Óbuda

Today, together with Békásmegyer, Óbuda forms a part of the city's third district, although the toponym is also sometimes used for northern Buda as a whole.

Settlements dating from the Stone Age have been found in Óbuda.

Hungarians arrived after 900 and it served as an important settlement of major tribal leaders, later kings.

[1] King Béla IV built a new capital after the 1241–42 catastrophic Mongol invasion in Buda, somewhat south of Óbuda.

In the fourteenth century, Óbuda featured a convent of the Poor Clares.

Óbuda Town Hall
Roman amphitheatre