The Labyrinth of Buda Castle is permanently closed.
Nighttime programs
The night-time personal labyrinths are the sites of one-person path-findings. They are soul-thrilling and sometimes scary “space-time sections”. Instead of being directed by a labyrinth-guide or a soul-guide, visitors are assisted during their journey by a labyrinth-thread, the symbolic thread of life- and path-finding. Wanderings at night might reveal everything that is hidden in the deeper meaning of the word ‘labyrinth’. The inner path leading to the world, leading to ourselves, on which nothing else matters but You.
Traditional personal labyrinths at night
Personal Labyrinth, Inner Circle
The invisible labyrinth is the scene of seeking ways and means by oneself. Read more »
The Labyrinth of Love
The Labyrinth of Love is an exciting and special form of personal wandering in the labyrinth.Read more »
Wandering with the Great Ones of Europe
In Dante’s Divine Comedy, Vergilius was the guide in the journey below the Sky. Visitors starting their night-time one-person path-finding walk can choose a companion, a soul-guide from the most powerful authors of Europe. In the pitch-black labyrinth, where only the Labyrinth lantern helps us to find our way, the invisible labyrinth-thread is represented by the impressive visions and impulses of our chosen guide. These are the impulses of the Europe that is falling into oblivion, the Europe that will soon exist only in our dreams, just as we, ourselves.
Wandering with József, Attila
Being aware of the entirety of existence and behind the bars of powerlessness. Read more »
Wandering with Chopin
On the road of the struggle - rising behind the stormy falls of notesRead more »
Wandering with Liszt
In Hungary’s Liszt Year, the Labyrinth of Buda Castle commemorates the greatest Hungarian musician genius of romanticism. Read more »
Wandering with Beethoven
At the path of sounds by the last classicist and at the same time the first romanticist master. Read more »
Wandering with Mozart
Composing music through the dice play of chance: listen to an unrepeatable Mozart ‘symphony’ while roaming your own route. Read more »
Wandering with Shakespeare
His words open up confounding and dazzling infinity for the wanderers.Read more »
Wandering with Nietzsche
Nietzsche invites you to ecstatic wanderings.Read more »
Wandering with Pilinszky
We can feel very lonely while wandering the labyrinth of facts and getting lost as the world ‘flees’ from us.Read more »
Wandering with Plato
Plato opens up the passages between the changing and the unchanged world for you. Read more »
Wandering with Augustine of Hippo
The inner conflicts of Augustine reveal the paths of belief in God and knowledge.Read more »
Wandering with Heraclitus
Heraclitus is laying road marks just to make you get lost in the invisible order.Read more »
Wandering with Pascal
Pascal offers the Labyrinth thread to those got into the infinite cosmos.Read more »
Wandering with Ady
The creator of modern Hungarian poetry, examining the question ‘who am I’. Read more »
Wandering with Bach
The last master of Baroque music is now guiding us gently in our night labyrinth walk. Read more »
Wandering with Dante
A mystic wandering that provides a glimpse of Hell, Purgatory and…Read more »
Wandering with Hölderlin
Nature and Gods – perceptions that might never reveal themselves again. Read more »
Wandering with Goethe
The constant quest of the harmony of Entirety created by art.Read more »
Wandering with Coleridge
The romanticist English poet is taking us to mysterious worlds. Read more »
Wandering with Shelley
Shelley is dragging his followers towards a new golden age in the ecstasy of devoted desire for freedom. Read more »
Wandering with Dostoyevsky
He who rambles through his own dark labyrinth can find his life’s…Read more »
Wandering with Rimbaud
The prophetic poems of the ‘infant Shakespeare’ dip into the world of deeper
intuitions and associations.Read more »
Wandering with Vivaldi
We are guided in the labyrinth of music by his less known tones of music.Read more »
Wandering with Kafka
Kafka is searching for the way out of the inner labyrinth of ancient anxiety, hopelessly.Read more »
Wandering with Rilke
On the footpaths of anxious fears, aimlessness and being a stranger that are hard to walk on.Read more »
Wandering with Sophocles
On the paths of ancient fears and passions and considerations – just like the Gods. Read more »
Wandering wit Baudelaire
On the rarely beaten paths of death and melancholy with the creator of modern
European poetry.Read more »
Wandering with Heidegger
Heidegger implies the closeness of invisible and remote things.Read more »



















