The legacy of an era.
Millennium pavilion · BudapestAt the time of the Millennium — the end of the 19th century — Hungary lived its golden age. Budapest led the way: Heroes' Square, the Parliament, Andrássy Avenue and continental Europe's first underground railway were all built here. A growing middle class and urban bourgeoisie supplied the cultural appetite and economic drive that let Budapest rival Vienna, Paris and London in scale and ambition.
The era was infused with the pride of a thousand-year-old nation, a sense of civic duty and the patronage of the arts. The spirit of the age embraced the classical virtues: aspiration, diligence, communal responsibility and patriotism.
Budapest citizens · turn of the centuryDuring the Hungarian millennium — especially in 1896, the thousandth anniversary of the conquest — Budapest marked the peak of modern urban and national development. Our capital secured its place among the great European cities, and the Budapest bourgeoisie played a key role in that transformation.
The modern Budapest gentleman — often a self-made man or a member of the new commercial and intellectual elite — expressed his virtues not through old feudal forms, but through active participation in the city's economic, social and cultural life. The age was marked by a strong competitive spirit and the desire to advance, as social mobility opened to those who embodied these virtues.
Period Hungarian cigar brandsThe smoking habits and social life of 19th-century Budapest were closely intertwined. Smoking — pipes and cigars above all — carried not only personal but social significance, and was a strongly gendered custom among men.
It became a symbol of national pride, masculinity and belonging — and, tied to the consumption of Hungarian-grown tobacco and protest against the Austrian tobacco monopoly, took on a patriotic meaning. Budapest's civic life thus created distinctive communal forms around the shared ritual of smoking.
The Club's Ars Poetica
Built on the spirit of the Millennium, the Millennium Szivarklub was founded in 2025 to bring back, for its members, the forms of social connection typical of that era — in our hurried, increasingly impersonal world.
Its members are men who strive to practise the classical virtues, who value patriotism and openness, classical values and modernity alike. They regard civic engagement and the arts as worth supporting.
Our members are bound by a love of the cigar, and gather regularly to honour their passion; shared reflection and culture are part of every social evening.

I discovered the world of cigars 20 years ago. When I want to focus, it is silence and cigar smoke that help me unwind and inspire me. In company, it is almost unthinkable for me not to light a cigar suited to the occasion to accompany the conversation. Five years ago I founded the Bikavér Cigar Club in Eger, which has offered unforgettable shared smokes for us all ever since.
To be a founding organiser of the Millennium Szivarklub is an even greater honour. The capital's community of cigar lovers turns Tuesday evenings into a true celebration. After the talks, the conversations and the civilised debates, I always leave far richer than I arrived.
Since then we have also launched the Cigar & Sail initiative (szivaresvitorla.hu) for the Millennium Szivarklub's community — to share sailing, another of my passions enjoyed together with many of our members, with those who would like to gather unforgettable experiences on the Adriatic too.












