalaegerszeg accelerated, with new housing and services emerging post-regime change.[47] Hungary's EU accession in 2004 catalyzed infrastructure upgrades in Zala, including road networks and thermal tourism enhancements at sites like Hévíz, leveraging EU cohesion funds to offset earlier disparities.[48] By the 2010s, the county's economy diversified into services and light manufacturing, with MOL's upstream operations in Zalaegerszeg providing stable employment amid national energy strategies emphasizing domestic resources over imports.[49] These developments mitigated some transition shocks but highlighted persistent rural-urban divides, with agriculture's GDP share dropping below 5% by 2000.[50]Administrative Structure
Districts and Local Governance
Zala County is divided into six administrative districts (járások): Keszthely District, Lenti District, Letenye District, Nagykanizsa District, Zalaegerszeg District, and Zalaszentgrót District.[51] Each district is centered on its namesake town or city and functions as a subunit for state administrative services, including population registration, land administration, and public guardianship, under the oversight of the Zala County Government Office.[52] This structure stems from Hungary's 2013 territorial reform, which consolidated smaller offices to streamline central government implementation at the local level.[51] County-level governance is handled by the Zala County Assembly (Zala Vármegyei Közgyűlés), an elected body comprising representatives and mayors from significant municipalities, responsible for strategic planning, regional infrastructure, healthcare facilities, and secondary education coordination.[1] The assembly, seated in Zalaegerszeg, operates under the Act on Local Self-Government of 2011, which delineates county competencies amid a framework emphasizing national policy alignment.[53] At the municipal level, Zala County encompasses 258 settlements, including 10 towns and two cities with county rights—Zalaegerszeg and Nagykanizsa—each governed by elected councils and mayors who manage primary services such as waste collection, local roads, and kindergartens.[54] Local elections occur every five years, with the assembly electing the county president to lead executive functions.[55] This tiered system balances decentralized decision-making with central oversight, reflecting Hungary's unitary state model.[43]Municipalities and Settlements
Zala County comprises 258 municipalities, of which 10 hold urban status—including two cities with county rights (Zalaegerszeg and Nagykanizsa) and eight towns—while the remaining 248 are villages.[20] This structure underscores a predominantly rural landscape, with approximately 60-70% of settlements classified as small villages having fewer than 500 inhabitants.[51] The largest municipality is Zalaegerszeg, the county seat, with a population of 54,428 as recorded in the 2022 census.[56] Nagykanizsa ranks second at 43,228 residents, serving as a key industrial and commercial hub.[57] Keszthely, situated on the western shore of Lake Balaton, follows with 18,039 inhabitants and functions as a significant tourism center.[58] Other towns include Lenti, Zalaszentgrót, Hévíz (noted for its medicinal thermal lake), Zalakaros, Letenye, and Zalalövő, each contributing to regional economic activities such as agriculture, light industry, and spa tourism.[59] Villages dominate the settlement pattern, many clustered along the Zala River valley or scattered in hilly terrains, supporting subsistence farming and forestry. Several micro-settlements with populations under 100 persist, particularly in remote areas, highlighting challenges in service provision and population retention.[60]| Largest Municipalities by Population (2022 Census) | Type | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Zalaegerszeg | City with county rights | 54,428 |
| Nagykanizsa | City with county rights | 43,228 |
| Keszthely | Town | 18,039 |
Economy
Primary Sectors and Resources
Agriculture constitutes a key primary sector in Zala County, utilizing about 33.3% of the land for arable purposes amid predominantly medium to poor brown forest soils averaging 15.8 Ak quality points, below the national average of 21.[61] Major crops encompass corn and wheat on roughly 50% of arable land, supplemented by sunflower, rapeseed, and fruits including apples, where the county ranks 4th to 5th in national production; large-scale orchards contribute 30% of output.[61][62] Livestock focuses on poultry, accounting for 5% of Hungary's total, alongside pastures for animal husbandry, though the sector grapples with declining employment and intensive practices stressing landscapes.[61] Forestry covers approximately 120,000 hectares, or 32.2% of the county's territory—above the national average—with managed forests spanning 56,000 hectares across regions like Göcsej and the Örség.[61][13] This sector yields timber for furniture and other wood products, integrates game management, and bolsters biodiversity, with forest cover stable and increasing since 2010 alongside about 1,000 hectares of protected reserves.[61][63] Mining and extraction remain limited, centered on Tertiary-era oil and gas deposits, though production has waned post-socialism with 27 dry hydrocarbon wells noted; historical fields like Nagylengyel sustain modest output.[61] Non-energy minerals include dolomite quarried in the Keszthely Mountains and sand extraction sites, supporting construction alongside rehabilitated abandoned quarries.[61][64] Prominent natural resources feature thermal and medicinal waters, with Lake Hévíz discharging 0.65 cubic meters per second at 60 MW thermal capacity, alongside 9 thermal facilities and 18 spas fostering balneology; geothermal potential and rich surface waters from the Mura and Zala rivers further underpin primary activities.[61]Industrial Development
Zala County's industrial base originated with oil exploration and extraction in the first half of the 20th century, which established the region as a major domestic producer of crude oil and supported ancillary manufacturing activities.[5] Mechanical engineering emerged as a core sector during the mid-20th century, complemented by timber processing and light industries such as textiles and food production.[5] The post-1989 transition to market economy spurred diversification through foreign direct investment, particularly in automotive and electronics manufacturing, leveraging proximity to western borders and infrastructure improvements. The ZalaZONE Automotive Test Track, operational since 2018, has driven high-tech growth by facilitating autonomous vehicle testing, simulation, and R&D, initially focused on automotive but expanding into robotics, energy systems, and precision agriculture as of 2025.[65] Key recent investments highlight manufacturing expansion: In August 2024, U.S.-based Flex initiated a HUF 36 billion (EUR 92 million) greenfield plant in Zalaegerszeg for automotive components, expected to create hundreds of jobs and enhance supply chain integration.[66] German defense firm Rheinmetall committed EUR 9.5 million in October 2025 to a development and engineering center in Zalaegerszeg, focusing on advanced munitions and systems amid Europe's rearmament trends.[67] Food processing has grown via domestic expansions, such as Zalaco's greenfield facility in Zalaegerszeg, boosting annual output to 7 million kg of bread, 50 million rolls, and 40 million pastries.[68] Renewable energy marks an emerging industrial vector, with the Zalaszentiván ACDC solar project—spanning 80 hectares and incorporating 112,500 modules—coming online in 2024 to generate utility-scale power.[69] Despite these gains, Zala's industrial output has faced relative decline as a peripheral region, with manufacturing employment and productivity lagging national leaders like Fejér County, attributed to demographic shrinkage and slower infrastructure upgrades.[70]Contemporary Challenges and Growth Areas
Zala County's economy faces challenges from slower growth rates compared to the national average since 2013, with gross domestic product expansion lagging behind Hungary's overall recovery path following the global financial crisis.[61] Agricultural sectors, which remain a traditional base despite unfavorable soil conditions, are particularly vulnerable to climate change, with projections indicating heightened exposure in Zala's rural areas through 2035.[71] High levels of work-related commuting, or ingázás, generate social strains, increased traffic congestion, and environmental pressures, complicating sustainable urban development in smaller settlements.[72] In tourism, a key sector bolstered by thermal spas like Hévíz and proximity to Lake Balaton, challenges include declining foreign visitor numbers—down 64% in wellness trips from 2019 to 2022—and issues such as rising prices, service quality gaps, and shorter stays amid market saturation.[73][74] Emerging growth areas center on high-tech automotive development, exemplified by the ZalaZONE proving ground in Zalaegerszeg, a 250-hectare facility dedicated to testing autonomous, electric, and connected vehicles, which expanded in 2025 with a 4.45-kilometer high-speed oval track and has attracted partnerships with firms like AVL and interest from Chinese certification entities.[75][76][77] This cluster supports innovation in mobility, energy, and defense, fostering a regional ecosystem for research and validation.[78] Industrial investments have created over 5,000 jobs in Zalaegerszeg since 2014, with recent projects like Rheinmetall expansions and others adding 800 positions in 2024, driving revenue for top local firms beyond 800 billion HUF.[79][80] The energy sector offers diversification potential, with Hungary's hydrocarbon output rising—gas and oil production surpassing first-half 2024 levels by mid-2025—and Zala's established natural gas fields contributing to national exploration efforts.[81] Renewable initiatives, including the 80-hectare Zalaszentiván ACDC solar project with 112,500 modules, align with regional strategies for sustainable energy yards and align with broader West-Transdanubian plans.[69][21] Unemployment remains low at approximately 2.5% in Zalaegerszeg as of 2023, below the national rate of 4.1% in early 2025, supporting labor availability for these expansions despite skill training needs.[82]Demographics
Population Dynamics and Trends
As of the 2022 census conducted by the Hungarian Central Statistical Office (KSH), Zala County's resident population totaled 260,800, reflecting a density of approximately 69 inhabitants per square kilometer across its 3,784 square kilometers.[83] [3] This figure marks a continuation of decline, with the county's population falling from 292,411 in the 2011 census—a reduction of about 10.8% over the decade, or an average annual rate of -0.71%.[83] Earlier estimates indicate 277,290 residents in 2015, underscoring a pattern of shrinkage exceeding the national average due to structural demographic pressures.[84] Historical data reveal fluctuations followed by sustained decrease: the population peaked near 317,000 in the late communist era before contracting amid post-1990 economic transitions.[2] Key milestones include:| Year | Population | Change from Prior Census |
|---|---|---|
| 1980 | 317,298 | +4.3% (from 1970) |
| 1990 | 306,398 | -3.4% |
| 2001 | ~288,000 | -6.0% (approx.) |
| 2011 | 292,411 | +1.5% (post-2001 est.) |
| 2022 | 260,800 | -10.8% |
Ethnic Composition
The ethnic composition of Zala County remains predominantly Hungarian, consistent with national patterns where ethnic Hungarians form over 85% of the population.[88] Minorities, primarily Roma, Croats, Germans, and Slovenes, account for a small fraction, influenced by the county's borders with Croatia and Slovenia. Roma represent approximately 2.6% of the population, based on regional census-derived estimates highlighting their presence in southwestern Hungary.[89] Croats, numbering around 3,500 in earlier censuses, are concentrated in southern border settlements, maintaining cultural institutions and self-governing bodies.[90] Germans, with historical settlements in the Göcsej and Hetés regions, comprise roughly 0.7-1% locally, though self-identification has declined nationally to about 1% by 2022.[88] Slovenes form pockets near the western border, supporting minority rights frameworks, but constitute less than 0.5% county-wide. The 2022 census records a total population of 260,800, with no significant shifts in minority proportions reported at the county level, as ethnic declarations remain stable absent major migrations.[3] Nationally, Roma self-identification stood at 210,000 (2.5%), underscoring their role as the principal minority, though underreporting persists due to stigma.[91]| Ethnic Group | Approximate Share in Zala County (2011-2020 estimates) |
|---|---|
| Hungarian | >95% |
| Roma | 2.6% |
| Croat | ~1.2% |
| German | ~0.7% |
| Slovene | <0.5% |
Religious Affiliation
The population of Zala County is predominantly affiliated with Christianity, particularly Roman Catholicism, reflecting the historical dominance of the Catholic Church in western Hungary. According to the 2011 census conducted by the Hungarian Central Statistical Office (KSH), among those who declared a religious affiliation, Roman Catholics formed the majority at 75.8%, followed by smaller Protestant communities.[83]| Denomination | Percentage (2011) |
|---|---|
| Roman Catholic | 75.8% |
| Reformed (Calvinist) | 3.9% |
| Lutheran | 2.1% |
| Other Christian | 4.4% |
| Other religions | 0.3% |
| No religious affiliation (among declarants) | 13.5% |
Migration Patterns
Zala County's migration patterns reflect a combination of internal redistribution within Hungary and limited international flows, influenced by its western location, rural character, and economic opportunities in energy and tourism sectors. Official data from the Hungarian Central Statistical Office (KSH) indicate that permanent internal net migration has been modestly positive in recent years, with inflows slightly exceeding outflows. For instance, in 2022, Zala recorded 8,841 in-migrants and 8,364 out-migrants, yielding a net gain of 477 persons; similar patterns held in 2021 (+330) and 2023 (+227), though gains were smaller in 2020 (+68) and 2024 (+126).[93] These figures represent a stabilization compared to earlier decades, where net migration was often negative due to outflows from rural areas to urban centers like Budapest or Győr-Moson-Sopron County, driven by limited local employment before expansions in oil and gas extraction.[94] Internal migration is characterized by selective inflows of working-age individuals attracted to Zala's growing sectors, including the MOL Group's hydrocarbon developments around Zalaegerszeg and tourism hubs like Hévíz and Keszthely, which draw retirees and seasonal workers from eastern Hungary. Relative to its population of approximately 270,000, Zala ranks among counties with high in-migration rates (2.6-2.8% of population annually in recent periods), alongside Pest and Fejér, contrasting with depopulation in eastern regions.[95] However, rural micro-regions like Murafölde in southern Zala experience persistent outflows, motivated by insufficient job opportunities and aging infrastructure, leading to weakened local attachment among youth.[96] This intra-county dynamic exacerbates village depopulation, with 62% of settlements under 500 residents and some facing extinction-level declines.[97] Internationally, Zala exhibits low but proximity-driven exchanges, particularly with Austria and Slovenia due to shared borders. As of 2011, 472 Austrian citizens resided in Zala, concentrated in western Hungary's border counties, reflecting reverse commuting and family reunification post-EU accession in 2004.[98] Emigration from Zala mirrors national trends, with undocumented outflows to Austria and Germany—estimated at tens of thousands annually Hungary-wide—targeting higher wages, though county-specific data underreport due to incomplete registration of short-term labor migration.[99] Net international migration remains negative overall, contributing to Zala's population decline (above national average in some periods), offset partially by ethnic Hungarian inflows from neighboring states but insufficient against aging and low fertility.[20] Historical patterns include 19th-20th century outflows to the Americas amid agrarian pressures, but modern trends prioritize economic pragmatism over mass exodus.[100]Politics and Governance
Political Landscape
Zala County, as a predominantly rural region in southwestern Hungary, features a political landscape dominated by the Fidesz–KDNP alliance, consistent with patterns observed in similar areas where conservative policies resonate with local voters focused on economic stability, national sovereignty, and traditional values.[101] This dominance stems from sustained electoral success since 2010, driven by factors including infrastructure investments, agricultural subsidies, and border security measures amid regional migration pressures.[102] In the April 3, 2022, parliamentary elections, Fidesz–KDNP candidates prevailed in all three single-member constituencies within the county—covering Zalaegerszeg and surrounding districts—capturing over 50% of the vote share county-wide, reflecting robust grassroots organization and voter turnout above national averages in rural precincts.[101] The opposition United for Hungary coalition, encompassing left-leaning parties like the MSZP and DK, trailed significantly, underscoring limited urban-rural polarization within Zala compared to more contested counties.[101] The June 9, 2024, local elections further entrenched Fidesz–KDNP control, with their list securing 9 seats in the 18-member Zala County Assembly, comprising a clear majority based on proportional representation.[103] Right-wing challenger Mi Hazánk gained 2 seats with 15.17% of the vote, signaling minor fragmentation on the conservative spectrum, while newer entities like the Tisza Party, led by Péter Magyar, achieved around 28% in select urban areas but failed to unseat the incumbents.[103] [104] In Zalaegerszeg, the county seat, Fidesz mayor Balaicz Zoltán was reelected with strong support, preserving alignment between municipal and county governance.[104] This continuity in Fidesz–KDNP leadership facilitates coordinated regional development, though critics from opposition-aligned media highlight potential risks of centralized influence over local decisions.[102] Voter preferences remain empirically tied to national trends, with turnout in 2024 reaching approximately 59% county-wide, bolstered by concurrent European Parliament voting.[102]Key Political Figures and Elections
The Zala County Assembly, the primary governing body for the county, is led by President Dr. Attila Pál of the Fidesz-KDNP alliance, who was re-elected to the position on October 4, 2024, following the assembly's inaugural session after the local elections.[105] [106] Pál, a long-serving figure in county politics, oversees a body comprising 15 representatives elected every five years, with vice presidents including Imre Pácsonyi and Róbert Rétvári, both also affiliated with Fidesz-KDNP.[107] [106] Zoltán Balaicz, mayor of Zalaegerszeg—the county seat and largest city—has held office since October 2014 under the Fidesz-KDNP banner, winning re-election in the June 9, 2024, local elections with strong support in the urban center.[108] [65] Balaicz's administration has focused on infrastructure and economic projects, including the ZalaZONE autonomous vehicle testing facility, reflecting alignment with national government priorities.[109] In the 2024 municipal elections, held concurrently with European Parliament voting, Fidesz-KDNP dominated the Zala County Assembly race, capturing 9 of 15 seats with approximately 50% of the vote, based on 100% precinct reporting.[103] [110] Mi Hazánk Movement secured 2 seats with 15.17% support, while opposition alliances like the Tisza Party and united left-wing groups gained minimal representation, underscoring Fidesz-KDNP's entrenched control in rural and semi-urban Zala.[103] Voter turnout countywide aligned with national figures around 59%, with Fidesz-KDNP retaining majorities in key municipalities such as Nagykanizsa and Keszthely.[102] Prior cycles, including 2019, followed similar patterns, with Fidesz-KDNP holding supermajorities in the assembly, enabling policy continuity on development and EU fund allocation despite national opposition gains in 2022 parliamentary voting.[106] National Assembly representatives from Zala constituencies, such as László Vigh (Fidesz, Zala 1st district since 2022), further reinforce the county's alignment with the ruling coalition.[111]Culture and Heritage
Traditional Customs and Festivals
Zala County's traditional customs are deeply rooted in its agrarian heritage and regional folk arts, particularly in the Göcsej area around Zalaegerszeg, where communities preserve practices like embroidery, pottery, and woodcarving passed down through generations.[112] These customs often intertwine with religious observances, such as Easter rituals involving decorated eggs and communal meals, and harvest traditions featuring group dances and songs in folk costumes.[113] Border regions along the Mura River incorporate cross-cultural elements from Slovenian and Croatian influences, evident in shared weaving techniques and seasonal storytelling gatherings. Festivals serve as key platforms for reviving these customs, emphasizing community participation and culinary staples like prósza—a thin, potato-based flatbread grilled over open flames—and dödölle, mashed potato dumplings flavored with lard and cracklings, both emblematic of Zala's peasant cuisine.[114][115] The Göcseji Prószafesztivál, held annually on Pentecost Monday (June 9 in 2025) at Gébárti Lake in Zalaegerszeg, draws competitors from local groups to bake and judge prósza in a "Prósza Street" setup, accompanied by craft demonstrations, folk music performances, and markets featuring handmade goods.[116][117] This event, in its 29th edition in 2025, highlights the dish's role in communal feasting and has evolved to include family-oriented activities while maintaining authenticity tied to Vas, Zala, and Somogy counties.[114] The Gébárti Népművészeti Fesztivál, organized by the Zala County Folk Art Association on July 12 in Zalaegerszeg, focuses on living folk traditions through workshops in weaving, carving, and pottery, alongside exhibitions of regional artifacts and performances by artisan groups.[118][119] Revived after a 25-year hiatus, the 2025 edition at Gébárti Craftsmen's House underscores community values and intergenerational transmission of skills, with events like panorama galleries and youth ensembles promoting cross-border folk exchanges.[120][121] In Nagykanizsa, the Kanizsai Bor- és Dödölle Fesztivál (September 12–13 in 2025) celebrates Zala's viticultural and culinary heritage with dödölle cooking contests, wine tastings from local producers, and stages hosting folk dance ensembles, choirs, and concerts until dawn.[115][122] In its 19th year, the event on Erzsébet Square integrates '56 Memorial Garden performances, drawing thousands to honor the potato-based dish's folk origins while blending gastronomy with musical traditions.[123][124] These gatherings not only sustain customs amid modernization but also foster regional identity through verifiable participation data, such as competition entries exceeding 30 teams at prósza events.[125]Historical Sites and Preservation
Zala County preserves a diverse array of historical sites, including medieval fortifications, Baroque estates, and early medieval archaeological remains that reflect the region's role in Hungarian history from the Árpád era onward. The Festetics Palace in Keszthely stands as one of Hungary's largest Baroque residences, with construction initiated in 1745 by Kristóf Festetics and subsequent expansions under family descendants, serving as the noble family's seat for two centuries until the mid-20th century.[126][127] The palace complex, encompassing 365 rooms and expansive gardens, exemplifies 18th-century aristocratic architecture and has been maintained as a museum since nationalization post-World War II.[128] Medieval defensive structures include the ruins of Tátika Castle atop a 413-meter basalt peak near Zalaszántó, erected between 1248 and 1262 on orders from King Béla IV following the Mongol invasion to fortify western borders; the site, initially held by the Tátika clan and later the Kőszegi family, fell into disrepair after the 14th century and remains accessible via hiking trails amid protected beech forests.[129][130] Similarly, Zalavár Historical Memorial Park safeguards 9th-century foundations linked to the early Hungarian principality and Carolingian influences, featuring excavated remnants of St. Adrian's Basilica—a Romanesque structure from the 11th century—and integrated modern monuments commemorating figures like Saint Stephen, with the park's development commencing in the late 1990s to consolidate archaeological findings from six decades of excavations.[131][132] Preservation initiatives emphasize open-air museums and systematic archaeological documentation to protect vernacular and ancient heritage. The Göcseji Village Museum in Zalaegerszeg, Hungary's inaugural ethnographic open-air facility opened in 1965, relocates and restores over 300 traditional Göcsej-region buildings from the 18th to 20th centuries, including farmsteads, mills, and churches furnished with period artifacts to illustrate rural material culture and combat decay of dispersed folk architecture.[133][134] County-level efforts incorporate GIS-based mapping for site inventory and monitoring under Hungary's Cultural Heritage Protection Act of 2001, facilitating recovery, scientific analysis, and sustainable use of monuments amid urban development pressures.[134] These programs, supported by local museums and national policies, prioritize empirical documentation over interpretive narratives to ensure long-term integrity of sites vulnerable to environmental and human factors.[112]Tourism and Attractions
Natural and Thermal Resources
Zala County features significant forest cover, with approximately 111,000 hectares of natural forest comprising 29% of its land area as of 2020.[135] These forests, primarily managed by Zalaerdő Plc in state-owned areas, support timber production and are situated mostly below 150 meters elevation with diverse topography.[13] [63] Agriculture remains a key sector, focusing on crops such as winter barley, winter wheat, and rapeseed, alongside animal husbandry.[5] The county's geology, part of the Pannonian Basin's Zala subbasin, hosts hydrocarbon reserves from Upper Triassic to Miocene formations, making it a historical center for oil and gas extraction.[136] The Nagylengyel oil field, discovered in 1952, exemplifies ongoing production by MOL Group, with the region's first Hungarian oil and gas find at Budafapuszta in 1937.[137] Recent developments include a new oil field discovered in 2025 by MOL and O&GD, capable of yielding 1,200 barrels of oil equivalent per day, split 51-49%.[138] Zala County is renowned for its thermal waters, integral to health tourism, with sources rich in minerals like sulphur, CO2, calcium, and magnesium.[139] Lake Hévíz stands out as the world's largest biologically active natural thermal lake, its waters heated by a mix of hot springs (up to 38°C) and cold inflows, enabling year-round use and supporting medicinal mud treatments.[139] Zalakaros features unique thermal waters with distinct mineral compositions, utilized in local spas for therapeutic bathing.[140] Additional sites like Lenti and Zalaegerszeg thermal baths draw on these resources, contributing to the region's spa infrastructure.[141]Cultural and Recreational Sites
The Göcseji Village Museum in Zalaegerszeg serves as a premier open-air cultural institution, preserving over 300 examples of traditional Hungarian folk architecture from the Göcsej region, including farmhouses, mills, and churches dating from the 18th to early 20th centuries.[142] Visitors can explore exhibits on rural crafts, pottery, and beekeeping, reflecting the area's agrarian heritage through reconstructed buildings and seasonal demonstrations.[143] In Keszthely, the Balaton Museum houses collections on the natural history, archaeology, and ethnography of the Lake Balaton region, with artifacts from prehistoric settlements to medieval times, including Roman-era findings from the surrounding area.[144] The nearby Doll Museum displays over 500 antique dolls and miniatures, offering insights into 19th- and 20th-century European toy-making traditions.[144] Helikon Castle Museum, set in a Baroque mansion, features fine arts, historical furnishings, and temporary exhibitions on local nobility.[144] Recreational facilities include the AquaCity Waterslide and Adventure Park in Zalaegerszeg, operational since 2006, which provides indoor water slides, pools, and saunas accommodating up to 1,000 visitors daily for family-oriented leisure.[143] Lake Gébárti Leisure Park offers boating, fishing, and picnicking amid 50 hectares of lakeside greenery, promoting outdoor activities year-round.[145] Bobo Fun Park near Zalakaros features playgrounds, mini-golf, and animal interactions, drawing families for interactive recreation.[146]References
- https://wikitravel.org/wiki/hu/index.php?title=Zala_megye&mobileaction=toggle_view_desktop
- https://www.[researchgate](/page/ResearchGate).net/figure/Ottoman-period-fortifications-in-Vas-Veszprem-and-Zala-counties-drawn-by-Bela-Nagy_fig1_329610869