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Pole and Hungarian brothers be

"Pole and Hungarian brothers be" (the Polish version) and "Pole and Hungarian, two good friends" (the Hungarian version) are English translations of a proverbial saying about the traditional brotherhood and camaraderie between Poles and Hungarians.

Poles and Hungarians, by Johann Wilhelm Baur (Czartoryski Museum, Kraków)

Texts edit

 
Polish-Hungarian friendship monument in Eger, Hungary, with the saying inscribed on its steps

The saying's Polish text reads

Polak, Węgier — dwa bratanki,
i do szabli, i do szklanki,
oba zuchy, oba żwawi,
niech im Pan Bóg błogosławi.

The full, two-couplet Hungarian version reads

Lengyel, magyar – két jó barát,
Együtt harcol s issza borát,
Vitéz s bátor mindkettője,
Áldás szálljon mindkettőre.

The Polish text may be translated

Pole and Hungarian brothers be,
good for fight and good for party.
Both are valiant, both are lively,
Upon them may God's blessings be.

or, more literally,

Pole and Hungarian — two brothers,
good for saber and for glass.
Both courageous, both lively,
May the Lord God bless them.

A shorter Hungarian couplet

Lengyel, magyar – két jó barát,
együtt harcol s issza borát.

may be translated

Pole and Hungarian — two good friends,
fighting, and drinking at the end.

or, more literally,

Pole, Hungarian — two good friends,
together they battle and drink their wine.

The saying's Polish version has two couplets, each of the four lines containing eight syllables. The shorter Hungarian version has a single couplet, each of the two lines also consisting of eight syllables. The Polish bratanek (in modern parlance, "brother's son", or fraternal nephew) differs in meaning from the Hungarian barát ("friend"), though the words look similar. The Polish version is commonly quoted by Poles. The Hungarian language has 10 versions, most of which are two-line, eight-syllable couplets.

History edit

Congeniality edit

 
Polish Soldier and Hungarian Ladies, by Georg Haufnagel (Czartoryski Museum, Kraków)

The saying – a 16th- or 18th-century coinage by Polish szlachta (nobility) – reflects a long special relationship between Poland and Hungary. Poles and Hungarians considered themselves brothers in war and peace. They recognized that the two countries shared a similar political structure: a nobles' republic (the Polish Rzeczpospolita, the Hungarian natio Hungarica) with a democratic parliamentary system in which the state and king were controlled by a non-aristocratic noble class. The Polish word rokosz (a gathering to resist royal authority) derives from Hungary's Rákos [hu], a field near Pest which was the medieval venue for mass meetings of Hungarian nobility.

The Poles recognized that both countries' noble classes had similar lifestyles, employed similar military tactics and weaponry, and shared common history, making them "brothers". When the Poles in 1576 elected the Hungarian Stephen Báthory (prince of Transylvania) king of Poland, he introduced military reforms, creating Poland's hussars and importing Poland's first saber-makers from Transylvania. In Poland, the szabla became known as the szabla węgierska ("Hungarian saber") or batorówka after King Stephen Báthory; it was subsequently called the zygmuntówka after Poland's King Sigismund III Vasa and the augustówka after King Augustus III.

The nobility of both countries enjoyed wine (imported to Poland primarily from Hungary during the Middle Ages), resulting in a similar temperament and lifestyle.[citation needed] In Hungary, the saying became widely known outside noble circles in the late 19th century. According to one source, the proverb's original Polish version was Węgier, Polak dwa bratanki i do szabli i do szklanki. Oba zuchy, oba żwawi, niech im Pan Bóg błogosławi.[1]

The saying probably originated after the 1772 collapse of the Bar Confederation (1768–72), which had been formed to defend the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from aggression by the Russian Empire. According to Julian Krzyżanowski, the saying was inspired by the political asylum in Szepesség, Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Spiš, Slovakia), of the confederation's leaders.[2] According to another source, it "comes from the period when the Generality of the Bar Confederation (the Confederation's supreme authority) took up residence in Eperjes (now Prešov in eastern Slovakia) between 1769 and 1772".[3][4]

Common interests edit

 
Battle of Piski in which Hungarians and Poles defeated the Austrians during the Hungarian War of Independence of 1848–1849

Future Polish King Władysław I the Elbow-high, fighting the Teutonic Order, found shelter at the courts of the Aba and Záh (Nógrád Castle) clans in Hungary. His family was guarded by Záh knights. Władysław married a Polish-Byzantine-Hungarian princess, Jadwiga of Kalisz. The daughter of Władysław and Maria of Bytom, Elżbieta, became queen of Hungary. Her son, Hungarian King Louis the Great, was also king of Poland, 1370–1382, after the death of his uncle, Polish King Casimir III the Great.

After the death of Louis the Great, his daughter Jadwiga became ruler of Poland, crowned "king" in Poland's capital, Kraków, on 16 October 1384. In 1440–1444, the two countries shared the same king again, after King Władysław III of Poland became also King of Hungary. At age twenty he was killed in the Battle of Varna, in which a coalition of Central and Eastern European countries led by Poland and Hungary was defeated by the Turks. From 1490 to 1526, both countries were ruled by separate but closely related branches of the Jagiellonian dynasty, after Polish Prince Władysław, son of Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon, became King Vladislaus II of Hungary.

Polish-Hungarian relations became particularly close during the rule of the Jagiellonian dynasty in Poland and Hungary. The Polish historian Krzysztof Baczkowski [pl], who analyzed Polish-Hungarian correspondence and personal encounters in the late 15th and the first half of the 16th century, concluded that with no other neighbour did the Poles have such "frequent and lively" contacts, which intensified with time and led to many strong friendships as well as mutual sociocultural, military, and legal influences.[5]

In the 1576 Polish–Lithuanian royal election, a Hungarian nobleman, Stephen Báthory, was elected king of Poland.

After the outbreak of the Polish November 1830 Uprising, Hungarians collected money for Polish insurgents and provided help and shelter to Polish refugees.[6][7] Many of them also joined the ranks of the Polish rebels.[6] During the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, some 10,000 Polish volunteers fought for Hungarian independence,[8] and Polish General Józef Bem became a national hero of both countries.[9]

During the Polish–Soviet War of 1919–21, Hungary offered to send 30,000 cavalry to Poland's aid; however, the Czechoslovak government refused them passage through the demilitarized zone which had existed between Czechoslovakia and Hungary since the Hungarian–Czechoslovak War of several months earlier. The Romanian government took a similar stance, also refusing passage. When the Hungarians tried to send ammunition trains, Czechoslovakia again refused but Romania agreed, provided the Hungarians used their own trains.[10] Hundreds of Hungarian volunteers fought on Poland's side in the war, and some stayed in Poland afterward.[11]

 
Plaque in Warsaw commemorating Hungarian aid to Poland during the Polish–Soviet War of 1919–21

From the Middle Ages into the 18th century, Poland and Hungary shared a border between Poland and Carpathian Ruthenia (also known as Carpathian Rus, were part of several Hungarian states). After World War I, the Allies transferred Carpathian Ruthenia from Hungary to Czechoslovakia. Poland never ratified the Treaty of Trianon. The treaty with Hungary was not signed until 4 June 1920, did not become effective until 26 July 1921, and was never published in Poland's Journal of Laws.[12]

After the 30 September 1938 Munich Agreement (which fatally wounded Czechoslovakia and, after the proclamation of the First Slovak Republic, led to the remainder of the country being taken over by Germany), Poland and Hungary worked through diplomatic and paramilitary means to restore their common border by engineering the return of Carpathian Ruthenia to Hungary.[13] A step toward this goal was realized with the 2 November 1938 First Vienna Award.

Until mid-March 1939, Germany had considered a restored Hungarian-Polish frontier, for military reasons, undesirable. In March 1939, however, in response to Hungary's lobbying, Hitler changed his mind about a common Hungarian-Polish frontier and decided instead to betray Germany's ally, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, who had begun organizing Ukrainian military units in 1938 in a sich outside Uzhhorod, the capital of Subcarpathian Rus', which had been restyled Carpatho-Ukraine. Hitler had been concerned that if a Ukrainian army, organized there, accompanied German forces invading the Soviet Union, Ukrainian nationalists would insist on an independent Ukraine.[14] Polish political and military authorities, for their part, had seen the sich as an imminent danger to adjacent southeastern Poland, with its majority-Ukrainian population, and in November 1938 had launched paramilitary operations to assist Hungary in taking over the region, which Hungary had governed to the end of World War I.[15] Consequently, in March 1939, Hungary took over the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia.

 
Grave of a Hungarian Honvéd captain and six of his men, who fell fighting on the Polish side in the 1944 Warsaw Uprising

In September 1939, Hitler asked Hungary to allow German forces to transit Hungarian territory in order to speed the German attack on eastern Poland; Hungary's Admiral Miklós Horthy declined permission, on the ground that it would be incompatible with Hungarian honor.[14] On 17 September 1939, pursuant to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and the Gestapo–NKVD conferences, the Soviet Union seized eastern and southeastern Poland and incorporated them into western Ukraine. Upon the Soviet invasion, Poland evacuated its government and substantial army and air units into allied Romania; considerable Polish military were simultaneously evacuated into Hungary, to the west of Romania. The evacuated Polish forces quickly, eluding or escaping internment, made their way west to France, there to regroup and continue the war alongside Poland's western allies.[16] In June 1944, there were around 15,000 Polish refugees in Hungary.[17]

During the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, many Hungarian soldiers, sympathetic to the Polish cause, gave munitions, medical supplies, and rations for the Polish Underground, and some even defected to join their Polish brothers. Hungarian soldiers assisted in the evacuation of civilian families during the Uprising.[18]

During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Poles demonstrated their support for the Hungarian insurgents by donating blood. The blood banks had to work 24 hours a day because of how many people lined up to give blood for wounded Hungarians.[19] By 3 November, 1,210 litres of blood and blood plasma had been delivered from Poland to Hungary,[20] while by 12 November, 11,196 Poles had donated blood. The Polish Red Cross sent 44 tons of medical supplies to Hungary by air, and larger amounts were sent by road and rail.

In February 2021, Hungary returned to Poland the Renaissance armor of Polish King Sigismund II Augustus, which ended up in Hungary in the interwar period as a result of a misunderstanding, as it was believed to be the armor of King Louis II of Hungary.[21] The gesture is perceived as another example of Polish-Hungarian friendship.[21]

Friendship Day edit

On 12 March 2007, Hungary's parliament declared 23 March as Hungarian-Polish Friendship Day. Four days later, the Polish parliament declared 23 March Polish-Hungarian Friendship Day by acclamation.[22]

Friendship Day is celebrated regularly in both countries with concerts, festivals, and exhibitions. Some Polish music groups, such as SBB, feature Hungarian musicians (for example, Tamás Somló and Gábor Németh); Hungarian bands such as Locomotiv GT and Omega feature Polish musicians, including Józef Skrzek.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Michał Czajkowski, Dziwne życie Polaków i Polek (The Strange Life of Polish Men and Women), Leipzig: F. A. Brockhaus, 1865, pp. 155, 193.
  2. ^ Julian Krzyżanowski, Odrodzenie i reformacja w Polsce (The Renaissance and Reformation in Poland), vol. 36–38, p. 161.
  3. ^ Henryk Markiewicz, Andrzej Romanowski, Skrzydlate słowa (Winged Words), 1990, p. 830.
  4. ^ Janusz Tazbir states: "The Commonwealth was partitioned into three parts, subjected to three annexing powers. It was then that the popular proverb came into being, which appears in a number of variants: Polak, Węgier — dwa bratanki..." Janusz Tazbir, Sarmaci i świat (The Sarmatians and the World), vol. 3, 2001, p. 453.
  5. ^ Baczkowski, Krysztof (2003). "Stosunki między elitami władzy Polski i Węgier na przełomie XV i XVI wieku" (PDF). Prace Historyczne (in Polish and English). Jagiellonian University (130): 86. ISSN 0083-4351.
  6. ^ a b Kapronczay, Károly (1999). Refugees in Hungary: Shelter from Storm During World War II. Matthias Corvinus Publishing. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-1882785124.
  7. ^ Paget, John (1850). Hungary and Transylvania: With Remarks on Their Condition, Social, Political and Economical, Vol. 1. Lea & Blanchard. pp. 165–166.
  8. ^ Sutter Fichtner, Paula (2003). The Habsburg Monarchy, 1490-1848: Attributes of Empire. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-333-71694-6.
  9. ^ http://nemzetisegek.hu/repertorium/2012/05/belivek_15-19.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ "Magyar segítség a lengyel-bolsevik háborúban – Lengyelország Magyarországon – Portal Gov.pl".
  11. ^ "Wsparcie Węgier dla Polski w wojnie polsko-bolszewickiej". Portal Gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  12. ^ "A trianoni békeszerződés és Lengyelország".
  13. ^ Józef Kasparek, "Poland's 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia", East European Quarterly", vol. XXIII, no. 3 (September 1989), pp. 366–67, 370. Józef Kasparek, Przepust karpacki: tajna akcja polskiego wywiadu (The Carpathian Bridge: a Covert Polish Intelligence Operation), p. 11.
  14. ^ a b Józef Kasparek, "Poland's 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia", pp. 370–71.
  15. ^ Józef Kasparek, "Poland's 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia", p. 366.
  16. ^ Józef Kasparek, "Poland's 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia", p. 372.
  17. ^ István, Lagzi (1995). "The number of Poles having escaped to the territory of Hungary during the Second World War: facts and data" (PDF). Acta Universitatis Szegediensis: Acta historica. University of Szeged: 24. ISSN 0324-6965.
  18. ^ Zima, Maria (2018). Magyar katonák és a Varsói felkelés [Hungarian Soldiers and the Warsaw Uprising] (PDF) (in Hungarian). HM Hadtörténeti intézet és Múzeum. ISBN 978-963-7097-88-1.
  19. ^ Tischler, János (1999). "Polish Leaders and the Hungarian Revolution". In Kemp-Welch, A. (ed.). Stalinism in Poland, 1944–56: Selected Papers from the Fifth World Congress of Central and East European Studies, Warsaw, 1995. MacMillan Press Ltd. p. 126. ISBN 9781349276820.
  20. ^ Tischler, János (2006). "Poland and Hungary in 1956". In Lee, Congdon; Király, Béla K.; Nagy, Károly (eds.). 1956: the Hungarian Revolution and War for Independence. East European Monographs. p. 117. ISBN 9780880335980.
  21. ^ a b Małgorzata Wosion-Czoba; Karol Kostrzewa. "Renesansowa zbroja młodego Zygmunta II Augusta trafiła na Wawel". dzieje.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  22. ^ Uchwała Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 16 marca 2007 r. (in Polish)

References edit

  • Józef Kasparek, "Poland's 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia", East European Quarterly, vol. XXIII, no. 3 (September 1989), pp. 365–73.
  • Józef Kasparek, Przepust karpacki: tajna akcja polskiego wywiadu (The Carpathian Bridge: a Covert Polish Intelligence Operation), Warszawa, Wydawnictwo Czasopism i Książek Technicznych SIGMA NOT, 1992, ISBN 83-85001-96-4.
  • Edmund Charaszkiewicz, "Referat o działaniach dywersyjnych na Rusi Karpackiej" ("Report on Covert Operations in Carpathian Rus"), in Zbiór dokumentów ppłk. Edmunda Charaszkiewicza (Collection of Documents by Lt. Col. Edmund Charaszkiewicz), opracowanie, wstęp i przypisy (edited, with introduction and notes by) Andrzej Grzywacz, Marcin Kwiecień, Grzegorz Mazur, Kraków, Księgarnia Akademicka, 2000, ISBN 83-7188-449-4, pp. 106–30.

External links edit

  • Polish-Hungarian dictionary (in Polish)

pole, hungarian, brothers, polish, version, pole, hungarian, good, friends, hungarian, version, english, translations, proverbial, saying, about, traditional, brotherhood, camaraderie, between, poles, hungarians, poles, hungarians, johann, wilhelm, baur, czart. Pole and Hungarian brothers be the Polish version and Pole and Hungarian two good friends the Hungarian version are English translations of a proverbial saying about the traditional brotherhood and camaraderie between Poles and Hungarians Poles and Hungarians by Johann Wilhelm Baur Czartoryski Museum Krakow Contents 1 Texts 2 History 2 1 Congeniality 2 2 Common interests 3 Friendship Day 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksTexts edit nbsp Polish Hungarian friendship monument in Eger Hungary with the saying inscribed on its stepsThe saying s Polish text reads Polak Wegier dwa bratanki i do szabli i do szklanki oba zuchy oba zwawi niech im Pan Bog blogoslawi The full two couplet Hungarian version reads Lengyel magyar ket jo barat Egyutt harcol s issza borat Vitez s bator mindkettoje Aldas szalljon mindkettore The Polish text may be translated Pole and Hungarian brothers be good for fight and good for party Both are valiant both are lively Upon them may God s blessings be or more literally Pole and Hungarian two brothers good for saber and for glass Both courageous both lively May the Lord God bless them A shorter Hungarian couplet Lengyel magyar ket jo barat egyutt harcol s issza borat may be translated Pole and Hungarian two good friends fighting and drinking at the end or more literally Pole Hungarian two good friends together they battle and drink their wine The saying s Polish version has two couplets each of the four lines containing eight syllables The shorter Hungarian version has a single couplet each of the two lines also consisting of eight syllables The Polish bratanek in modern parlance brother s son or fraternal nephew differs in meaning from the Hungarian barat friend though the words look similar The Polish version is commonly quoted by Poles The Hungarian language has 10 versions most of which are two line eight syllable couplets History editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pole and Hungarian brothers be news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 template removal help Congeniality edit nbsp Polish Soldier and Hungarian Ladies by Georg Haufnagel Czartoryski Museum Krakow The saying a 16th or 18th century coinage by Polish szlachta nobility reflects a long special relationship between Poland and Hungary Poles and Hungarians considered themselves brothers in war and peace They recognized that the two countries shared a similar political structure a nobles republic the Polish Rzeczpospolita the Hungarian natio Hungarica with a democratic parliamentary system in which the state and king were controlled by a non aristocratic noble class The Polish word rokosz a gathering to resist royal authority derives from Hungary s Rakos hu a field near Pest which was the medieval venue for mass meetings of Hungarian nobility The Poles recognized that both countries noble classes had similar lifestyles employed similar military tactics and weaponry and shared common history making them brothers When the Poles in 1576 elected the Hungarian Stephen Bathory prince of Transylvania king of Poland he introduced military reforms creating Poland s hussars and importing Poland s first saber makers from Transylvania In Poland the szabla became known as the szabla wegierska Hungarian saber or batorowka after King Stephen Bathory it was subsequently called the zygmuntowka after Poland s King Sigismund III Vasa and the augustowka after King Augustus III The nobility of both countries enjoyed wine imported to Poland primarily from Hungary during the Middle Ages resulting in a similar temperament and lifestyle citation needed In Hungary the saying became widely known outside noble circles in the late 19th century According to one source the proverb s original Polish version was Wegier Polak dwa bratanki i do szabli i do szklanki Oba zuchy oba zwawi niech im Pan Bog blogoslawi 1 The saying probably originated after the 1772 collapse of the Bar Confederation 1768 72 which had been formed to defend the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth from aggression by the Russian Empire According to Julian Krzyzanowski the saying was inspired by the political asylum in Szepesseg Kingdom of Hungary present day Spis Slovakia of the confederation s leaders 2 According to another source it comes from the period when the Generality of the Bar Confederation the Confederation s supreme authority took up residence in Eperjes now Presov in eastern Slovakia between 1769 and 1772 3 4 Common interests edit nbsp Battle of Piski in which Hungarians and Poles defeated the Austrians during the Hungarian War of Independence of 1848 1849Future Polish King Wladyslaw I the Elbow high fighting the Teutonic Order found shelter at the courts of the Aba and Zah Nograd Castle clans in Hungary His family was guarded by Zah knights Wladyslaw married a Polish Byzantine Hungarian princess Jadwiga of Kalisz The daughter of Wladyslaw and Maria of Bytom Elzbieta became queen of Hungary Her son Hungarian King Louis the Great was also king of Poland 1370 1382 after the death of his uncle Polish King Casimir III the Great After the death of Louis the Great his daughter Jadwiga became ruler of Poland crowned king in Poland s capital Krakow on 16 October 1384 In 1440 1444 the two countries shared the same king again after King Wladyslaw III of Poland became also King of Hungary At age twenty he was killed in the Battle of Varna in which a coalition of Central and Eastern European countries led by Poland and Hungary was defeated by the Turks From 1490 to 1526 both countries were ruled by separate but closely related branches of the Jagiellonian dynasty after Polish Prince Wladyslaw son of Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon became King Vladislaus II of Hungary Polish Hungarian relations became particularly close during the rule of the Jagiellonian dynasty in Poland and Hungary The Polish historian Krzysztof Baczkowski pl who analyzed Polish Hungarian correspondence and personal encounters in the late 15th and the first half of the 16th century concluded that with no other neighbour did the Poles have such frequent and lively contacts which intensified with time and led to many strong friendships as well as mutual sociocultural military and legal influences 5 In the 1576 Polish Lithuanian royal election a Hungarian nobleman Stephen Bathory was elected king of Poland After the outbreak of the Polish November 1830 Uprising Hungarians collected money for Polish insurgents and provided help and shelter to Polish refugees 6 7 Many of them also joined the ranks of the Polish rebels 6 During the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 some 10 000 Polish volunteers fought for Hungarian independence 8 and Polish General Jozef Bem became a national hero of both countries 9 During the Polish Soviet War of 1919 21 Hungary offered to send 30 000 cavalry to Poland s aid however the Czechoslovak government refused them passage through the demilitarized zone which had existed between Czechoslovakia and Hungary since the Hungarian Czechoslovak War of several months earlier The Romanian government took a similar stance also refusing passage When the Hungarians tried to send ammunition trains Czechoslovakia again refused but Romania agreed provided the Hungarians used their own trains 10 Hundreds of Hungarian volunteers fought on Poland s side in the war and some stayed in Poland afterward 11 nbsp Plaque in Warsaw commemorating Hungarian aid to Poland during the Polish Soviet War of 1919 21From the Middle Ages into the 18th century Poland and Hungary shared a border between Poland and Carpathian Ruthenia also known as Carpathian Rus were part of several Hungarian states After World War I the Allies transferred Carpathian Ruthenia from Hungary to Czechoslovakia Poland never ratified the Treaty of Trianon The treaty with Hungary was not signed until 4 June 1920 did not become effective until 26 July 1921 and was never published in Poland s Journal of Laws 12 After the 30 September 1938 Munich Agreement which fatally wounded Czechoslovakia and after the proclamation of the First Slovak Republic led to the remainder of the country being taken over by Germany Poland and Hungary worked through diplomatic and paramilitary means to restore their common border by engineering the return of Carpathian Ruthenia to Hungary 13 A step toward this goal was realized with the 2 November 1938 First Vienna Award Until mid March 1939 Germany had considered a restored Hungarian Polish frontier for military reasons undesirable In March 1939 however in response to Hungary s lobbying Hitler changed his mind about a common Hungarian Polish frontier and decided instead to betray Germany s ally the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists who had begun organizing Ukrainian military units in 1938 in a sich outside Uzhhorod the capital of Subcarpathian Rus which had been restyled Carpatho Ukraine Hitler had been concerned that if a Ukrainian army organized there accompanied German forces invading the Soviet Union Ukrainian nationalists would insist on an independent Ukraine 14 Polish political and military authorities for their part had seen the sich as an imminent danger to adjacent southeastern Poland with its majority Ukrainian population and in November 1938 had launched paramilitary operations to assist Hungary in taking over the region which Hungary had governed to the end of World War I 15 Consequently in March 1939 Hungary took over the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia nbsp Grave of a Hungarian Honved captain and six of his men who fell fighting on the Polish side in the 1944 Warsaw UprisingIn September 1939 Hitler asked Hungary to allow German forces to transit Hungarian territory in order to speed the German attack on eastern Poland Hungary s Admiral Miklos Horthy declined permission on the ground that it would be incompatible with Hungarian honor 14 On 17 September 1939 pursuant to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact and the Gestapo NKVD conferences the Soviet Union seized eastern and southeastern Poland and incorporated them into western Ukraine Upon the Soviet invasion Poland evacuated its government and substantial army and air units into allied Romania considerable Polish military were simultaneously evacuated into Hungary to the west of Romania The evacuated Polish forces quickly eluding or escaping internment made their way west to France there to regroup and continue the war alongside Poland s western allies 16 In June 1944 there were around 15 000 Polish refugees in Hungary 17 During the 1944 Warsaw Uprising many Hungarian soldiers sympathetic to the Polish cause gave munitions medical supplies and rations for the Polish Underground and some even defected to join their Polish brothers Hungarian soldiers assisted in the evacuation of civilian families during the Uprising 18 During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Poles demonstrated their support for the Hungarian insurgents by donating blood The blood banks had to work 24 hours a day because of how many people lined up to give blood for wounded Hungarians 19 By 3 November 1 210 litres of blood and blood plasma had been delivered from Poland to Hungary 20 while by 12 November 11 196 Poles had donated blood The Polish Red Cross sent 44 tons of medical supplies to Hungary by air and larger amounts were sent by road and rail In February 2021 Hungary returned to Poland the Renaissance armor of Polish King Sigismund II Augustus which ended up in Hungary in the interwar period as a result of a misunderstanding as it was believed to be the armor of King Louis II of Hungary 21 The gesture is perceived as another example of Polish Hungarian friendship 21 Friendship Day editOn 12 March 2007 Hungary s parliament declared 23 March as Hungarian Polish Friendship Day Four days later the Polish parliament declared 23 March Polish Hungarian Friendship Day by acclamation 22 Friendship Day is celebrated regularly in both countries with concerts festivals and exhibitions Some Polish music groups such as SBB feature Hungarian musicians for example Tamas Somlo and Gabor Nemeth Hungarian bands such as Locomotiv GT and Omega feature Polish musicians including Jozef Skrzek Gallery edit nbsp Two oaks mural in Budapest symbolizing Polish Hungarian friendship nbsp Warsaw plaque commemorating Hungarians support for the Polish November 1830 31 Uprising nbsp Monument to Jozef Bem in Budapest nbsp Plaque in Sarospatak commemorating Hungarians help to 140 000 Polish soldiers and refugees in World War II nbsp Memorial in Budapest to victims of the Katyn massacre nbsp Memorial in Wroclaw to heroes of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956See also edit nbsp Poland portal nbsp Hungary portal nbsp Politics portalMieszko II Lambert Leszek the White Maria Laskarina Coloman of Galicia Bela IV of Hungary Boleslaw V the Chaste Kinga of Poland Yolanda of Poland Wladyslaw I the Elbow high Jadwiga of Kalisz Amadeus Aba Amadej coat of arms Matthew III Csak Zah gens Maria of Bytom Elizabeth of Poland Queen of Hungary Matthias Corvinus Gyorgy Dozsa Stephen Bathory Wladyslaw III of Varna Jozef Bem Michael Kovats and Casimir Pulaski Ignacy Lukasiewicz Poznan 1956 protests Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Sylwester Zych Hungary Poland relations Union of Hungary and Poland First Vienna Award Visegrad Group River s that connect s Poland to Hungary Cirocha via Poloniny National Park Laborec Latoritsa Bodrog TiszaNotes edit Michal Czajkowski Dziwne zycie Polakow i Polek The Strange Life of Polish Men and Women Leipzig F A Brockhaus 1865 pp 155 193 Julian Krzyzanowski Odrodzenie i reformacja w Polsce The Renaissance and Reformation in Poland vol 36 38 p 161 Henryk Markiewicz Andrzej Romanowski Skrzydlate slowa Winged Words 1990 p 830 Janusz Tazbir states The Commonwealth was partitioned into three parts subjected to three annexing powers It was then that the popular proverb came into being which appears in a number of variants Polak Wegier dwa bratanki Janusz Tazbir Sarmaci i swiat The Sarmatians and the World vol 3 2001 p 453 Baczkowski Krysztof 2003 Stosunki miedzy elitami wladzy Polski i Wegier na przelomie XV i XVI wieku PDF Prace Historyczne in Polish and English Jagiellonian University 130 86 ISSN 0083 4351 a b Kapronczay Karoly 1999 Refugees in Hungary Shelter from Storm During World War II Matthias Corvinus Publishing pp 9 10 ISBN 978 1882785124 Paget John 1850 Hungary and Transylvania With Remarks on Their Condition Social Political and Economical Vol 1 Lea amp Blanchard pp 165 166 Sutter Fichtner Paula 2003 The Habsburg Monarchy 1490 1848 Attributes of Empire Palgrave Macmillan p 136 ISBN 978 0 333 71694 6 http nemzetisegek hu repertorium 2012 05 belivek 15 19 pdf bare URL PDF Magyar segitseg a lengyel bolsevik haboruban Lengyelorszag Magyarorszagon Portal Gov pl Wsparcie Wegier dla Polski w wojnie polsko bolszewickiej Portal Gov pl in Polish Retrieved 3 April 2021 A trianoni bekeszerzodes es Lengyelorszag Jozef Kasparek Poland s 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia East European Quarterly vol XXIII no 3 September 1989 pp 366 67 370 Jozef Kasparek Przepust karpacki tajna akcja polskiego wywiadu The Carpathian Bridge a Covert Polish Intelligence Operation p 11 a b Jozef Kasparek Poland s 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia pp 370 71 Jozef Kasparek Poland s 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia p 366 Jozef Kasparek Poland s 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia p 372 Istvan Lagzi 1995 The number of Poles having escaped to the territory of Hungary during the Second World War facts and data PDF Acta Universitatis Szegediensis Acta historica University of Szeged 24 ISSN 0324 6965 Zima Maria 2018 Magyar katonak es a Varsoi felkeles Hungarian Soldiers and the Warsaw Uprising PDF in Hungarian HM Hadtorteneti intezet es Muzeum ISBN 978 963 7097 88 1 Tischler Janos 1999 Polish Leaders and the Hungarian Revolution In Kemp Welch A ed Stalinism in Poland 1944 56 Selected Papers from the Fifth World Congress of Central and East European Studies Warsaw 1995 MacMillan Press Ltd p 126 ISBN 9781349276820 Tischler Janos 2006 Poland and Hungary in 1956 In Lee Congdon Kiraly Bela K Nagy Karoly eds 1956 the Hungarian Revolution and War for Independence East European Monographs p 117 ISBN 9780880335980 a b Malgorzata Wosion Czoba Karol Kostrzewa Renesansowa zbroja mlodego Zygmunta II Augusta trafila na Wawel dzieje pl in Polish Retrieved 3 April 2021 Uchwala Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 16 marca 2007 r in Polish References editJozef Kasparek Poland s 1938 Covert Operations in Ruthenia East European Quarterly vol XXIII no 3 September 1989 pp 365 73 Jozef Kasparek Przepust karpacki tajna akcja polskiego wywiadu The Carpathian Bridge a Covert Polish Intelligence Operation Warszawa Wydawnictwo Czasopism i Ksiazek Technicznych SIGMA NOT 1992 ISBN 83 85001 96 4 Edmund Charaszkiewicz Referat o dzialaniach dywersyjnych na Rusi Karpackiej Report on Covert Operations in Carpathian Rus in Zbior dokumentow pplk Edmunda Charaszkiewicza Collection of Documents by Lt Col Edmund Charaszkiewicz opracowanie wstep i przypisy edited with introduction and notes by Andrzej Grzywacz Marcin Kwiecien Grzegorz Mazur Krakow Ksiegarnia Akademicka 2000 ISBN 83 7188 449 4 pp 106 30 External links editPolish Hungarian dictionary in Polish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pole and Hungarian brothers be amp oldid 1176921788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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