Perhaps because back in the day people knew what they were doing, why and where. Many of the local vineyard owners teamed up to erect a miniature church or chapel on their estates, in an obviously perfect spot, on the hillside. There they prayed for a good crop, their families, they village and who knows what else. Maybe it’s because of their good intentions that these sites are still pleasant places to take a rest today. On a bench. Because you can find benches everywhere. You have to sit down, not because you’re tired. Just for the sake of sitting down.
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Avasi ruins
Nothing is too far from anything else on the north shore of Balaton, which is good because you only have to drive 10 minutes – or bike 20 minutes – in the direction of Szigliget, and you’ll come upon a new attraction worth stopping for. Arriving in Szigliget from highway 71, visitors are greeted by the Avasi-Réhelyi church ruins. From the road you can only see an old tower, but these are in fact the remains of the town’s ancient core. The ruins of the 13th century church are guarded by shady trees.
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Szentháromság Chapel
Glistening like a pearl in the distance, the small, white chapel is visible even from Szigliget Beach. Turn up the “hill” by the marina, go all the way to the local convenience store where you can park your car or bike, and head up a flight of modest wooden stairs to get to Szentháromság (Holy Trinity) Chapel, a charming centrepiece of the Balaton panorama. This one too was built by the vineyard owners of the area in 1845. It is also a solemn memorial of Szigliget’s WWII heroes and the crew of the American B-24 bomber that went down in June 1944.
At this point you might think you won’t see anything more beautiful, but the tour is not yet over. Even so, there’ll be a moment when you’ll feel you don’t want to leave (you don’t have to, by the way), as you sit back on the bench, rest you back against the wall of the chapel and listen to the noises of the hill with Balaton sprawled out in front of your feet.