The House of Prisoner Ráby stands on the Rab Ráby Square a centre of the former Dalmatian quarter. The Austrian Emperor sent Mátyás Ráby to look into local corruption issues. He lived in this modest Baroque house built in 1768. He found out tax evasions and other unlawful acts commited by the local noble men who tried to briber by. After refuring bribery he was imprisoned. In his novel entitled Rab Ráby, Mór Jókai the great Hungarian tale teller introduces him as the leading figure of the cause of the poor. Due to the film based on this novel, he is honoured as a freedom hero.The space is called Rab Ráby Square since 1958. Before was Erzsébet, Marx, and Béke Square. Ráby was incorruptible, it was being whispered after all that he accepted gifts from the city's lords. One concealed the money into a cellar. The treasure --according to the tradition--even today is hiding there…
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