AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN TALES
“Post-Monarchic Tales — for the survivors of the Empire.”

West-Central Hungary
An exploration of West-Central Hungary’s cities between the Danube and Lake Balaton, centered on historic towns such as Győr, Veszprém, and Székesfehérvár, along with their broader region.
Prologue
Quick post
Experience
Itinerary
Daily
Epilogue

Western Slovakia
A curated selection of cities in Western Slovakia, stretching along the Danube and the foothills of the Little Carpathians. Through the historic towns of Bratislava, Dunajská Streda, Trnava, and Nitra, it offers insight into the region’s layered past, borderland atmosphere, and diverse cultural heritage.
Quick post
Legend
Experience
Museums
Itinerary
Daily
Austro-Hungarian tales are not just historical reflections, but father-and-son travel experiences across Central Europe. These stories explore how the legacy of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire can be discovered together—through shared journeys, real places, and lived moments.
These Austro-Hungarian tales are rooted in real locations: cities, museums, historic sites and border regions where the past still quietly shapes the present. Instead of presenting history as something distant, they show how it can be experienced directly—step by step, through travel.
At the center of these journeys is the idea of passing something on. A museum visit, a walk through an old town, or a simple question can turn into a story that makes history understandable for the next generation. The father-and-son perspective brings a different rhythm: slower, more curious, and focused on meaning rather than just facts.
The world of the former Empire is layered and complex—full of cultural overlaps, shifting identities, and traces of a shared past. The Austro-Hungarian tales capture this through real travel routes, personal observations, and moments that connect past and present.
This HUB page serves as a starting point: from here, you can explore content connected to specific cities, museums, and stories. If you are interested in how history can be experienced—not just learned—these Austro-Hungarian tales offer a unique, shared way into Central Europe’s past.













