Komárno, town, southwestern Slovakia. It lies at the confluence of the Vah and Nitra rivers with the Danube River below Bratislava, at the Hungarian border. The town of Komárom, part of Hungary, lies on the south bank of the Danube across from Komárno.
Komárno occupies the extreme eastern end of an island in the Danube River. This site, with its confluence of strong watercourses, proved a point of great defensive strength over the centuries. The ancient Romans fortified it, and in Magyar history and the Austro-Hungarian period Komárno remained a noted strongpoint; there is a record of fortification at the time of Matthias I Corvinus (1443–90), during the critical defense of Germanic Europe against the Turks (1526–64), and in the late 17th and early 19th centuries. In 1848–49 Komárno was held by the Magyar nationalist forces, and it was the refuge for the Austrian National Bank treasure in 1866, when Vienna was threatened by the Prussians.
By 1914 Komárno had expanded and spread to the south bank of the Danube River. When the Austro-Hungarian Empire collapsed in 1918, the Danube became the frontier between Hungary and nascent Czechoslovakia, and Komárno was divided as a consequence. In 1920 Komárno became part of Czechoslovakia while its south-bank settlement, Komárom, remained part of Hungary; the two towns are still closely associated. Komárno reverted to Hungary in 1939, but after 1945 it again became Czechoslovakian. Its population includes both Slovaks and Magyars.
Komárno’s role as a river port complemented and eventually superseded its function as a fortress. The port is an important reloading point for the trade in coal and oil between central and southeastern Europe. The town’s potential as a port has been limited by its frontier position, however, and by the damage to the Danube navigation channel in World War II. Fishing, textile, and machine industries are other economic activities. Pop. (2011) 34,349.