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Executive |
Parliament |
Recent elections
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There are seven statistical regions of Hungary created in 1999 by the Law 1999/XCII amending Law 1996/XXI. Regions are groupings of the 19 counties and the capital city.
Name of the region | Regional centre | Area (km2) |
Population 2016[1] |
Density (/km2) |
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Northern Hungary (Észak-Magyaroszág) | Miskolc | 13,428 | 1,153,714 | 86 |
Northern Great Plain (Észak-Alföld) | Debrecen | 17,749 | 1,474,383 | 83 |
Southern Great Plain (Dél-Alföld) | Szeged | 18,339 | 1,262,936 | 69 |
Central Hungary (Közép-Magyarország) | Budapest | 6,919 | 2,993,948 | 433 |
Central Transdanubia (Közép-Dunántúl) | Székesfehérvár | 11,237 | 1,060,703 | 94 |
Western Transdanubia (Nyugat-Dunántúl) | Győr | 11,209 | 983,933 | 88 |
Southern Transdanubia (Dél-Dunántúl) | Pécs | 14,169 | 900,868 | 64 |
Hungary belongs into the following euroregions:
(Counties sometimes only roughly correspond to euroregions, so overlap is possible.)
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States with limited recognition |
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Dependencies and other entities |
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