The 'Little Hungarian Plain' or 'Little Alföld' (
Hungarian: ''Kisalföld'',
Slovak: ''Malá dunajská kotlina'',
German: ''Kleine Ungarische Tiefebene'') is a plain (tectonic
basin) of appr. 8,000 km² in northwestern
Hungary, south-western
Slovakia (''Podunajská nÞina'' –
Danubian Lowland), and eastern
Austria. It is a part of the
Pannonian plain which covers most parts of Hungary.
Geography

The territory of the LHP in Hungary
Its borders are the
Carpathians on the north, the Bakony-Vértes Hills (at the
Balaton) in the south, and the
Vienna Basin and the
Alps in the west. In Hungary, it includes most of
Győr-Moson-Sopron and
Vas counties, and the western part of
Komárom-Esztergom and
Veszprém.
The plain is roughly cut in half by the
Danube which is splitting up into many arms between
Bratislava and
Komárno, forming large islands. Its main tributaries are the
Váh, the
Rába, the
Rábca and the
Marcal rivers.
Smaller microregions of the Little Alföld are
Hanság,
Seewinkel,
Neusiedl Basin,
Rábaköz,
Szigetköz,
Marcali Basin,
Moson Plain,
Komárom-Esztergom Plain and
Žitný ostrov.
The neighbouring regions of
Kemeneshát,
Sopron-Vas Plain and
Steirisches Hügelland are sometimes classified as belonging to the Little Alföld, but Hungarian and Austrian geographists use the term in a more narrow meaning.
History
The plain has been an important area of agriculture since the Neolithic Age. The southern part of it belonged to the Roman province of
Pannonia between the 1st and 5th centuries and later was inhabited by
Germans and
Slavic peoples and since about 900 also by
Hungarians. Since about 1000, the region became part of the
Kingdom of Hungary. After World War I the Little Alföld was divided between Hungary,
Czechoslovakia and Austria. In the 1990s Slovakia built a
large dam and power plant at
GabÄÃkovo.
Population
Country borders don't follow closely the linguistic boundaries, especially in the case of the northern part of the plain where Hungarians are a majority in the two southernmost districts Dunajská Streda and Komárno and a minority in the remaining districts. There are also smaller groups of
Croats in the tri-state border region. Important cities in the region are
Győr (HU),
Komárom (HU),
Komárno (SK),
Dunajská Streda (SK),
Nové Zámky (SK), and
Mosonmagyaróvár (HU).
See also
★
Great Alföld
★
Sedimentary basin
★
Lowlands