A Concise History of Hungary
This book offers a comprehensive thousand-year history of the land, people, society, culture and economy of Hungary, from its nebulous origins in the Ural Mountains to the elections of 1988. It tells above all the thrilling story of a people which became a great power in the region and then fought against - and was invaded by - Ottomans, Germans and Soviets. The Hungarian people preserved nevertheless a continuous individuality through its Ural-born language and a specifically Hungaro-European culture. Dominated from the sixteenth century by the Habsburgs, while ruling its own national minorities, Hungary was deprived of two-thirds of its lands and peoples through successive treaties which followed the two World Wars, after which it fell under Soviet domination for nearly fifty years. Free and independent since 1990, Hungary continues to seek its rightful position in Europe.
- A comprehensive history of the Hungarian lands and peoples from early medieval times to the fall of communism
- Illustrated by many photographs and maps which illuminate the text
- Written by a very experienced, authoritative author, who has himself suffered from the dramatic upheavals in Hungarian history in the twentieth century
Reviews & endorsements
"Good illustrations and maps guide the reader through the events of the Hungarian past." CHOICE Jan 2002
"Educated general readers seeking a well-informed, readable, and current individual perspective on Hungary's national past will find this book useful." Austrian History Yearbook
Product details
April 2001Hardback
9780521661423
390 pages
224 × 146 × 30 mm
0.65kg
48 b/w illus. 11 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- Chronology
- 1. From the beginnings to 1301
- 2. Grandeur and decline: from the Anjou kings to the battle of Mohà cs, 1301–1526
- 3. A country under three crowns, 1526–1711
- 4. Vienna and Hungary: absolutism, reforms, revolution, 1711–1848
- 5. Rupture, compromise and dual monarchy, 1849–1919
- 6. Between the two wars
- 7. Under Soviet domination, 1949–90
- 8. 1990, a new departure
- Bibliography
- Index.