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Treaty of Trianon

The Treaty of Trianon (French: Traité de Trianon; Hungarian: Trianoni békeszerződés; Italian: Trattato del Trianon; Romanian: Tratatul de la Trianon) often referred to as the Peace Dictate of Trianon[1][2][3][4][5] or Dictate of Trianon[6][7] in Hungary, was prepared at the Paris Peace Conference and was signed in the Grand Trianon château in Versailles on 4 June 1920. It formally ended World War I between most of the Allies of World War I[a] and the Kingdom of Hungary.[8][9][10][11] French diplomats played the major role in designing the treaty, with a view to establishing a French-led coalition of the newly formed states. It regulated the status of the Kingdom of Hungary and defined its borders generally within the ceasefire lines established in November–December 1918 and left Hungary as a landlocked state that included 93,073 square kilometres (35,936 sq mi), 28% of the 325,411 square kilometres (125,642 sq mi) that had constituted the pre-war Kingdom of Hungary (the Hungarian half of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy). The truncated kingdom had a population of 7.6 million, 36% compared to the pre-war kingdom's population of 20.9 million.[12] Though the areas that were allocated to neighbouring countries had a majority of non-Hungarians, in them lived 3.3 million Hungarians – 31% of the Hungarians – who then became minorities.[13][14][15][16] The treaty limited Hungary's army to 35,000 officers and men, and the Austro-Hungarian Navy ceased to exist. These decisions and their consequences have been the cause of deep resentment in Hungary ever since.[17]

Treaty of Trianon
Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and Hungary
Arrival of the two signatories, Ágost Benárd and Alfréd Drasche-Lázár, on 4 June 1920 at the Grand Trianon in Versailles
Signed4 June 1920
LocationVersailles, France
Effective26 July 1921
Parties1. Principal Allied and Associated Powers
 France
 United Kingdom
 Italy
 Japan
 United States
Other Allied Powers
 Belgium
China
 Cuba
 Czechoslovakia
 Greece
 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
 Nicaragua
 Panama
 Poland
 Portugal
 Romania
 Siam
2. Central Powers
 Hungary
DepositaryFrench Government
LanguagesFrench, English, Italian
Full text
Treaty of Trianon at Wikisource
Events leading to World War II
  1. Revolutions of 1917–1923
  2. Aftermath of World War I 1918–1939
  3. Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918–1925
  4. Province of the Sudetenland 1918–1920
  5. 1918–1920 unrest in Split
  6. Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
  7. Heimosodat 1918–1922
  8. Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia 1918–1919
  9. Hungarian–Romanian War 1918–1919
  10. Hungarian–Czechoslovak War 1918–1919
  11. 1919 Egyptian Revolution
  12. Christmas Uprising 1919
  13. Irish War of Independence 1919
  14. Comintern World Congresses 1919–1935
  15. Treaty of Versailles 1919
  16. Shandong Problem 1919–1922
  17. Polish–Soviet War 1919–1921
  18. Polish–Czechoslovak War 1919
  19. Polish–Lithuanian War 1919–1920
  20. Silesian Uprisings 1919–1921
  21. Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye 1919
  22. Turkish War of Independence 1919–1923
  23. Venizelos–Tittoni agreement 1919
  24. Italian Regency of Carnaro 1919–1920
  25. Iraqi Revolt 1920
  26. Treaty of Trianon 1920
  27. Treaty of Rapallo 1920
  28. Little Entente 1920–1938
  29. Treaty of Tartu (Finland–Russia) 1920–1938
  30. Mongolian Revolution of 1921
  31. Soviet intervention in Mongolia 1921–1924
  32. Franco-Polish alliance 1921–1940
  33. Polish–Romanian alliance 1921–1939
  34. Genoa Conference (1922)
  35. Treaty of Rapallo (1922)
  36. March on Rome 1922
  37. Sun–Joffe Manifesto 1923
  38. Corfu incident 1923
  39. Occupation of the Ruhr 1923–1925
  40. Treaty of Lausanne 1923–1924
  41. Mein Kampf 1925
  42. Second Italo-Senussi War 1923–1932
  43. First United Front 1923–1927
  44. Dawes Plan 1924
  45. Treaty of Rome (1924)
  46. Soviet–Japanese Basic Convention 1925
  47. German–Polish customs war 1925–1934
  48. Treaty of Nettuno 1925
  49. Locarno Treaties 1925
  50. Anti-Fengtian War 1925–1926
  51. Treaty of Berlin (1926)
  52. May Coup (Poland) 1926
  53. Northern Expedition 1926–1928
  54. Nanking incident of 1927
  55. Chinese Civil War 1927–1937
  56. Jinan incident 1928
  57. Huanggutun incident 1928
  58. Italo-Ethiopian Treaty of 1928
  59. Chinese reunification 1928
  60. Lateran Treaty 1928
  61. Central Plains War 1929–1930
  62. Young Plan 1929
  63. Sino-Soviet conflict (1929)
  64. Great Depression 1929
  65. London Naval Treaty 1930
  66. Kumul Rebellion 1931–1934
  67. Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1931
  68. Pacification of Manchukuo 1931–1942
  69. January 28 incident 1932
  70. Soviet–Japanese border conflicts 1932–1939
  71. Geneva Conference 1932–1934
  72. May 15 incident 1932
  73. Lausanne Conference of 1932
  74. Soviet–Polish Non-Aggression Pact 1932
  75. Soviet–Finnish Non-Aggression Pact 1932
  76. Proclamation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 1932
  77. Defense of the Great Wall 1933
  78. Battle of Rehe 1933
  79. Nazis' rise to power in Germany 1933
  80. Reichskonkordat 1933
  81. Tanggu Truce 1933
  82. Italo-Soviet Pact 1933
  83. Inner Mongolian Campaign 1933–1936
  84. Austrian Civil War 1934
  85. Balkan Pact 1934–1940
  86. July Putsch 1934
  87. German–Polish declaration of non-aggression 1934–1939
  88. Baltic Entente 1934–1939
  89. 1934 Montreux Fascist conference
  90. Stresa Front 1935
  91. Franco-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935
  92. Soviet–Czechoslovakia Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935
  93. He–Umezu Agreement 1935
  94. Anglo-German Naval Agreement 1935
  95. December 9th Movement
  96. Second Italo-Ethiopian War 1935–1936
  97. February 26 incident 1936
  98. Remilitarization of the Rhineland 1936
  99. Soviet-Mongolian alliance 1936
  100. Spanish Civil War 1936–1939
  101. Anglo-Egyptian treaty of 1936
  102. Italo-German "Axis" protocol 1936
  103. Anti-Comintern Pact 1936
  104. Suiyuan campaign 1936
  105. Xi'an Incident 1936
  106. Second Sino-Japanese War 1937–1945
  107. USS Panay incident 1937
  108. Anschluss Mar. 1938
  109. 1938 Polish ultimatum to Lithuania Mar. 1938
  110. Easter Accords April 1938
  111. May Crisis May 1938
  112. Battle of Lake Khasan July–Aug. 1938
  113. Salonika Agreement July 1938
  114. Bled Agreement Aug. 1938
  115. Undeclared German–Czechoslovak War Sep. 1938
  116. Munich Agreement Sep. 1938
  117. First Vienna Award Nov. 1938
  118. German occupation of Czechoslovakia Mar. 1939
  119. Hungarian invasion of Carpatho-Ukraine Mar. 1939
  120. German ultimatum to Lithuania Mar. 1939
  121. Slovak–Hungarian War Mar. 1939
  122. Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War Mar.–Apr. 1939
  123. Danzig crisis Mar.–Aug. 1939
  124. British guarantee to Poland Mar. 1939
  125. Italian invasion of Albania Apr. 1939
  126. Soviet–British–French Moscow negotiations Apr.–Aug. 1939
  127. Pact of Steel May 1939
  128. Battles of Khalkhin Gol May–Sep. 1939
  129. Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact Aug. 1939
  130. Invasion of Poland Sep. 1939
President Mihály Károlyi's speech after the proclamation of the First Hungarian Republic on 16 November, 1918
film: Béla Linder's pacifist speech for military officers, and declaration of Hungarian self-disarmament on 2 November 1918.
Newsreel about Treaty of Trianon, 1920

The principal beneficiaries were the Kingdom of Romania, the Czechoslovak Republic, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia), and the First Austrian Republic. One of the main elements of the treaty was the doctrine of "self-determination of peoples", and it was an attempt to give the non-Hungarians their own national states.[18] In addition, Hungary had to pay war reparations to its neighbours. The treaty was dictated by the Allies rather than negotiated, and the Hungarians had no option but to accept its terms.[18] The Hungarian delegation signed the treaty under protest, and agitation for its revision began immediately.[14][19]

The current boundaries of Hungary are for the most part the same as those defined by the Treaty of Trianon, with minor modifications until 1924 regarding the Hungarian-Austrian border and the transfer of three villages to Czechoslovakia in 1947.[20][21]

After World War I, despite the "self-determination of peoples" idea of the Allied Powers, only one plebiscite was permitted (later known as the Sopron plebiscite) to settle disputed borders on the former territory of the Kingdom of Hungary,[22] settling a smaller territorial dispute between the First Austrian Republic and the Kingdom of Hungary, because some months earlier, the Rongyos Gárda launched a series of attacks to oust the Austrian forces that entered the area. During the plebiscite in late 1921, the polling stations were supervised by British, French, and Italian army officers of the Allied Powers.[23]

Background

First World War and Austro-Hungarian Armistice

On 28 June 1914, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist.[24] This caused a rapidly escalating July Crisis resulting in Austria-Hungary declaring war on Serbia, followed quickly by the entry of most European powers into the First World War.[25] Two alliances faced off, the Central Powers (led by Germany) and the Triple Entente (led by Britain, France and Russia). In 1918 Germany tried to overwhelm the Allies on the Western Front but failed. Instead the Allies began a successful counteroffensive and forced the Armistice of 11 November 1918 that resembled a surrender by the Central Powers.[26]

On 6 April 1917, the United States entered the war against Germany and in December 1917 against Austria-Hungary. The American war aim was to end aggressive militarism as shown by Berlin and Vienna. The United States never formally joined the Allies. President Woodrow Wilson acted as an independent force, and his Fourteen Points was accepted by Germany as a basis for the armistice of November 1918. It outlined a policy of free trade, open agreements, and democracy. While the term was not used, self-determination was assumed. It called for a negotiated end to the war, international disarmament, the withdrawal of the Central Powers from occupied territories, the creation of a Polish state, the redrawing of Europe's borders along ethnic lines, and the formation of a League of Nations to guarantee the political independence and territorial integrity of all states.[27][28] It called for a just and democratic peace uncompromised by territorial annexation. Point ten announced Wilson's "wish" that the peoples of Austria-Hungary be given autonomy—a point that Vienna rejected.[29]

Germany, the major ally of Austria-Hungary in World War I, suffered numerous losses during the Hundred Days Offensive between August and November 1918 and was in negotiation of armistice with Allied Powers from the beginning of October 1918. Between 15 and 29 September 1918, Franchet d'Espèrey, in command of a relative small army of Greeks (9 divisions), French (6 divisions), Serbs (6 divisions), British (4 divisions) and Italians (1 division), staged a successful Vardar offensive in Vardar Macedonia that ended by taking Bulgaria out of the war.[30] That collapse of the Southern (Italian) Front was one of several developments that effectively triggered the November 1918 armistice.[31] By the end of October 1918, the Austro-Hungarian Army was so fatigued that its commanders were forced to seek a ceasefire. Czechoslovakia and the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs were proclaimed, and troops started deserting, disobeying orders and retreating. Many Czechoslovak troops, in fact, started working for the Allied cause, and in September 1918, five Czechoslovak Regiments were formed in the Italian Army. The troops of Austria-Hungary started a chaotic withdrawal during the Battle of Vittorio Veneto, and Austria-Hungary began to negotiate a truce on 28 October.

Aster Revolution and the First Hungarian Republic

During the war, Count Mihály Károlyi led a small but very active pacifist anti-war maverick faction in the Hungarian parliament.[32] He even organized covert contacts with British and French diplomats in Switzerland.[33] The Austro-Hungarian monarchy politically collapsed and disintegrated as a result of a defeat in the Italian front. On 31 October 1918, in the midst of armistice negotiations, the Aster Revolution in Budapest brought the liberal Károlyi, a supporter of the Allies, to power. King Charles had no other option than the appointment of Károlyi as prime minister of Hungary. On 25 October 1918 Károlyi had formed the Hungarian National Council. The Hungarian Royal Honvéd army still had more than 1,400,000 soldiers[34][35] when Károlyi was announced as prime minister. Károlyi yielded to President Wilson's demand for pacifism by ordering the unilateral self-disarmament of the Hungarian army. This happened under the direction of Minister of War Béla Linder on 2 November 1918[36][37] When Oszkár Jászi became the new Minister for National Minorities of Hungary, he immediately offered democratic referendums about the disputed borders for minorities; however, the political leaders of those minorities refused the very idea of democratic referendums regarding disputed territories at the Paris peace conference.[38] Disarmament of its army meant that Hungary was to remain without a national defence at a time of particular vulnerability. The unilateral self-disarmament made the occupation of Hungary directly possible for the relatively small armies of Romania, the Franco-Serbian army, and the armed forces of the newly established Czechoslovakia.[39][40] After self-disarmament, Czech, Serbian, and Romanian political leaders chose to attack Hungary instead of holding democratic plebiscites concerning the disputed areas.[41]

On the request of the Austro-Hungarian government, an armistice was granted to Austria-Hungary on 3 November 1918 by the Allies.[42] Military and political events changed rapidly and drastically after the Hungarian unilateral disarmament:

  • On 5 November 1918, the Serbian army, with the help of the French army, crossed the southern borders.
  • On 8 November, the Czechoslovak army crossed the northern borders.
  • On 10 November d'Espérey's army crossed the Danube River and was poised to enter the Hungarian heartland.
  • On 11 November Germany signed an armistice with Allies, under which they had to immediately withdraw all German troops in Romania and in the Ottoman Empire, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Russian Empire back to German territory and Allies to have access to these countries.[43]
  • On 13 November, the Romanian army crossed the eastern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary.

During the rule of Károlyi's pacifist cabinet, Hungary rapidly lost control over approximately 75% of its former pre-WWI territories (325,411 km2 (125,642 sq mi)) without a fight and was subject to foreign occupation.[44] The Armistice of 3 November was completed as regards Hungary on 13 November, when Károlyi signed the Armistice of Belgrade with the Allied nations, in order that a Treaty of Peace might be concluded.[45][46] It limited the size of the Hungarian army to six infantry and two cavalry divisions.[47] Demarcation lines defining the territory to remain under Hungarian control were made. The lines would apply until definitive borders could be established. Under the terms of the armistice, Serbian and French troops advanced from the south, taking control of the Banat and Croatia. Romanian forces were permitted to advance to the River Mureș (Maros). However, on 14 November, Serbia occupied Pécs.[48][49] General Franchet d'Espèrey followed up the victory by overrunning much of the Balkans, and by the war's end his troops had penetrated well into Hungary. In mid-November 1918, the Czechoslovak troops advanced into the Upper Hungary, but were repulsed by the Hungarian troops. But following a demand by the Entente to allow the Czechoslovak occupation in the North on 3 December 1918, Budapest agreed that the Czechs would occupy the North-West of Upper Hungary. Late December 1918, Hungary agreed to extend the Czech zone of occupation to Pozsony (Bratislava), Komarno, Kosice and Uzhhorod. By late January 1919, the Czech troops advanced into these areas. The Budapest approval for the Czech advancement in Upper Hungary was largely explained by the Hungarian desire to reopen trade with Czech lands and to obtain crucially needed coal amidst an energy crisis.[1]

After King Charles's withdrawal from government on 16 November 1918, Károlyi proclaimed the First Hungarian Republic, with himself as provisional president of the republic.

Fall of the liberal First Hungarian Republic and communist coup d'état

The Károlyi government failed to manage both domestic and military issues and lost popular support. On 20 March 1919, Béla Kun, who had been imprisoned in the Markó Street prison, was released.[50] On 21 March, he led a successful communist coup d'état; Károlyi was deposed and arrested.[51] Kun formed a social democratic, communist coalition government and proclaimed the Hungarian Soviet Republic. Days later the communists purged the social democrats from the government.[52][53] The Hungarian Soviet Republic was a small communist rump state.[54] When the Republic of Councils in Hungary was established, it controlled only approximately 23% of Hungary's historic territory. After the Communist takeover, the Allies sent a new diplomatic mission to Budapest, led by General Jan Smuts. During these talks with Smuts, Kun insisted that his government would abide by the Belgrade ceasefire and recognise the right to self-determination of the various ethnic groups living in Hungary. In return, Kun urged an end to the Allied trade blockade, particularly by the Czechs, and to allow fuel and food to be imported into Hungary.[55]

The communists remained bitterly unpopular[56] in the Hungarian countryside, where the authority of that government was often nonexistent.[57] Rather than divide the big estates among the peasants – which might have gained their support for the government, but would have created a class of small-holding farmers the communist government proclaimed the nationalization of the estates. But having no skilled people to manage the estates, the communists had no choice but to leave the existing estate managers in place. These, while formally accepting their new government bosses, in practice retained their loyalty to the deposed aristocratic owners. The peasants felt that the revolution had no real effect on their lives and thus had no reason to support it. The communist party and communist policies only had real popular support among the proletarian masses of large industrial centers—especially in Budapest—where the working class represented a high proportion of the inhabitants. The communist government followed the Soviet model: the party established its terror groups (like the infamous Lenin Boys) to "overcome the obstacles" in the Hungarian countryside. This was later known as the Red Terror in Hungary.[citation needed]

In late May, after the Entente military representative demanded more territorial concessions from Hungary, Kun attempted to "fulfill" his promise to adhere to Hungary's historical borders. The men of the Hungarian Red Army were recruited mainly from the volunteers of the Budapest proletariat.[58] On 20 May 1919, a force under Colonel Aurél Stromfeld attacked and routed Czechoslovak troops from Miskolc. The Romanian Army attacked the Hungarian flank with troops from the 16th Infantry Division and the Second Vânători Division, aiming to maintain contact with the Czechoslovak Army. Hungarian troops prevailed, and the Romanian Army retreated to its bridgehead at Tokaj. There, between 25 and 30 May, Romanian forces were required to defend their position against Hungarian attacks. On 3 June, Romania was forced into further retreat but extended its line of defence along the Tisza River and reinforced its position with the 8th Division, which had been moving forward from Bukovina since 22 May. Hungary then controlled the territory almost to its old borders; regained control of industrial areas around Miskolc, Salgótarján, Selmecbánya (Banská Štiavnica), Kassa (Košice).[citation needed]

In June, the Hungarian Red Army invaded the eastern part of the so-called Upper Hungary, now claimed by the newly forming Czechoslovak state. The Hungarian Red Army achieved some military success early on: under the leadership of Colonel Aurél Stromfeld, it ousted Czechoslovak troops from the north and planned to march against the Romanian Army in the east. Kun ordered the preparation of an offensive against Czechoslovakia, which would increase his domestic support by making good on his promise to restore Hungary's borders. The Hungarian Red Army recruited men between 19 and 25 years of age. Industrial workers from Budapest volunteered. Many former Austro-Hungarian officers re-enlisted for patriotic reasons. The Hungarian Red Army moved its 1st and 5th artillery divisions—40 battalions—to Upper Hungary.[citation needed]

Despite promises for the restoration of the former borders of Hungary, the communists declared the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic in Prešov (Eperjes) on 16 June 1919.[59] After the proclamation of the Slovak Soviet Republic, the Hungarian nationalists and patriots soon realized that the new communist government had no intentions to recapture the lost territories, only to spread communist ideology and establish other communist states in Europe, thus sacrificing Hungarian national interests.[60] The Hungarian patriots and professional military officers in the Red Army saw the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic as a betrayal, and their support for the government began to erode. Despite a series of military victories against the Czechoslovak army, the Hungarian Red Army started to disintegrate due to tension between nationalists and communists during the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic. The concession eroded support of the communist government among professional military officers and nationalists in the Hungarian Red Army; even the chief of the general staff Aurél Stromfeld, resigned his post in protest.[61]

When the French promised the Hungarian government that Romanian forces would withdraw from the Tiszántúl, Kun withdrew from Czechoslovakia his remaining military units who had remained loyal after the political fiasco with the Slovak Soviet Republic. Kun then unsuccessfully tried to turn the remaining units of the demoralized Hungarian Red Army on the Romanians.[citation needed]

Treaty preparation

 
Treaty of Trianon

The Hungarian "Conditions of Peace" were dated 15 January 1920, and their "Observations" handed in on 20 February. French diplomats played the major role in the drafting, and Hungarians were kept in the dark. Their long-term goal was to build a coalition of small new nations led by France and capable of standing up to Russia or Germany. This led to the "Little Entente" of Czechoslovakia, Romania and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.[62] The lengthy negotiation process was recorded on a daily basis by János Wettstein [hu], deputy first secretary of the Hungarian delegation.[63] The treaty of peace in final form was submitted to the Hungarians on 6 May and signed by them in Grand Trianon[64] on 4 June 1920, entering into force on 26 July 1921.[65] The United States did not ratify the Treaty of Trianon. Instead it negotiated a separate peace treaty that did not contradict the terms of the Trianon treaty.[29]

Borders of Hungary

 
Drafted borders of Austria-Hungary in the treaties of Trianon and Saint Germain
 
The Hungarian delegation leaving Grand Trianon Palace at Versailles, after the treaty was signed, 1920.

The Hungarian government terminated its union with Austria on 31 October 1918, officially dissolving the Austro-Hungarian state. The de facto temporary borders of independent Hungary were defined by the ceasefire lines in November–December 1918. Compared with the pre-war Kingdom of Hungary, these temporary borders did not include:

  • Part of Transylvania south of the Mureș River and east of the Someș River, which came under the control of Romania (cease-fire agreement of Belgrade signed on 13 November 1918).
  • The General Council of the Saxons in Nagyszeben (now Sibiu in Romania) decided in question of Transylvania to choose clear neutrality, without committing themselves either to the Hungarian or the Romanian side on 25 November 1918.[66]
  • The Romanian Army occupied Marosvásárhely (now Târgu Mureș in Romania), the most important town of Székely Land in Transylvania. On the same day the National Assembly of Székelys in Marosvásárhely reaffirms their support to the territorial integrity of Hungary on 25 November 1918.
  • On 1 December 1918, the Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia declared union with the Kingdom of Romania.[67]
  • In response, a Hungarian General Assembly in Kolozsvár (now Cluj in Romania), the most important Hungarian town in Transylvania, reaffirms the loyalty of Hungarians from Transylvania to Hungary on 22 December 1918.
  • Slovakia was proclaimed as part of Czechoslovakia (status quo set by the Czechoslovak legions and accepted by the Entente on 25 November 1918). Afterwards, the Slovak politician Milan Hodža discussed with the Hungarian Minister of Defence, Albert Bartha, a temporary demarcation line that left between 650,000 and 886,000 Hungarians in the newly formed Czechoslovakia and between 142,000 and 399,000 Slovaks in the remainder of Hungary (the discrepancy was caused by the different way census was collected in Hungary and Czechoslovakia). That was signed on 6 December 1918.[citation needed]
  • South Slavic lands, which, after the war, were organised into two political formations – the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and Banat, Bačka and Baranja, which both came under control of South Slavs, according to the ceasefire agreement of Belgrade signed on 13 November 1918. Previously, on 29 October 1918, the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia parliament, an autonomous kingdom within Transleithania, terminated[68] the union[69] with the Kingdom of Hungary and on 30 October 1918 the Hungarian diet adopted a motion declaring that the constitutional relations between the two states had ended.[70] Croatia-Slavonia was included in a newly formed State of Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs (which also included some other South Slavic territories, formerly administered by Austria-Hungary) on 29 October 1918. This state and the Kingdom of Serbia formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia) on 1 December 1918.[citation needed]

The territories of Banat, Bačka and Baranja (which included most of the pre-war Hungarian counties of Baranya, Bács-Bodrog, Torontál, and Temes) came under military control by the Kingdom of Serbia and political control by local South Slavs. The Great People's Assembly of Serbs, Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat, Bačka and Baranja declared union of this region with Serbia on 25 November 1918. The ceasefire line had the character of a temporary international border until the treaty. The central parts of Banat were later assigned to Romania, respecting the wishes of Romanians from this area, which, on 1 December 1918, were present in the National Assembly of Romanians in Alba Iulia, which voted for union with the Kingdom of Romania.[citation needed]

After the Romanian Army advanced beyond this cease-fire line, the Entente powers asked Hungary (Vix Note) to acknowledge the new Romanian territorial gains by a new line set along the Tisza river. Unable to reject these terms and unwilling to accept them, the leaders of the Hungarian Democratic Republic resigned and the Communists seized power. In spite of the country being under Allied blockade, the Hungarian Soviet Republic was formed and the Hungarian Red Army was rapidly set up. This army was initially successful against the Czechoslovak Legions, due to covert food[73] and arms aid from Italy.[74] This made it possible for Hungary to reach nearly the former Galician (Polish) border, thus separating the Czechoslovak and Romanian troops from each other.

After a Hungarian-Czechoslovak cease-fire signed on 1 July 1919, the Hungarian Red Army left parts of Slovakia by 4 July, as the Entente powers promised to invite a Hungarian delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference. In the end, this particular invitation was not issued. Béla Kun, leader of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, then turned the Hungarian Red Army on the Romanian Army and attacked at the Tisza river on 20 July 1919. After fierce fighting that lasted some five days, the Hungarian Red Army collapsed. The Royal Romanian Army marched into Budapest on 4 August 1919.[citation needed]

The Hungarian state was restored by the Entente powers, helping Admiral Horthy into power in November 1919. On 1 December 1919, the Hungarian delegation was officially invited to the Versailles Peace Conference; however, the newly defined borders of Hungary were nearly concluded without the presence of the Hungarians.[75] During prior negotiations, the Hungarian party, along with the Austrian, advocated the American principle of self-determination: that the population of disputed territories should decide by free plebiscite to which country they wished to belong.[75][76] This view did not prevail for long, as it was disregarded by the decisive French and British delegates.[77] According to some opinions, the Allies drafted the outline of the new frontiers[78] with little or no regard to the historical, cultural, ethnic, geographic, economic and strategic aspects of the region.[75][78][79] The Allies assigned territories that were mostly populated by non-Hungarian ethnicities to successor states, but also allowed these states to absorb sizeable territories that were mainly inhabited by Hungarian-speaking populations. For instance, Romania gained all of Transylvania, which was home to 2,800,000 Romanians, but also contained a significant minority of 1,600,000 Hungarians and about 250,000 Germans.[80] The intent of the Allies was principally to strengthen these successor states at the expense of Hungary. Although the countries that were the main beneficiaries of the treaty partially noted the issues, the Hungarian delegates tried to draw attention to them. Their views were disregarded by the Allied representatives.

Some predominantly Hungarian settlements, consisting of more than two million people, were situated in a typically 20–50 km (12–31 mi) wide strip along the new borders in foreign territory. More concentrated groups were found in Czechoslovakia (parts of southern Slovakia), Yugoslavia (parts of northern Délvidék), and Romania (parts of Transylvania).

The final borders of Hungary were defined by the Treaty of Trianon signed on 4 June 1920. Beside exclusion of the previously mentioned territories, they did not include:

  • the rest of Transylvania, which together with some additional parts of the pre-war Kingdom of Hungary became part of Romania;
  • Carpathian Ruthenia, which became part of Czechoslovakia, pursuant to the Treaty of Saint-Germain in 1919;[81]
  • most of Burgenland, which became part of Austria, also pursuant to the Treaty of Saint-Germain (the district of Sopron opted to remain within Hungary after a plebiscite held in December 1921, the only place where a plebiscite was held and factored in the decision);
  • Međimurje and the 2/3 of the Slovene March or Vendvidék (now Prekmurje), which became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.

By the Treaty of Trianon, the cities of Pécs, Mohács, Baja and Szigetvár, which were under Serb-Croat-Slovene administration after November 1918, were assigned to Hungary. An arbitration committee in 1920 assigned small northern parts of the former Árva and Szepes counties of the Kingdom of Hungary with Polish majority population to Poland. After 1918, Hungary did not have access to the sea, which pre-war Hungary formerly had directly through the Rijeka coastline and indirectly through Croatia-Slavonia.[citation needed]

 
1885 ethnographic map of the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen, i.e. Kingdom of Hungary and Croatia-Slavonia according to the 1880 census

Representatives of small nations living in the former Austria-Hungary and active in the Congress of Oppressed Nations regarded the treaty of Trianon for being an act of historical righteousness[82][page needed] because a better future for their nations was "to be founded and durably assured on the firm basis of world democracy, real and sovereign government by the people, and a universal alliance of the nations vested with the authority of arbitration" while at the same time making a call for putting an end to "the existing unbearable domination of one nation over the other" and making it possible "for nations to organize their relations to each other on the basis of equal rights and free conventions". Furthermore, they believed the treaty would help toward a new era of dependence on international law, the fraternity of nations, equal rights, and human liberty as well as aid civilisation in the effort to free humanity from international violence.[83]

Results and consequences

 
The Red Map,[84][85] an ethnographic map of the Hungary proper publicised by the Hungarian delegation. Regions with population density below 20 persons/km2 (51.8 persons/sq. mi.)[86] are left blank and the corresponding population is represented in the nearest region with population density above that limit. The vibrant, dominant red color was deliberately chosen to mark Hungarians while the light purple color of the Romanians, who were already the majority in the whole of Transylvania back then, is shadow-like.[87]
  German
  Slovak
  Regions with fewer than 20 persons/sq km

Irredentism—the demand for reunification of Hungarian peoples—became a central theme of Hungarian politics and diplomacy.[88]

1910 census

 
Ethnographic map of the Kingdom of Hungary according to the 1910 census

The last census before the Treaty of Trianon was held in 1910. This census recorded population by language and religion but not by ethnicity. However, it is generally accepted that the largest ethnic group in the Kingdom of Hungary in this time were the Hungarians. According to the census, speakers of the Hungarian language included approximately 48% of the population of the kingdom and 54% of the population of the territory referred to as "Hungary proper", i.e. excluding Croatia-Slavonia. Within the borders of "Hungary proper" numerous ethnic minorities were present: 16.1% Romanians, 10.5% Slovaks, 10.4% Germans, 2.5% Ruthenians, 2.5% Serbs and 8% others.[89] 5% of the population of "Hungary proper" were Jews, who were included in speakers of the Hungarian language.[90] The population of the autonomous Croatia-Slavonia was mostly composed of Croats and Serbs (who together counted 87% of population).

Criticism of the 1910 census

The census of 1910 classified the residents of the Kingdom of Hungary by their native languages[91] and religions, so it presents the preferred language of the individual, which may or may not correspond to the individual's ethnic identity. To make the situation even more complex, in the multilingual kingdom there were territories with ethnically mixed populations where people spoke two or even three languages natively. For example, in the territory what is today Slovakia (then part of Upper Hungary) 18% of the Slovaks, 33% of the Hungarians and 65% of the Germans were bilingual. In addition, 21% of the Germans spoke both Slovak and Hungarian beside German.[92] These reasons are ground for debate about the accuracy of the census.

While several demographers (David W. Paul,[93] Peter Hanak, László Katus[94]) state that the outcome of the census is reasonably accurate (assuming that it is also properly interpreted), others believe that the 1910 census was manipulated[95][96] by exaggerating the percentage of the speakers of Hungarian, pointing to the discrepancy between an improbably high growth of the Hungarian-speaking population and the decrease of percentual participation of speakers of other languages through Magyarization in the late 19th century.[97] For example, the 1921 census in Czechoslovakia (only one year after the Treaty of Trianon) shows 21% Hungarians in Slovakia,[98] compared to 30% based on 1910 census.

Some Slovak demographers (such as Ján Svetoň [sk] and Julius Mesaros) dispute the result of every pre-war census.[93] Owen Johnson, an American historian, accepts the numbers of the earlier censuses up to the one in 1900, according to which the proportion of the Hungarians was 51.4%,[89] but he neglects the 1910 census as he thinks the changes since the last census are too big.[93] It is also argued that there were different results in previous censuses in the Kingdom of Hungary and subsequent censuses in the new states. Considering the size of discrepancies, some demographers are on the opinion that these censuses were somewhat biased in the favour of the respective ruling nation.[99]

Distribution of the non-Hungarian and Hungarian populations

The number of non-Hungarian and Hungarian communities in the different areas based on the census data of 1910 (in this, people were not directly asked about their ethnicity, but about their native language). The present day location of each area is given in parenthesis.

Region Main spoken language Hungarian language Other languages
Transylvania and parts of Partium, Banat (Romania) Romanian – 2,819,467 (54%) 1,658,045 (31.7%) German – 550,964 (10.5%)
Upper Hungary (restricted to the territory of today's Slovakia) Slovak – 1,688,413 (57.9%) 881,320 (30.2%) German – 198,405 (6.8%)
Délvidék (Vojvodina, Serbia) Serbo-Croatian – 601,770 (39.8%)
* Serbian – 510,754 (33.8%)
* Croatian, Bunjevac and Šokac – 91,016 (6%)
425,672 (28.1%) German – 324,017 (21.4%)
Kárpátalja (Ukraine) Ruthenian – 330,010 (54.5%) 185,433 (30.6%) German – 64,257 (10.6%)
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia and Muraköz and part of Baranya (Croatia) Croatian – 1,638,350 (62.3%) 121,000 (3.5%) Serbian – 644,955 (24.6%)
German – 134,078 (5.1%)
Fiume (Croatia) Italian – 24,212 (48.6%) 6,493 (13%) Croatian and Serbian – 13,351 (26.8%)
Slovene – 2,336 (4.7%)
German – 2,315 (4.6%)
Őrvidék (Burgenland, Austria) German – 217,072 (74.4%) 26,225 (9%) Croatian – 43,633 (15%)
Muravidék (Prekmurje, Slovenia) Slovene – 74,199 (80.4%) – in 1921 14,065 (15.2%) – in 1921 German – 2,540 (2.8%) – in 1921

According to another source[which?], population distribution in 1910 looked as follows:[original research?]

Region Main ethnicity Others
Transylvania and parts of Partium, Banat (Romania) 2,831,222 Romanians (53.8%). The 1919 and 1920 Transylvanian censuses indicate a greater percentage of Romanians (57.1% / 57.3%)[100] 2,431,273 "others" (mostly Hungarians – 1,662,948 (31.6%) and Germans – 563,087 (10.7%)). The 1919 and 1920 Transylvanian censuses indicate a smaller Hungarian minority (26.5% / 25.5%).[100]
Upper Hungary (restricted to the territory of today's Slovakia) 1,687,977 Slovaks [according to the 1921 census: 1,941,942 Slovaks] 1,233,454 "others" (mostly Hungarians – 886,044, Germans, Ruthenians and Roma) [according to the 1921 census: 1,058,928 of "others"]
Croatia-Slavonia, Délvidék (today in Croatia, Serbia) 2,756,000 Croats and Serbs 1,366,000 others (mostly Hungarians and Germans)
Kárpátalja (Ukraine) 330,010 Ruthenians 275,932 "others" (mostly Hungarians, Germans, Romanians, and Slovaks)
Őrvidék (Burgenland, Austria) 217,072 Germans 69,858 "others" (mainly Croatian and Hungarian)

Hungarians outside the newly defined borders

 
Hungary lost 72% of its territory, its sea access, half of its 10 biggest cities and all of its precious metal mines; 3,425,000 ethnic Hungarians found themselves separated from their motherland.[101][102][103] Based on the 1910 Hungarian census with the Administrative Kingdom of Hungary in green and autonomous Croatia-Slavonia in grey

The territories of the former Hungarian Kingdom that were ceded by the treaty to neighbouring countries in total (and each of them separately) had a majority of non-Hungarian nationals; however, the Hungarian ethnic area was much larger than the newly established territory of Hungary,[104] therefore 30% of the ethnic Hungarians were under foreign authority.[105]

After the treaty, the percentage and the absolute number of all Hungarian populations outside of Hungary decreased in the next decades (although, some of these populations also recorded temporary increase of the absolute population number). There are several reasons for this population decrease, some of which were spontaneous assimilation and certain state policies, like Slovakization, Romanianization, Serbianisation.[citation needed] Other important factors were the Hungarian migration from the neighbouring states to Hungary or to some western countries as well as decreased birth rate of Hungarian populations. According to the National Office for Refugees, the number of Hungarians who immigrated to Hungary from neighbouring countries was about 350,000 between 1918 and 1924.[106]

Minorities in post-Trianon Hungary

On the other hand, a considerable number of other nationalities remained within the frontiers of the independent Hungary:

According to the 1920 census 10.4% of the population spoke one of the minority languages as mother language:

  • 551,212 German (6.9%)
  • 141,882 Slovak (1.8%)
  • 36,858 Croatian (0.5%)
  • 23,760 Romanian (0.3%)
  • 23,228 Bunjevac and Šokac (0.3%)
  • 17,131 Serbian (0.2%)
  • 7,000 Slovene (0.08%)

The number of bilingual people was much higher, for example 1,398,729 people spoke German (17%), 399,176 people spoke Slovak (5%), 179,928 people spoke Croatian (2.2%) and 88,828 people spoke Romanian (1.1%). Hungarian was spoken by 96% of the total population and was the mother language of 89%.[107] The percentage and the absolute number of all non-Hungarian nationalities decreased in the next decades, although the total population of the country increased. Bilingualism was also disappearing. The main reasons of this process were both spontaneous assimilation and the deliberate Magyarization policy of the state. Minorities made up 8% of the total population in 1930 and 7% in 1941 (on the post-Trianon territory).[citation needed]

After World War II approximately 200,000 Germans were deported to Germany, according to the decree of the Potsdam Conference. Under the forced exchange of population between Czechoslovakia and Hungary, approximately 73,000 Slovaks left Hungary and according to different estimations 120,500[92][108] or 45,000[109] Hungarians moved to present day Hungarian territory from Czechoslovakia. After these population movements, Hungary became a nearly ethnically homogeneous country.

Political consequences

 
Bordermark on the Hungarian-Romanian border near Csenger
 
The Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia (1 December 1918) – Union of Transylvania with Romania, seen as an act of national liberation by the Transylvanian Romanians
 
A statue of King Peter I, Karađorđević of Serbia at Freedom Square in Zrenjanin, Serbia. The inscription says: "To the King Peter I, gratious people, to its liberator". Separation from the Kingdom of Hungary and unification with the Kingdom of Serbia was seen as an act of national liberation by the Vojvodinian Serbs.

Officially the treaty was intended to be a confirmation of the right of self-determination for nations and of the concept of nation-states replacing the old multinational Austro-Hungarian empire. Although the treaty addressed some nationality issues, it also sparked some new ones.[88]

The minority ethnic groups of the pre-war kingdom were the major beneficiaries. The Allies had explicitly committed themselves to the causes of the minority peoples of Austria-Hungary late in World War I. For all intents and purposes, the death knell of the Austro-Hungarian empire sounded on 14 October 1918, when United States Secretary of State Robert Lansing informed Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister István Burián that autonomy for the nationalities was no longer enough. Accordingly, the Allies assumed without question that the minority ethnic groups of the pre-war kingdom wanted to leave Hungary. The Romanians joined their ethnic brethren in Romania, while the Slovaks, Serbs and Croats helped establish states of their own (Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia). However, these new or enlarged countries also absorbed large slices of territory with a majority of ethnic Hungarians or Hungarian speaking population. As a result, as many as a third of Hungarian language-speakers found themselves outside the borders of the post-Trianon Hungary.[110][page needed]

While the territories that were now outside Hungary's borders had non-Hungarian majorities overall, there also existed some sizeable areas with a majority of Hungarians, largely near the newly defined borders. Over the last century, concerns have occasionally been raised about the treatment of these ethnic Hungarian communities in the neighbouring states.[111][112][113] Areas with significant Hungarian populations included the Székely Land[114] in eastern Transylvania, the area along the newly defined Romanian-Hungarian border (cities of Arad, Oradea), the area north of the newly defined Czechoslovak–Hungarian border (Komárno, Csallóköz), southern parts of Subcarpathia and northern parts of Vojvodina.[citation needed]

The Allies rejected the idea of plebiscites in the disputed areas with the exception of the city of Sopron, which voted in favour of Hungary. The Allies were indifferent as to the exact line of the newly defined border between Austria and Hungary. Furthermore, ethnically diverse Transylvania, with an overall Romanian majority (53.8% – 1910 census data or 57.1% – 1919 census data or 57.3% – 1920 census data), was treated as a single entity at the peace negotiations and was assigned in its entirety to Romania. The option of partition along ethnic lines as an alternative was rejected.[115]

Another reason why the victorious Allies decided to dissolve the Austria-Hungary was to prevent Germany from acquiring substantial influence in the future, since Austria-Hungary was a strong German supporter and fast developing region.[116] The Western powers' main priority was to prevent a resurgence of the German Reich, and they therefore decided that her allies in the region should be "contained" by a ring of states friendly to the Allies,[citation needed] each of which would be bigger than either Austria or Hungary.[117] Compared to the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary, post-Trianon Hungary had 60% less population, and its political and economic footprint in the region was significantly reduced. Hungary lost connection to strategic military and economic infrastructure because of the concentric layout of the railway and road network, which the borders bisected. In addition, the structure of its economy collapsed because it had relied on other parts of the pre-war kingdom. The country lost access to the Mediterranean and to the important sea port of Rijeka (Fiume) and became landlocked, which had a negative effect on sea trading and strategic naval operations. Many trading routes that went through the newly defined borders from various parts of the pre-war kingdom were abandoned.[citation needed]

With regard to the ethnic issues, the Western powers were aware of the problem posed by the presence of so many Hungarians (and Germans) living outside the newly formed states of Hungary and Austria. The Romanian delegation to Versailles feared in 1919 that the Allies were beginning to favour the partition of Transylvania along ethnic lines to reduce the potential exodus,[citation needed] and Prime Minister Ion I. C. Brătianu even summoned British-born Queen Marie to France to strengthen their case. The Romanians had suffered a higher relative casualty rate in the war than either Britain[118][119][120] or France[119][120][121] so it was considered that the Western powers had a moral debt to repay. In absolute terms, Romanian troops had considerably fewer casualties than either Britain or France, however.[120] The underlying reason for the decision was a secret pact between The Entente and Romania.[122] In the Treaty of Bucharest (1916) Romania was promised Transylvania and some other territories to the east of river Tisza, provided that she attacked Austria-Hungary from the south-east, where defences were weak. However, after the Central Powers had noticed the military manoeuvre, the attempt was quickly choked off and Bucharest fell in the same year.

 
The Trianon cross at Kőszeg is pointing onto the former territories of the pre-war Kingdom of Hungary that were not assigned to post-Trianon Hungary.
 
Trianon memorial, Békéscsaba

By the time the victorious Allies arrived in France, the treaty was already settled, which made the outcome inevitable. At the heart of the dispute lay fundamentally different views on the nature of the Hungarian presence in the disputed territories. For Hungarians, the outer territories were not seen as colonial territories but rather part of the core national territory.[123] The non-Hungarians that lived in the Pannonian Basin saw the Hungarians as colonial-style rulers who had oppressed the Slavs and Romanians since 1848, when they introduced laws that the language used in education and in local offices was to be Hungarian.[124] For non-Hungarians from the Pannonian Basin it was a process of decolonisation instead of a punitive dismemberment (as was seen by the Hungarians).[125] The Hungarians did not see it this way because the newly defined borders did not fully respect territorial distribution of ethnic groups,[126] with areas where there were Hungarian majorities[126] outside the new borders. The French sided with their allies the Romanians who had a long policy of cultural ties to France since the country broke from the Ottoman Empire (partly because of the relative ease at which Romanians could learn French)[127] although Clemenceau personally detested Brătianu.[125] President Wilson initially supported the outline of a border that would have more respect to ethnic distribution of population based on the Coolidge Report, led by Archibald Cary Coolidge, a Harvard professor, but later gave in because of changing international politics and as a courtesy to other allies.[128]

For Hungarian public opinion, the fact that almost three-fourths of the pre-war kingdom's territory and a significant number of ethnic Hungarians were assigned to neighbouring countries triggered considerable bitterness. Most Hungarians preferred to maintain the territorial integrity of the pre-war kingdom. The Hungarian politicians claimed that they were ready to give the non-Hungarian ethnicities a great deal of autonomy. Most Hungarians regarded the treaty as an insult to the nation's honour. The Hungarian political attitude towards Trianon was summed up in the phrases Nem, nem, soha! ("No, no, never!") and Mindent vissza! ("Return everything!" or "Everything back!").[129] The perceived humiliation of the treaty became a dominant theme in inter-war Hungarian politics, analogous with the German reaction to the Treaty of Versailles.

By the arbitrations of Germany and Italy, Hungary expanded its borders towards neighbouring countries before and during World War II. This started by the First Vienna Award, then was continued with the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1939 (annexation of the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia and a small strip from eastern Slovakia), afterwards by the Second Vienna Award in 1940, and finally by the annexations of territories after the breakup of Yugoslavia. This territorial expansion was short-lived, since the post-war Hungarian boundaries in the Paris Peace Treaties, 1947 were nearly identical to those of 1920 (with three villages – Horvátjárfalu, Oroszvár, and Dunacsún – transferred to Czechoslovakia).[81]

Legacy

Francesco Saverio Nitti served as Prime Minister of Italy between 1919 and 1920. Italy was a member of the Entente and participated in the treaty, he wrote in the Peaceless Europe[130] in 1922:

Hungary has undergone the greatest occupation of her territories and her wealth. This poor great country, which saved both civilization and Christianity, has been treated with a bitterness which nothing can explain except the desire of greed of those surrounding her, and the fact that the weaker people, seeing the stronger overcome, wish and insist that she shall be reduced to impotence. Nothing, in fact, can justify the measures of violence and the depredations committed in Magyar territory. What was the Rumanian occupation of Hungary: a systematic rapine and the systematic destruction for a long time hidden, and the stern reproach which Lloyd George addressed in London to the Premier of Rumania was perfectly justified. After the War everyone wanted some sacrifice from Hungary, and no one dared to say a word of peace or goodwill for her. When I tried it was too late. The victors hated Hungary for her proud defence. The adherents of Socialism do not love her because she had to resist, under more than difficult conditions, internal and external Bolshevism. The international financiers hate her because of the violences committed against the Jews. So Hungary suffers all the injustices without defence, all the miseries without help, and all the intrigues without resistance. Before the War Hungary had an area almost equal to that of Italy, 282,870 square kilometres, with a population of 18,264,533 inhabitants. The Treaty of Trianon reduced her territory to 91,114 kilometres -- that is, 32.3%. -- and the population to 7,481,954, or 41%. It was not sufficient to cut off from Hungary the populations which were not ethnically Magyar. Without any reason 1,084,447 Magyars have been handed over to Czeko-Slovakia, 457,597 to Jugo-Slavia, 1,704,851 to Rumania. Also other nuclei of population have been detached without reason.

— Francesco Saverio Nitti: Peaceless Europe[131]

In modern historiography

The treaty's perceived disproportion has had a lasting impact on Hungarian politics and culture, with some commentators even likening it to a "collective pathology" that places Trianon into a much larger narrative of Hungarian victimhood at the hands of foreign powers.[132] Within Hungary, Trianon is often referred to as a "diktat," "tragedy,"[133] and "trauma."[114] According to a study, two-thirds of Hungarians agreed in 2020 that parts of neighbouring countries should belong to them, the highest percentage in any NATO country.[134] Such irredentism was one of the main contributing factors to Hungary's decision to enter World War II as an Axis power; Adolf Hitler had promised to intervene on Hungary's behalf to restore majority-ethnic Hungarian lands lost after Trianon.[citation needed]

Hungarian bitterness at Trianon was also a source of regional tension after the Cold War ended in 1989.[123] For example, Hungary attracted international media attention in 1999 for passing the "status law" concerning estimated three-million ethnic Hungarian minorities in neighbouring Romania, Slovakia, Serbia and Montenegro, Croatia, Slovenia and Ukraine. The law aimed to provide education, health benefits and employment rights to these minorities as a means of providing reparations for Trianon's negative consequences.[17][135]

Trianon's legacy is similarly implicated in the question of whether to grant extraterritorial ethnic Hungarians citizenship, an important issue in contemporary Hungarian politics. In 2004, a majority of voters approved extending citizenship to ethnic Hungarians in a referendum, which nonetheless failed due to low turnout.[136] In 2011, Viktor Orbán's newly formed government liberalized the nationality law by statute. Although Orbán depicted the new law as redressing Trianon, many commentators speculated about an additional political motivation; the law granted voting rights to extraterritorial Hungarians, who were seen as a reliable base of support for Orbán's national-conservative Fidesz party.[137][138]

Economic consequences

 
Trianon memorial, Kiskunhalas

The Austro-Hungarian Empire was one economic unit with autarkic characteristics[139][140][141] during its golden age and therefore achieved rapid growth, especially in the early 20th century when GNP grew by 1.46%.[142] This level of growth compared very favourably to that of other European states such as Britain (1.00%), France (1.06%), and Germany (1.51%). There was also a division of labour present throughout the empire: that is, in the Austrian part of the monarchy manufacturing industries were highly advanced, while in the Kingdom of Hungary an agro-industrial economy had emerged. By the late 19th century, economic growth of the eastern regions consistently surpassed that of western, thus discrepancies eventually began to diminish. The key success of fast development was specialisation of each region in fields that they were best.[citation needed]

The Kingdom of Hungary was the main supplier of wheat, rye, barley and other various goods in the empire, and these comprised a large portion of the empire's exports.[143] Meanwhile, the territory of present-day Czech Republic (Kingdom of Bohemia) owned 75% of the whole industrial capacity of former Austria-Hungary.[144][145] This shows that the various parts of the former monarchy were economically interdependent. As a further illustration of this issue, post-Trianon Hungary produced 5 times more agricultural goods than it needed for itself,[146] and mills around Budapest (some of the largest ones in Europe at the time) operated at 20% capacity. As a consequence of the treaty, all the competitive industries of the former empire were compelled to close doors, as great capacity was met by negligible demand owing to economic barriers presented in the form of the newly defined borders.[citation needed]

 
Hungarian economic consequences due to the Treaty of Trianon. "A New World Was Born"[147] permanent exhibition in the Buda Castle.

Post-Trianon Hungary possessed 90% of the engineering and printing industry of the pre-war kingdom, while only 11% of timber and 16% of iron was retained. In addition, 61% of arable land, 74% of public roads, 65% of canals, 62% of railroads, 64% of hard surface roads, 83% of pig iron output, 55% of industrial plants, and 67% of credit and banking institutions of the former Kingdom of Hungary lay within the territory of Hungary's neighbours.[148][149][150] These statistics correspond to post-Trianon Hungary retaining only around a third of the kingdom's territory before the war and around 60% of its population.[151] The new borders also bisected transport links – in the Kingdom of Hungary the road and railway network had a radial structure, with Budapest in the centre. Many roads and railways, running along the newly defined borders and interlinking radial transport lines, ended up in different, highly introvert countries. Hence, much of the rail cargo traffic of the emergent states was virtually paralysed.[152] These factors all combined created some imbalances in the now separated economic regions of the former monarchy.

The disseminating economic problems had been also noted in the Coolidge Report as a serious potential aftermath of the treaty.[77] This opinion was not taken into account during the negotiations. Thus, the resulting uneasiness and despondency of one part of the concerned population was later one of the main antecedents of World War II. Unemployment levels in Austria, as well as in Hungary, were dangerously high, and industrial output dropped by 65%. What happened to Austria in industry happened to Hungary in agriculture where production of grain declined by more than 70%.[153][154] Austria, especially the imperial capital Vienna, was a leading investor of development projects throughout the empire with more than 2.2 billion crown capital. This sum sunk to a mere 8.6 million crowns after the treaty took effect and resulted in a starving of capital in other regions of the former empire.[155]

The disintegration of the multinational state conversely impacted neighbouring countries, too: In Poland, Romania, Yugoslavia, and Bulgaria a fifth to a third of the rural population could find no work, and industry was in no position to absorb them.[citation needed] In comparison, by 1921 the new Czechoslovak state reached 75% of its pre-war production owing to their favourable position among the victors and greater associated access to international rehabilitation resources.[156]

With the creation of customs barriers and fragmented protective economies, the economic growth and outlook in the region sharply declined,[157] ultimately culminating in a deep recession. It proved to be immensely challenging for the successor states to successfully transform their economies to adapt to the new circumstances. All the formal districts of Austria-Hungary used to rely on each other's exports for growth and welfare; by contrast, 5 years after the treaty, traffic of goods between the countries dropped to less than 5% of its former value. This could be attributed to the introduction of aggressive nationalistic policies by local political leaders.[158][159][page needed]

The drastic shift in economic climate forced the countries to re-evaluate their situation and to promote industries where they had fallen short. Austria and Czechoslovakia subsidised the mill, sugar and brewing industries, while Hungary attempted to increase the efficiency of iron, steel, glass and chemical industries.[139][160] The stated objective was that all countries should become self-sufficient. This tendency, however, led to uniform economies and competitive economic advantage of long well-established industries and research fields evaporated. The lack of specialisation adversely affected the whole Danube-Carpathian region and caused a distinct setback of growth and development compared to western and northern European regions as well as high financial vulnerability and instability.[161][162]

Miscellaneous consequences

 
Memorial in Csátalja

Romania, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia had to assume part of the financial obligations of the former Kingdom of Hungary on account of the parts of its former territory that were assigned under their sovereignty. Some conditions of the treaty were similar to those imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles. After the war, the Austro-Hungarian navy, air force and army were disbanded. The army of post-Trianon Hungary was to be restricted to 35,000 men, and there was to be no conscription. Heavy artillery, tanks and air force were prohibited.[150] No railway was to be built with more than one track, because at that time railways held substantial strategic importance economically and militarily.[163]

Articles 54–60 of the treaty required Hungary to recognise various rights of national minorities within its borders.[164] Articles 61–66 state that all former citizens of the Kingdom of Hungary living outside the newly defined frontiers of Hungary were to ipso facto lose their Hungarian citizenship in one year.[165] Under articles 79 to 101 Hungary renounced all privileges of the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy in territories outside Europe, including Morocco, Egypt, Siam and China.[166]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The United States ended the war with the U.S.–Hungarian Peace Treaty (1921).

References

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Cited sources

  • Deak, Francis (1942). Hungary at the Paris Peace Conference: The Diplomatic History of the Treaty of Trianon. Howard Fertig.
  • Frucht, Richard C. (2004). Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-800-6.
  • Kocsis, Károly; Kocsis-Hodosi, Eszter (1998). Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin. ISBN 978-963-7395-84-0.
  • Brass, Paul R. (1985). Ethnic Groups and the State. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7099-3272-7.
  • Tucker, Spencer; Roberts, Priscilla Mary (2005). Encyclopedia of World War I (1 ed.). ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-420-2.

Further reading

  • Badescu, Ilie. "Peacebuilding in an Era of State-Nations: The Europe of Trianon." Romanian Journal of Sociological Studies 2 (2018): 87–100. online
  • Balogh, Eva S. "Peaceful Revision: The Diplomatic Road to War." Hungarian Studies Review 10.1 (1983): 43- 51. online
  • Bandholtz, H.H. An Undiplomatic Diary by the American Member of the Inter-Allied Military Mission to Hungary: 1919–1920. (1933) online
  • Bartha, Dezso. "Trianon and the Predestination of Hungarian Politics: A Historiography of Hungarian Revisionism, 1918–1944." (Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2006) online
  • Bihari, Peter. "Images of defeat: Hungary after the lost war, the revolutions and the Peace Treaty of Trianon." Crossroads of European histories: multiple outlooks on five key moments in the history of Europe (2006) pp: 165–171.
  • Hanák, Peter. "Hungary on a fixed course: An outline of Hungarian history, 1918–1945." in Joseph Held, ed., Columbia history of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century (1992) pp: 164–204.
  • Jeszenszky, Géza. "The Afterlife of the Treaty of Trianon." The Hungarian Quarterly 184 (2006): 101–111.
  • Király, Béla K. and László Veszprémy, eds. Trianon and East Central Europe: Antecedents and Repercussions (Columbia University Press, 1995).
  • Macartney, Carlile Aylmer Hungary and Her Successors: The Treaty of Trianon and Its Consequences 1919–1937 (1937)
  • Macartney, Carlile Aylmer October Fifteenth – A History of Modern Hungary 1929–1945. Edinburgh University Press (1956)
  • Piahanau, Aliaksandr. "‘Each Wagon of Coal Should Be Paid for with Territorial concessions.’ Hungary, Czechoslovakia,and the Coal Shortage in 1918–21." Diplomacy & Statecraft, 34/1 (2023): 86-116. online
  • Aliaksandr Piahanau, Hungary's Policy Towards Czechoslovakia, 1918–36. PhD dissertation. Toulouse University, 2018 Hungary's Policy Towards Czechoslovakia in 1918 - 36
  • Romsics, Ignác. The Dismantling of Historic Hungary: The Peace Treaty of Trianon, 1920 (Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs, 2002).
  • Romsics, Ignác. "The Trianon Peace Treaty in Hungarian Historiography and Political Thinking." East European Monographs (2000): 89–105.
  • Romsics, Ignác. "Hungarian Revisionism in Thought and Action, 1920–1941: Plans, Expectations, Reality" in Marina Cattaruzza ed., Territorial Revisionism and the Allies of Germany in the Second World War: Goals, Expectations, Practices (2013) pp. 92–101 online
  • Steiner, Zara S. The lights that failed: European international history, 1919–1933 (2007) Trianon in relation to powers and nearby countries.
    • Steiner, Zara. The triumph of the dark: European international history 1933–1939 (2011), continued,
  • Várdy, Steven Béla. "The Impact of Trianon upon Hungary and the Hungarian Mind: The Nature of Interwar Hungarian Irredentism." Hungarian Studies Review 10.1 (1983): 21+. online
  • Wojatsek, Charles. From Trianon to the First Vienna Arbitral Award: The Hungarian Minority in the First Czechoslovak Republic, 1918–1938 (Montreal: Institute of Comparative Civilizations, 1980).

External links

  • Zeidler, Miklós: Treaty of Trianon, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Sharp, Alan: The Paris Peace Conference and its Consequences, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Czechoslovak-Hungarian Border Conflict, in: [2].
  • Trianon Treaty text (in English)
  • Map of Hungarian borders in November–December 1918
  • Map of Europe and Treaty of Trianon 16 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine at omniatlas.com

treaty, trianon, french, traité, trianon, hungarian, trianoni, békeszerződés, italian, trattato, trianon, romanian, tratatul, trianon, often, referred, peace, dictate, trianon, dictate, trianon, hungary, prepared, paris, peace, conference, signed, grand, trian. The Treaty of Trianon French Traite de Trianon Hungarian Trianoni bekeszerzodes Italian Trattato del Trianon Romanian Tratatul de la Trianon often referred to as the Peace Dictate of Trianon 1 2 3 4 5 or Dictate of Trianon 6 7 in Hungary was prepared at the Paris Peace Conference and was signed in the Grand Trianon chateau in Versailles on 4 June 1920 It formally ended World War I between most of the Allies of World War I a and the Kingdom of Hungary 8 9 10 11 French diplomats played the major role in designing the treaty with a view to establishing a French led coalition of the newly formed states It regulated the status of the Kingdom of Hungary and defined its borders generally within the ceasefire lines established in November December 1918 and left Hungary as a landlocked state that included 93 073 square kilometres 35 936 sq mi 28 of the 325 411 square kilometres 125 642 sq mi that had constituted the pre war Kingdom of Hungary the Hungarian half of the Austro Hungarian monarchy The truncated kingdom had a population of 7 6 million 36 compared to the pre war kingdom s population of 20 9 million 12 Though the areas that were allocated to neighbouring countries had a majority of non Hungarians in them lived 3 3 million Hungarians 31 of the Hungarians who then became minorities 13 14 15 16 The treaty limited Hungary s army to 35 000 officers and men and the Austro Hungarian Navy ceased to exist These decisions and their consequences have been the cause of deep resentment in Hungary ever since 17 Treaty of TrianonTreaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and HungaryArrival of the two signatories Agost Benard and Alfred Drasche Lazar on 4 June 1920 at the Grand Trianon in VersaillesSigned4 June 1920LocationVersailles FranceEffective26 July 1921Parties1 Principal Allied and Associated Powers France United Kingdom Italy Japan United StatesOther Allied Powers Belgium China Cuba Czechoslovakia Greece Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes Nicaragua Panama Poland Portugal Romania Siam 2 Central Powers HungaryDepositaryFrench GovernmentLanguagesFrench English ItalianFull textTreaty of Trianon at WikisourceEvents leading to World War IIRevolutions of 1917 1923 Aftermath of World War I 1918 1939 Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 1925 Province of the Sudetenland 1918 1920 1918 1920 unrest in Split Soviet westward offensive of 1918 1919 Heimosodat 1918 1922 Austro Slovene conflict in Carinthia 1918 1919 Hungarian Romanian War 1918 1919 Hungarian Czechoslovak War 1918 1919 1919 Egyptian Revolution Christmas Uprising 1919 Irish War of Independence 1919 Comintern World Congresses 1919 1935 Treaty of Versailles 1919 Shandong Problem 1919 1922 Polish Soviet War 1919 1921 Polish Czechoslovak War 1919 Polish Lithuanian War 1919 1920 Silesian Uprisings 1919 1921 Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye 1919 Turkish War of Independence 1919 1923 Venizelos Tittoni agreement 1919 Italian Regency of Carnaro 1919 1920 Iraqi Revolt 1920 Treaty of Trianon 1920 Treaty of Rapallo 1920 Little Entente 1920 1938 Treaty of Tartu Finland Russia 1920 1938 Mongolian Revolution of 1921 Soviet intervention in Mongolia 1921 1924 Franco Polish alliance 1921 1940 Polish Romanian alliance 1921 1939 Genoa Conference 1922 Treaty of Rapallo 1922 March on Rome 1922 Sun Joffe Manifesto 1923 Corfu incident 1923 Occupation of the Ruhr 1923 1925 Treaty of Lausanne 1923 1924 Mein Kampf 1925 Second Italo Senussi War 1923 1932 First United Front 1923 1927 Dawes Plan 1924 Treaty of Rome 1924 Soviet Japanese Basic Convention 1925 German Polish customs war 1925 1934 Treaty of Nettuno 1925 Locarno Treaties 1925 Anti Fengtian War 1925 1926 Treaty of Berlin 1926 May Coup Poland 1926 Northern Expedition 1926 1928 Nanking incident of 1927 Chinese Civil War 1927 1937 Jinan incident 1928 Huanggutun incident 1928 Italo Ethiopian Treaty of 1928 Chinese reunification 1928 Lateran Treaty 1928 Central Plains War 1929 1930 Young Plan 1929 Sino Soviet conflict 1929 Great Depression 1929 London Naval Treaty 1930 Kumul Rebellion 1931 1934 Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1931 Pacification of Manchukuo 1931 1942 January 28 incident 1932 Soviet Japanese border conflicts 1932 1939 Geneva Conference 1932 1934 May 15 incident 1932 Lausanne Conference of 1932 Soviet Polish Non Aggression Pact 1932 Soviet Finnish Non Aggression Pact 1932 Proclamation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 1932 Defense of the Great Wall 1933 Battle of Rehe 1933 Nazis rise to power in Germany 1933 Reichskonkordat 1933 Tanggu Truce 1933 Italo Soviet Pact 1933 Inner Mongolian Campaign 1933 1936 Austrian Civil War 1934 Balkan Pact 1934 1940 July Putsch 1934 German Polish declaration of non aggression 1934 1939 Baltic Entente 1934 1939 1934 Montreux Fascist conference Stresa Front 1935 Franco Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935 Soviet Czechoslovakia Treaty of Mutual Assistance 1935 He Umezu Agreement 1935 Anglo German Naval Agreement 1935 December 9th Movement Second Italo Ethiopian War 1935 1936 February 26 incident 1936 Remilitarization of the Rhineland 1936 Soviet Mongolian alliance 1936 Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 Anglo Egyptian treaty of 1936 Italo German Axis protocol 1936 Anti Comintern Pact 1936 Suiyuan campaign 1936 Xi an Incident 1936 Second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 USS Panay incident 1937 Anschluss Mar 1938 1938 Polish ultimatum to Lithuania Mar 1938 Easter Accords April 1938 May Crisis May 1938 Battle of Lake Khasan July Aug 1938 Salonika Agreement July 1938 Bled Agreement Aug 1938 Undeclared German Czechoslovak War Sep 1938 Munich Agreement Sep 1938 First Vienna Award Nov 1938 German occupation of Czechoslovakia Mar 1939 Hungarian invasion of Carpatho Ukraine Mar 1939 German ultimatum to Lithuania Mar 1939 Slovak Hungarian War Mar 1939 Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War Mar Apr 1939 Danzig crisis Mar Aug 1939 British guarantee to Poland Mar 1939 Italian invasion of Albania Apr 1939 Soviet British French Moscow negotiations Apr Aug 1939 Pact of Steel May 1939 Battles of Khalkhin Gol May Sep 1939 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Aug 1939 Invasion of Poland Sep 1939 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source President Mihaly Karolyi s speech after the proclamation of the First Hungarian Republic on 16 November 1918 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source film Bela Linder s pacifist speech for military officers and declaration of Hungarian self disarmament on 2 November 1918 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Newsreel about Treaty of Trianon 1920 The principal beneficiaries were the Kingdom of Romania the Czechoslovak Republic the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes later Yugoslavia and the First Austrian Republic One of the main elements of the treaty was the doctrine of self determination of peoples and it was an attempt to give the non Hungarians their own national states 18 In addition Hungary had to pay war reparations to its neighbours The treaty was dictated by the Allies rather than negotiated and the Hungarians had no option but to accept its terms 18 The Hungarian delegation signed the treaty under protest and agitation for its revision began immediately 14 19 The current boundaries of Hungary are for the most part the same as those defined by the Treaty of Trianon with minor modifications until 1924 regarding the Hungarian Austrian border and the transfer of three villages to Czechoslovakia in 1947 20 21 After World War I despite the self determination of peoples idea of the Allied Powers only one plebiscite was permitted later known as the Sopron plebiscite to settle disputed borders on the former territory of the Kingdom of Hungary 22 settling a smaller territorial dispute between the First Austrian Republic and the Kingdom of Hungary because some months earlier the Rongyos Garda launched a series of attacks to oust the Austrian forces that entered the area During the plebiscite in late 1921 the polling stations were supervised by British French and Italian army officers of the Allied Powers 23 Contents 1 Background 1 1 First World War and Austro Hungarian Armistice 1 2 Aster Revolution and the First Hungarian Republic 1 3 Fall of the liberal First Hungarian Republic and communist coup d etat 1 4 Treaty preparation 2 Borders of Hungary 3 Results and consequences 3 1 1910 census 3 1 1 Criticism of the 1910 census 3 1 2 Distribution of the non Hungarian and Hungarian populations 3 1 3 Hungarians outside the newly defined borders 3 1 4 Minorities in post Trianon Hungary 3 2 Political consequences 3 2 1 Legacy 3 2 2 In modern historiography 3 3 Economic consequences 3 4 Miscellaneous consequences 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Cited sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground EditFirst World War and Austro Hungarian Armistice Edit Main articles World War I American entry into World War I and Fourteen Points On 28 June 1914 the heir to the throne of Austria Hungary the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist 24 This caused a rapidly escalating July Crisis resulting in Austria Hungary declaring war on Serbia followed quickly by the entry of most European powers into the First World War 25 Two alliances faced off the Central Powers led by Germany and the Triple Entente led by Britain France and Russia In 1918 Germany tried to overwhelm the Allies on the Western Front but failed Instead the Allies began a successful counteroffensive and forced the Armistice of 11 November 1918 that resembled a surrender by the Central Powers 26 On 6 April 1917 the United States entered the war against Germany and in December 1917 against Austria Hungary The American war aim was to end aggressive militarism as shown by Berlin and Vienna The United States never formally joined the Allies President Woodrow Wilson acted as an independent force and his Fourteen Points was accepted by Germany as a basis for the armistice of November 1918 It outlined a policy of free trade open agreements and democracy While the term was not used self determination was assumed It called for a negotiated end to the war international disarmament the withdrawal of the Central Powers from occupied territories the creation of a Polish state the redrawing of Europe s borders along ethnic lines and the formation of a League of Nations to guarantee the political independence and territorial integrity of all states 27 28 It called for a just and democratic peace uncompromised by territorial annexation Point ten announced Wilson s wish that the peoples of Austria Hungary be given autonomy a point that Vienna rejected 29 Germany the major ally of Austria Hungary in World War I suffered numerous losses during the Hundred Days Offensive between August and November 1918 and was in negotiation of armistice with Allied Powers from the beginning of October 1918 Between 15 and 29 September 1918 Franchet d Esperey in command of a relative small army of Greeks 9 divisions French 6 divisions Serbs 6 divisions British 4 divisions and Italians 1 division staged a successful Vardar offensive in Vardar Macedonia that ended by taking Bulgaria out of the war 30 That collapse of the Southern Italian Front was one of several developments that effectively triggered the November 1918 armistice 31 By the end of October 1918 the Austro Hungarian Army was so fatigued that its commanders were forced to seek a ceasefire Czechoslovakia and the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs were proclaimed and troops started deserting disobeying orders and retreating Many Czechoslovak troops in fact started working for the Allied cause and in September 1918 five Czechoslovak Regiments were formed in the Italian Army The troops of Austria Hungary started a chaotic withdrawal during the Battle of Vittorio Veneto and Austria Hungary began to negotiate a truce on 28 October Aster Revolution and the First Hungarian Republic Edit Main articles Armistice of Villa Giusti Aster Revolution and First Hungarian Republic During the war Count Mihaly Karolyi led a small but very active pacifist anti war maverick faction in the Hungarian parliament 32 He even organized covert contacts with British and French diplomats in Switzerland 33 The Austro Hungarian monarchy politically collapsed and disintegrated as a result of a defeat in the Italian front On 31 October 1918 in the midst of armistice negotiations the Aster Revolution in Budapest brought the liberal Karolyi a supporter of the Allies to power King Charles had no other option than the appointment of Karolyi as prime minister of Hungary On 25 October 1918 Karolyi had formed the Hungarian National Council The Hungarian Royal Honved army still had more than 1 400 000 soldiers 34 35 when Karolyi was announced as prime minister Karolyi yielded to President Wilson s demand for pacifism by ordering the unilateral self disarmament of the Hungarian army This happened under the direction of Minister of War Bela Linder on 2 November 1918 36 37 When Oszkar Jaszi became the new Minister for National Minorities of Hungary he immediately offered democratic referendums about the disputed borders for minorities however the political leaders of those minorities refused the very idea of democratic referendums regarding disputed territories at the Paris peace conference 38 Disarmament of its army meant that Hungary was to remain without a national defence at a time of particular vulnerability The unilateral self disarmament made the occupation of Hungary directly possible for the relatively small armies of Romania the Franco Serbian army and the armed forces of the newly established Czechoslovakia 39 40 After self disarmament Czech Serbian and Romanian political leaders chose to attack Hungary instead of holding democratic plebiscites concerning the disputed areas 41 On the request of the Austro Hungarian government an armistice was granted to Austria Hungary on 3 November 1918 by the Allies 42 Military and political events changed rapidly and drastically after the Hungarian unilateral disarmament On 5 November 1918 the Serbian army with the help of the French army crossed the southern borders On 8 November the Czechoslovak army crossed the northern borders On 10 November d Esperey s army crossed the Danube River and was poised to enter the Hungarian heartland On 11 November Germany signed an armistice with Allies under which they had to immediately withdraw all German troops in Romania and in the Ottoman Empire the Austro Hungarian Empire and the Russian Empire back to German territory and Allies to have access to these countries 43 On 13 November the Romanian army crossed the eastern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary During the rule of Karolyi s pacifist cabinet Hungary rapidly lost control over approximately 75 of its former pre WWI territories 325 411 km2 125 642 sq mi without a fight and was subject to foreign occupation 44 The Armistice of 3 November was completed as regards Hungary on 13 November when Karolyi signed the Armistice of Belgrade with the Allied nations in order that a Treaty of Peace might be concluded 45 46 It limited the size of the Hungarian army to six infantry and two cavalry divisions 47 Demarcation lines defining the territory to remain under Hungarian control were made The lines would apply until definitive borders could be established Under the terms of the armistice Serbian and French troops advanced from the south taking control of the Banat and Croatia Romanian forces were permitted to advance to the River Mureș Maros However on 14 November Serbia occupied Pecs 48 49 General Franchet d Esperey followed up the victory by overrunning much of the Balkans and by the war s end his troops had penetrated well into Hungary In mid November 1918 the Czechoslovak troops advanced into the Upper Hungary but were repulsed by the Hungarian troops But following a demand by the Entente to allow the Czechoslovak occupation in the North on 3 December 1918 Budapest agreed that the Czechs would occupy the North West of Upper Hungary Late December 1918 Hungary agreed to extend the Czech zone of occupation to Pozsony Bratislava Komarno Kosice and Uzhhorod By late January 1919 the Czech troops advanced into these areas The Budapest approval for the Czech advancement in Upper Hungary was largely explained by the Hungarian desire to reopen trade with Czech lands and to obtain crucially needed coal amidst an energy crisis 1 After King Charles s withdrawal from government on 16 November 1918 Karolyi proclaimed the First Hungarian Republic with himself as provisional president of the republic Fall of the liberal First Hungarian Republic and communist coup d etat Edit Main article Hungarian Soviet Republic The Karolyi government failed to manage both domestic and military issues and lost popular support On 20 March 1919 Bela Kun who had been imprisoned in the Marko Street prison was released 50 On 21 March he led a successful communist coup d etat Karolyi was deposed and arrested 51 Kun formed a social democratic communist coalition government and proclaimed the Hungarian Soviet Republic Days later the communists purged the social democrats from the government 52 53 The Hungarian Soviet Republic was a small communist rump state 54 When the Republic of Councils in Hungary was established it controlled only approximately 23 of Hungary s historic territory After the Communist takeover the Allies sent a new diplomatic mission to Budapest led by General Jan Smuts During these talks with Smuts Kun insisted that his government would abide by the Belgrade ceasefire and recognise the right to self determination of the various ethnic groups living in Hungary In return Kun urged an end to the Allied trade blockade particularly by the Czechs and to allow fuel and food to be imported into Hungary 55 The communists remained bitterly unpopular 56 in the Hungarian countryside where the authority of that government was often nonexistent 57 Rather than divide the big estates among the peasants which might have gained their support for the government but would have created a class of small holding farmers the communist government proclaimed the nationalization of the estates But having no skilled people to manage the estates the communists had no choice but to leave the existing estate managers in place These while formally accepting their new government bosses in practice retained their loyalty to the deposed aristocratic owners The peasants felt that the revolution had no real effect on their lives and thus had no reason to support it The communist party and communist policies only had real popular support among the proletarian masses of large industrial centers especially in Budapest where the working class represented a high proportion of the inhabitants The communist government followed the Soviet model the party established its terror groups like the infamous Lenin Boys to overcome the obstacles in the Hungarian countryside This was later known as the Red Terror in Hungary citation needed In late May after the Entente military representative demanded more territorial concessions from Hungary Kun attempted to fulfill his promise to adhere to Hungary s historical borders The men of the Hungarian Red Army were recruited mainly from the volunteers of the Budapest proletariat 58 On 20 May 1919 a force under Colonel Aurel Stromfeld attacked and routed Czechoslovak troops from Miskolc The Romanian Army attacked the Hungarian flank with troops from the 16th Infantry Division and the Second Vanători Division aiming to maintain contact with the Czechoslovak Army Hungarian troops prevailed and the Romanian Army retreated to its bridgehead at Tokaj There between 25 and 30 May Romanian forces were required to defend their position against Hungarian attacks On 3 June Romania was forced into further retreat but extended its line of defence along the Tisza River and reinforced its position with the 8th Division which had been moving forward from Bukovina since 22 May Hungary then controlled the territory almost to its old borders regained control of industrial areas around Miskolc Salgotarjan Selmecbanya Banska Stiavnica Kassa Kosice citation needed In June the Hungarian Red Army invaded the eastern part of the so called Upper Hungary now claimed by the newly forming Czechoslovak state The Hungarian Red Army achieved some military success early on under the leadership of Colonel Aurel Stromfeld it ousted Czechoslovak troops from the north and planned to march against the Romanian Army in the east Kun ordered the preparation of an offensive against Czechoslovakia which would increase his domestic support by making good on his promise to restore Hungary s borders The Hungarian Red Army recruited men between 19 and 25 years of age Industrial workers from Budapest volunteered Many former Austro Hungarian officers re enlisted for patriotic reasons The Hungarian Red Army moved its 1st and 5th artillery divisions 40 battalions to Upper Hungary citation needed Despite promises for the restoration of the former borders of Hungary the communists declared the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic in Presov Eperjes on 16 June 1919 59 After the proclamation of the Slovak Soviet Republic the Hungarian nationalists and patriots soon realized that the new communist government had no intentions to recapture the lost territories only to spread communist ideology and establish other communist states in Europe thus sacrificing Hungarian national interests 60 The Hungarian patriots and professional military officers in the Red Army saw the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic as a betrayal and their support for the government began to erode Despite a series of military victories against the Czechoslovak army the Hungarian Red Army started to disintegrate due to tension between nationalists and communists during the establishment of the Slovak Soviet Republic The concession eroded support of the communist government among professional military officers and nationalists in the Hungarian Red Army even the chief of the general staff Aurel Stromfeld resigned his post in protest 61 When the French promised the Hungarian government that Romanian forces would withdraw from the Tiszantul Kun withdrew from Czechoslovakia his remaining military units who had remained loyal after the political fiasco with the Slovak Soviet Republic Kun then unsuccessfully tried to turn the remaining units of the demoralized Hungarian Red Army on the Romanians citation needed Treaty preparation Edit Treaty of Trianon The Hungarian Conditions of Peace were dated 15 January 1920 and their Observations handed in on 20 February French diplomats played the major role in the drafting and Hungarians were kept in the dark Their long term goal was to build a coalition of small new nations led by France and capable of standing up to Russia or Germany This led to the Little Entente of Czechoslovakia Romania and the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes 62 The lengthy negotiation process was recorded on a daily basis by Janos Wettstein hu deputy first secretary of the Hungarian delegation 63 The treaty of peace in final form was submitted to the Hungarians on 6 May and signed by them in Grand Trianon 64 on 4 June 1920 entering into force on 26 July 1921 65 The United States did not ratify the Treaty of Trianon Instead it negotiated a separate peace treaty that did not contradict the terms of the Trianon treaty 29 Borders of Hungary Edit Drafted borders of Austria Hungary in the treaties of Trianon and Saint Germain The Hungarian delegation leaving Grand Trianon Palace at Versailles after the treaty was signed 1920 The Hungarian government terminated its union with Austria on 31 October 1918 officially dissolving the Austro Hungarian state The de facto temporary borders of independent Hungary were defined by the ceasefire lines in November December 1918 Compared with the pre war Kingdom of Hungary these temporary borders did not include Part of Transylvania south of the Mureș River and east of the Someș River which came under the control of Romania cease fire agreement of Belgrade signed on 13 November 1918 The General Council of the Saxons in Nagyszeben now Sibiu in Romania decided in question of Transylvania to choose clear neutrality without committing themselves either to the Hungarian or the Romanian side on 25 November 1918 66 The Romanian Army occupied Marosvasarhely now Targu Mureș in Romania the most important town of Szekely Land in Transylvania On the same day the National Assembly of Szekelys in Marosvasarhely reaffirms their support to the territorial integrity of Hungary on 25 November 1918 On 1 December 1918 the Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia declared union with the Kingdom of Romania 67 In response a Hungarian General Assembly in Kolozsvar now Cluj in Romania the most important Hungarian town in Transylvania reaffirms the loyalty of Hungarians from Transylvania to Hungary on 22 December 1918 Slovakia was proclaimed as part of Czechoslovakia status quo set by the Czechoslovak legions and accepted by the Entente on 25 November 1918 Afterwards the Slovak politician Milan Hodza discussed with the Hungarian Minister of Defence Albert Bartha a temporary demarcation line that left between 650 000 and 886 000 Hungarians in the newly formed Czechoslovakia and between 142 000 and 399 000 Slovaks in the remainder of Hungary the discrepancy was caused by the different way census was collected in Hungary and Czechoslovakia That was signed on 6 December 1918 citation needed South Slavic lands which after the war were organised into two political formations the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs and Banat Backa and Baranja which both came under control of South Slavs according to the ceasefire agreement of Belgrade signed on 13 November 1918 Previously on 29 October 1918 the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia parliament an autonomous kingdom within Transleithania terminated 68 the union 69 with the Kingdom of Hungary and on 30 October 1918 the Hungarian diet adopted a motion declaring that the constitutional relations between the two states had ended 70 Croatia Slavonia was included in a newly formed State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs which also included some other South Slavic territories formerly administered by Austria Hungary on 29 October 1918 This state and the Kingdom of Serbia formed the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes Yugoslavia on 1 December 1918 citation needed The territories of Banat Backa and Baranja which included most of the pre war Hungarian counties of Baranya Bacs Bodrog Torontal and Temes came under military control by the Kingdom of Serbia and political control by local South Slavs The Great People s Assembly of Serbs Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat Backa and Baranja declared union of this region with Serbia on 25 November 1918 The ceasefire line had the character of a temporary international border until the treaty The central parts of Banat were later assigned to Romania respecting the wishes of Romanians from this area which on 1 December 1918 were present in the National Assembly of Romanians in Alba Iulia which voted for union with the Kingdom of Romania citation needed The city of Rijeka was occupied by the Italian nationalists group Its affiliation was a matter of international dispute between the Kingdom of Italy and Yugoslavia Croatian populated territories in modern Međimurje remained under Hungarian control after the Armistice of Belgrade of 13 November 1918 After the Međimurje was occupied by forces led by Slavko Kvaternik on 24 December 1918 this region declared separation from Hungary and entry into Yugoslavia at the popular assembly of 9 January 1919 71 72 After the Romanian Army advanced beyond this cease fire line the Entente powers asked Hungary Vix Note to acknowledge the new Romanian territorial gains by a new line set along the Tisza river Unable to reject these terms and unwilling to accept them the leaders of the Hungarian Democratic Republic resigned and the Communists seized power In spite of the country being under Allied blockade the Hungarian Soviet Republic was formed and the Hungarian Red Army was rapidly set up This army was initially successful against the Czechoslovak Legions due to covert food 73 and arms aid from Italy 74 This made it possible for Hungary to reach nearly the former Galician Polish border thus separating the Czechoslovak and Romanian troops from each other After a Hungarian Czechoslovak cease fire signed on 1 July 1919 the Hungarian Red Army left parts of Slovakia by 4 July as the Entente powers promised to invite a Hungarian delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference In the end this particular invitation was not issued Bela Kun leader of the Hungarian Soviet Republic then turned the Hungarian Red Army on the Romanian Army and attacked at the Tisza river on 20 July 1919 After fierce fighting that lasted some five days the Hungarian Red Army collapsed The Royal Romanian Army marched into Budapest on 4 August 1919 citation needed The Hungarian state was restored by the Entente powers helping Admiral Horthy into power in November 1919 On 1 December 1919 the Hungarian delegation was officially invited to the Versailles Peace Conference however the newly defined borders of Hungary were nearly concluded without the presence of the Hungarians 75 During prior negotiations the Hungarian party along with the Austrian advocated the American principle of self determination that the population of disputed territories should decide by free plebiscite to which country they wished to belong 75 76 This view did not prevail for long as it was disregarded by the decisive French and British delegates 77 According to some opinions the Allies drafted the outline of the new frontiers 78 with little or no regard to the historical cultural ethnic geographic economic and strategic aspects of the region 75 78 79 The Allies assigned territories that were mostly populated by non Hungarian ethnicities to successor states but also allowed these states to absorb sizeable territories that were mainly inhabited by Hungarian speaking populations For instance Romania gained all of Transylvania which was home to 2 800 000 Romanians but also contained a significant minority of 1 600 000 Hungarians and about 250 000 Germans 80 The intent of the Allies was principally to strengthen these successor states at the expense of Hungary Although the countries that were the main beneficiaries of the treaty partially noted the issues the Hungarian delegates tried to draw attention to them Their views were disregarded by the Allied representatives Some predominantly Hungarian settlements consisting of more than two million people were situated in a typically 20 50 km 12 31 mi wide strip along the new borders in foreign territory More concentrated groups were found in Czechoslovakia parts of southern Slovakia Yugoslavia parts of northern Delvidek and Romania parts of Transylvania The final borders of Hungary were defined by the Treaty of Trianon signed on 4 June 1920 Beside exclusion of the previously mentioned territories they did not include the rest of Transylvania which together with some additional parts of the pre war Kingdom of Hungary became part of Romania Carpathian Ruthenia which became part of Czechoslovakia pursuant to the Treaty of Saint Germain in 1919 81 most of Burgenland which became part of Austria also pursuant to the Treaty of Saint Germain the district of Sopron opted to remain within Hungary after a plebiscite held in December 1921 the only place where a plebiscite was held and factored in the decision Međimurje and the 2 3 of the Slovene March or Vendvidek now Prekmurje which became part of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes By the Treaty of Trianon the cities of Pecs Mohacs Baja and Szigetvar which were under Serb Croat Slovene administration after November 1918 were assigned to Hungary An arbitration committee in 1920 assigned small northern parts of the former Arva and Szepes counties of the Kingdom of Hungary with Polish majority population to Poland After 1918 Hungary did not have access to the sea which pre war Hungary formerly had directly through the Rijeka coastline and indirectly through Croatia Slavonia citation needed 1885 ethnographic map of the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen i e Kingdom of Hungary and Croatia Slavonia according to the 1880 census Representatives of small nations living in the former Austria Hungary and active in the Congress of Oppressed Nations regarded the treaty of Trianon for being an act of historical righteousness 82 page needed because a better future for their nations was to be founded and durably assured on the firm basis of world democracy real and sovereign government by the people and a universal alliance of the nations vested with the authority of arbitration while at the same time making a call for putting an end to the existing unbearable domination of one nation over the other and making it possible for nations to organize their relations to each other on the basis of equal rights and free conventions Furthermore they believed the treaty would help toward a new era of dependence on international law the fraternity of nations equal rights and human liberty as well as aid civilisation in the effort to free humanity from international violence 83 Results and consequences Edit The Red Map 84 85 an ethnographic map of the Hungary proper publicised by the Hungarian delegation Regions with population density below 20 persons km2 51 8 persons sq mi 86 are left blank and the corresponding population is represented in the nearest region with population density above that limit The vibrant dominant red color was deliberately chosen to mark Hungarians while the light purple color of the Romanians who were already the majority in the whole of Transylvania back then is shadow like 87 Hungarian German Slovak Ruthenians Romanian Serbian Regions with fewer than 20 persons sq km Irredentism the demand for reunification of Hungarian peoples became a central theme of Hungarian politics and diplomacy 88 1910 census Edit Ethnographic map of the Kingdom of Hungary according to the 1910 census The last census before the Treaty of Trianon was held in 1910 This census recorded population by language and religion but not by ethnicity However it is generally accepted that the largest ethnic group in the Kingdom of Hungary in this time were the Hungarians According to the census speakers of the Hungarian language included approximately 48 of the population of the kingdom and 54 of the population of the territory referred to as Hungary proper i e excluding Croatia Slavonia Within the borders of Hungary proper numerous ethnic minorities were present 16 1 Romanians 10 5 Slovaks 10 4 Germans 2 5 Ruthenians 2 5 Serbs and 8 others 89 5 of the population of Hungary proper were Jews who were included in speakers of the Hungarian language 90 The population of the autonomous Croatia Slavonia was mostly composed of Croats and Serbs who together counted 87 of population Criticism of the 1910 census Edit The census of 1910 classified the residents of the Kingdom of Hungary by their native languages 91 and religions so it presents the preferred language of the individual which may or may not correspond to the individual s ethnic identity To make the situation even more complex in the multilingual kingdom there were territories with ethnically mixed populations where people spoke two or even three languages natively For example in the territory what is today Slovakia then part of Upper Hungary 18 of the Slovaks 33 of the Hungarians and 65 of the Germans were bilingual In addition 21 of the Germans spoke both Slovak and Hungarian beside German 92 These reasons are ground for debate about the accuracy of the census While several demographers David W Paul 93 Peter Hanak Laszlo Katus 94 state that the outcome of the census is reasonably accurate assuming that it is also properly interpreted others believe that the 1910 census was manipulated 95 96 by exaggerating the percentage of the speakers of Hungarian pointing to the discrepancy between an improbably high growth of the Hungarian speaking population and the decrease of percentual participation of speakers of other languages through Magyarization in the late 19th century 97 For example the 1921 census in Czechoslovakia only one year after the Treaty of Trianon shows 21 Hungarians in Slovakia 98 compared to 30 based on 1910 census Some Slovak demographers such as Jan Sveton sk and Julius Mesaros dispute the result of every pre war census 93 Owen Johnson an American historian accepts the numbers of the earlier censuses up to the one in 1900 according to which the proportion of the Hungarians was 51 4 89 but he neglects the 1910 census as he thinks the changes since the last census are too big 93 It is also argued that there were different results in previous censuses in the Kingdom of Hungary and subsequent censuses in the new states Considering the size of discrepancies some demographers are on the opinion that these censuses were somewhat biased in the favour of the respective ruling nation 99 Distribution of the non Hungarian and Hungarian populations Edit The number of non Hungarian and Hungarian communities in the different areas based on the census data of 1910 in this people were not directly asked about their ethnicity but about their native language The present day location of each area is given in parenthesis Region Main spoken language Hungarian language Other languagesTransylvania and parts of Partium Banat Romania Romanian 2 819 467 54 1 658 045 31 7 German 550 964 10 5 Upper Hungary restricted to the territory of today s Slovakia Slovak 1 688 413 57 9 881 320 30 2 German 198 405 6 8 Delvidek Vojvodina Serbia Serbo Croatian 601 770 39 8 Serbian 510 754 33 8 Croatian Bunjevac and Sokac 91 016 6 425 672 28 1 German 324 017 21 4 Karpatalja Ukraine Ruthenian 330 010 54 5 185 433 30 6 German 64 257 10 6 Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia and Murakoz and part of Baranya Croatia Croatian 1 638 350 62 3 121 000 3 5 Serbian 644 955 24 6 German 134 078 5 1 Fiume Croatia Italian 24 212 48 6 6 493 13 Croatian and Serbian 13 351 26 8 Slovene 2 336 4 7 German 2 315 4 6 Orvidek Burgenland Austria German 217 072 74 4 26 225 9 Croatian 43 633 15 Muravidek Prekmurje Slovenia Slovene 74 199 80 4 in 1921 14 065 15 2 in 1921 German 2 540 2 8 in 1921According to another source which population distribution in 1910 looked as follows original research Region Main ethnicity OthersTransylvania and parts of Partium Banat Romania 2 831 222 Romanians 53 8 The 1919 and 1920 Transylvanian censuses indicate a greater percentage of Romanians 57 1 57 3 100 2 431 273 others mostly Hungarians 1 662 948 31 6 and Germans 563 087 10 7 The 1919 and 1920 Transylvanian censuses indicate a smaller Hungarian minority 26 5 25 5 100 Upper Hungary restricted to the territory of today s Slovakia 1 687 977 Slovaks according to the 1921 census 1 941 942 Slovaks 1 233 454 others mostly Hungarians 886 044 Germans Ruthenians and Roma according to the 1921 census 1 058 928 of others Croatia Slavonia Delvidek today in Croatia Serbia 2 756 000 Croats and Serbs 1 366 000 others mostly Hungarians and Germans Karpatalja Ukraine 330 010 Ruthenians 275 932 others mostly Hungarians Germans Romanians and Slovaks Orvidek Burgenland Austria 217 072 Germans 69 858 others mainly Croatian and Hungarian Hungarians outside the newly defined borders Edit Hungary lost 72 of its territory its sea access half of its 10 biggest cities and all of its precious metal mines 3 425 000 ethnic Hungarians found themselves separated from their motherland 101 102 103 Based on the 1910 Hungarian census with the Administrative Kingdom of Hungary in green and autonomous Croatia Slavonia in grey The territories of the former Hungarian Kingdom that were ceded by the treaty to neighbouring countries in total and each of them separately had a majority of non Hungarian nationals however the Hungarian ethnic area was much larger than the newly established territory of Hungary 104 therefore 30 of the ethnic Hungarians were under foreign authority 105 After the treaty the percentage and the absolute number of all Hungarian populations outside of Hungary decreased in the next decades although some of these populations also recorded temporary increase of the absolute population number There are several reasons for this population decrease some of which were spontaneous assimilation and certain state policies like Slovakization Romanianization Serbianisation citation needed Other important factors were the Hungarian migration from the neighbouring states to Hungary or to some western countries as well as decreased birth rate of Hungarian populations According to the National Office for Refugees the number of Hungarians who immigrated to Hungary from neighbouring countries was about 350 000 between 1918 and 1924 106 Minorities in post Trianon Hungary Edit On the other hand a considerable number of other nationalities remained within the frontiers of the independent Hungary According to the 1920 census 10 4 of the population spoke one of the minority languages as mother language 551 212 German 6 9 141 882 Slovak 1 8 36 858 Croatian 0 5 23 760 Romanian 0 3 23 228 Bunjevac and Sokac 0 3 17 131 Serbian 0 2 7 000 Slovene 0 08 The number of bilingual people was much higher for example 1 398 729 people spoke German 17 399 176 people spoke Slovak 5 179 928 people spoke Croatian 2 2 and 88 828 people spoke Romanian 1 1 Hungarian was spoken by 96 of the total population and was the mother language of 89 107 The percentage and the absolute number of all non Hungarian nationalities decreased in the next decades although the total population of the country increased Bilingualism was also disappearing The main reasons of this process were both spontaneous assimilation and the deliberate Magyarization policy of the state Minorities made up 8 of the total population in 1930 and 7 in 1941 on the post Trianon territory citation needed After World War II approximately 200 000 Germans were deported to Germany according to the decree of the Potsdam Conference Under the forced exchange of population between Czechoslovakia and Hungary approximately 73 000 Slovaks left Hungary and according to different estimations 120 500 92 108 or 45 000 109 Hungarians moved to present day Hungarian territory from Czechoslovakia After these population movements Hungary became a nearly ethnically homogeneous country Political consequences Edit Bordermark on the Hungarian Romanian border near Csenger The Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia 1 December 1918 Union of Transylvania with Romania seen as an act of national liberation by the Transylvanian Romanians A statue of King Peter I Karađorđevic of Serbia at Freedom Square in Zrenjanin Serbia The inscription says To the King Peter I gratious people to its liberator Separation from the Kingdom of Hungary and unification with the Kingdom of Serbia was seen as an act of national liberation by the Vojvodinian Serbs Officially the treaty was intended to be a confirmation of the right of self determination for nations and of the concept of nation states replacing the old multinational Austro Hungarian empire Although the treaty addressed some nationality issues it also sparked some new ones 88 The minority ethnic groups of the pre war kingdom were the major beneficiaries The Allies had explicitly committed themselves to the causes of the minority peoples of Austria Hungary late in World War I For all intents and purposes the death knell of the Austro Hungarian empire sounded on 14 October 1918 when United States Secretary of State Robert Lansing informed Austro Hungarian Foreign Minister Istvan Burian that autonomy for the nationalities was no longer enough Accordingly the Allies assumed without question that the minority ethnic groups of the pre war kingdom wanted to leave Hungary The Romanians joined their ethnic brethren in Romania while the Slovaks Serbs and Croats helped establish states of their own Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia However these new or enlarged countries also absorbed large slices of territory with a majority of ethnic Hungarians or Hungarian speaking population As a result as many as a third of Hungarian language speakers found themselves outside the borders of the post Trianon Hungary 110 page needed While the territories that were now outside Hungary s borders had non Hungarian majorities overall there also existed some sizeable areas with a majority of Hungarians largely near the newly defined borders Over the last century concerns have occasionally been raised about the treatment of these ethnic Hungarian communities in the neighbouring states 111 112 113 Areas with significant Hungarian populations included the Szekely Land 114 in eastern Transylvania the area along the newly defined Romanian Hungarian border cities of Arad Oradea the area north of the newly defined Czechoslovak Hungarian border Komarno Csallokoz southern parts of Subcarpathia and northern parts of Vojvodina citation needed The Allies rejected the idea of plebiscites in the disputed areas with the exception of the city of Sopron which voted in favour of Hungary The Allies were indifferent as to the exact line of the newly defined border between Austria and Hungary Furthermore ethnically diverse Transylvania with an overall Romanian majority 53 8 1910 census data or 57 1 1919 census data or 57 3 1920 census data was treated as a single entity at the peace negotiations and was assigned in its entirety to Romania The option of partition along ethnic lines as an alternative was rejected 115 Another reason why the victorious Allies decided to dissolve the Austria Hungary was to prevent Germany from acquiring substantial influence in the future since Austria Hungary was a strong German supporter and fast developing region 116 The Western powers main priority was to prevent a resurgence of the German Reich and they therefore decided that her allies in the region should be contained by a ring of states friendly to the Allies citation needed each of which would be bigger than either Austria or Hungary 117 Compared to the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary post Trianon Hungary had 60 less population and its political and economic footprint in the region was significantly reduced Hungary lost connection to strategic military and economic infrastructure because of the concentric layout of the railway and road network which the borders bisected In addition the structure of its economy collapsed because it had relied on other parts of the pre war kingdom The country lost access to the Mediterranean and to the important sea port of Rijeka Fiume and became landlocked which had a negative effect on sea trading and strategic naval operations Many trading routes that went through the newly defined borders from various parts of the pre war kingdom were abandoned citation needed With regard to the ethnic issues the Western powers were aware of the problem posed by the presence of so many Hungarians and Germans living outside the newly formed states of Hungary and Austria The Romanian delegation to Versailles feared in 1919 that the Allies were beginning to favour the partition of Transylvania along ethnic lines to reduce the potential exodus citation needed and Prime Minister Ion I C Brătianu even summoned British born Queen Marie to France to strengthen their case The Romanians had suffered a higher relative casualty rate in the war than either Britain 118 119 120 or France 119 120 121 so it was considered that the Western powers had a moral debt to repay In absolute terms Romanian troops had considerably fewer casualties than either Britain or France however 120 The underlying reason for the decision was a secret pact between The Entente and Romania 122 In the Treaty of Bucharest 1916 Romania was promised Transylvania and some other territories to the east of river Tisza provided that she attacked Austria Hungary from the south east where defences were weak However after the Central Powers had noticed the military manoeuvre the attempt was quickly choked off and Bucharest fell in the same year The Trianon cross at Koszeg is pointing onto the former territories of the pre war Kingdom of Hungary that were not assigned to post Trianon Hungary Trianon memorial Bekescsaba By the time the victorious Allies arrived in France the treaty was already settled which made the outcome inevitable At the heart of the dispute lay fundamentally different views on the nature of the Hungarian presence in the disputed territories For Hungarians the outer territories were not seen as colonial territories but rather part of the core national territory 123 The non Hungarians that lived in the Pannonian Basin saw the Hungarians as colonial style rulers who had oppressed the Slavs and Romanians since 1848 when they introduced laws that the language used in education and in local offices was to be Hungarian 124 For non Hungarians from the Pannonian Basin it was a process of decolonisation instead of a punitive dismemberment as was seen by the Hungarians 125 The Hungarians did not see it this way because the newly defined borders did not fully respect territorial distribution of ethnic groups 126 with areas where there were Hungarian majorities 126 outside the new borders The French sided with their allies the Romanians who had a long policy of cultural ties to France since the country broke from the Ottoman Empire partly because of the relative ease at which Romanians could learn French 127 although Clemenceau personally detested Brătianu 125 President Wilson initially supported the outline of a border that would have more respect to ethnic distribution of population based on the Coolidge Report led by Archibald Cary Coolidge a Harvard professor but later gave in because of changing international politics and as a courtesy to other allies 128 For Hungarian public opinion the fact that almost three fourths of the pre war kingdom s territory and a significant number of ethnic Hungarians were assigned to neighbouring countries triggered considerable bitterness Most Hungarians preferred to maintain the territorial integrity of the pre war kingdom The Hungarian politicians claimed that they were ready to give the non Hungarian ethnicities a great deal of autonomy Most Hungarians regarded the treaty as an insult to the nation s honour The Hungarian political attitude towards Trianon was summed up in the phrases Nem nem soha No no never and Mindent vissza Return everything or Everything back 129 The perceived humiliation of the treaty became a dominant theme in inter war Hungarian politics analogous with the German reaction to the Treaty of Versailles By the arbitrations of Germany and Italy Hungary expanded its borders towards neighbouring countries before and during World War II This started by the First Vienna Award then was continued with the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1939 annexation of the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia and a small strip from eastern Slovakia afterwards by the Second Vienna Award in 1940 and finally by the annexations of territories after the breakup of Yugoslavia This territorial expansion was short lived since the post war Hungarian boundaries in the Paris Peace Treaties 1947 were nearly identical to those of 1920 with three villages Horvatjarfalu Oroszvar and Dunacsun transferred to Czechoslovakia 81 Legacy Edit Francesco Saverio Nitti served as Prime Minister of Italy between 1919 and 1920 Italy was a member of the Entente and participated in the treaty he wrote in the Peaceless Europe 130 in 1922 Hungary has undergone the greatest occupation of her territories and her wealth This poor great country which saved both civilization and Christianity has been treated with a bitterness which nothing can explain except the desire of greed of those surrounding her and the fact that the weaker people seeing the stronger overcome wish and insist that she shall be reduced to impotence Nothing in fact can justify the measures of violence and the depredations committed in Magyar territory What was the Rumanian occupation of Hungary a systematic rapine and the systematic destruction for a long time hidden and the stern reproach which Lloyd George addressed in London to the Premier of Rumania was perfectly justified After the War everyone wanted some sacrifice from Hungary and no one dared to say a word of peace or goodwill for her When I tried it was too late The victors hated Hungary for her proud defence The adherents of Socialism do not love her because she had to resist under more than difficult conditions internal and external Bolshevism The international financiers hate her because of the violences committed against the Jews So Hungary suffers all the injustices without defence all the miseries without help and all the intrigues without resistance Before the War Hungary had an area almost equal to that of Italy 282 870 square kilometres with a population of 18 264 533 inhabitants The Treaty of Trianon reduced her territory to 91 114 kilometres that is 32 3 and the population to 7 481 954 or 41 It was not sufficient to cut off from Hungary the populations which were not ethnically Magyar Without any reason 1 084 447 Magyars have been handed over to Czeko Slovakia 457 597 to Jugo Slavia 1 704 851 to Rumania Also other nuclei of population have been detached without reason Francesco Saverio Nitti Peaceless Europe 131 In modern historiography Edit The treaty s perceived disproportion has had a lasting impact on Hungarian politics and culture with some commentators even likening it to a collective pathology that places Trianon into a much larger narrative of Hungarian victimhood at the hands of foreign powers 132 Within Hungary Trianon is often referred to as a diktat tragedy 133 and trauma 114 According to a study two thirds of Hungarians agreed in 2020 that parts of neighbouring countries should belong to them the highest percentage in any NATO country 134 Such irredentism was one of the main contributing factors to Hungary s decision to enter World War II as an Axis power Adolf Hitler had promised to intervene on Hungary s behalf to restore majority ethnic Hungarian lands lost after Trianon citation needed Hungarian bitterness at Trianon was also a source of regional tension after the Cold War ended in 1989 123 For example Hungary attracted international media attention in 1999 for passing the status law concerning estimated three million ethnic Hungarian minorities in neighbouring Romania Slovakia Serbia and Montenegro Croatia Slovenia and Ukraine The law aimed to provide education health benefits and employment rights to these minorities as a means of providing reparations for Trianon s negative consequences 17 135 Trianon s legacy is similarly implicated in the question of whether to grant extraterritorial ethnic Hungarians citizenship an important issue in contemporary Hungarian politics In 2004 a majority of voters approved extending citizenship to ethnic Hungarians in a referendum which nonetheless failed due to low turnout 136 In 2011 Viktor Orban s newly formed government liberalized the nationality law by statute Although Orban depicted the new law as redressing Trianon many commentators speculated about an additional political motivation the law granted voting rights to extraterritorial Hungarians who were seen as a reliable base of support for Orban s national conservative Fidesz party 137 138 Economic consequences Edit Trianon memorial Kiskunhalas The Austro Hungarian Empire was one economic unit with autarkic characteristics 139 140 141 during its golden age and therefore achieved rapid growth especially in the early 20th century when GNP grew by 1 46 142 This level of growth compared very favourably to that of other European states such as Britain 1 00 France 1 06 and Germany 1 51 There was also a division of labour present throughout the empire that is in the Austrian part of the monarchy manufacturing industries were highly advanced while in the Kingdom of Hungary an agro industrial economy had emerged By the late 19th century economic growth of the eastern regions consistently surpassed that of western thus discrepancies eventually began to diminish The key success of fast development was specialisation of each region in fields that they were best citation needed The Kingdom of Hungary was the main supplier of wheat rye barley and other various goods in the empire and these comprised a large portion of the empire s exports 143 Meanwhile the territory of present day Czech Republic Kingdom of Bohemia owned 75 of the whole industrial capacity of former Austria Hungary 144 145 This shows that the various parts of the former monarchy were economically interdependent As a further illustration of this issue post Trianon Hungary produced 5 times more agricultural goods than it needed for itself 146 and mills around Budapest some of the largest ones in Europe at the time operated at 20 capacity As a consequence of the treaty all the competitive industries of the former empire were compelled to close doors as great capacity was met by negligible demand owing to economic barriers presented in the form of the newly defined borders citation needed Hungarian economic consequences due to the Treaty of Trianon A New World Was Born 147 permanent exhibition in the Buda Castle Post Trianon Hungary possessed 90 of the engineering and printing industry of the pre war kingdom while only 11 of timber and 16 of iron was retained In addition 61 of arable land 74 of public roads 65 of canals 62 of railroads 64 of hard surface roads 83 of pig iron output 55 of industrial plants and 67 of credit and banking institutions of the former Kingdom of Hungary lay within the territory of Hungary s neighbours 148 149 150 These statistics correspond to post Trianon Hungary retaining only around a third of the kingdom s territory before the war and around 60 of its population 151 The new borders also bisected transport links in the Kingdom of Hungary the road and railway network had a radial structure with Budapest in the centre Many roads and railways running along the newly defined borders and interlinking radial transport lines ended up in different highly introvert countries Hence much of the rail cargo traffic of the emergent states was virtually paralysed 152 These factors all combined created some imbalances in the now separated economic regions of the former monarchy Archibald Cary Coolidge The disseminating economic problems had been also noted in the Coolidge Report as a serious potential aftermath of the treaty 77 This opinion was not taken into account during the negotiations Thus the resulting uneasiness and despondency of one part of the concerned population was later one of the main antecedents of World War II Unemployment levels in Austria as well as in Hungary were dangerously high and industrial output dropped by 65 What happened to Austria in industry happened to Hungary in agriculture where production of grain declined by more than 70 153 154 Austria especially the imperial capital Vienna was a leading investor of development projects throughout the empire with more than 2 2 billion crown capital This sum sunk to a mere 8 6 million crowns after the treaty took effect and resulted in a starving of capital in other regions of the former empire 155 The disintegration of the multinational state conversely impacted neighbouring countries too In Poland Romania Yugoslavia and Bulgaria a fifth to a third of the rural population could find no work and industry was in no position to absorb them citation needed In comparison by 1921 the new Czechoslovak state reached 75 of its pre war production owing to their favourable position among the victors and greater associated access to international rehabilitation resources 156 With the creation of customs barriers and fragmented protective economies the economic growth and outlook in the region sharply declined 157 ultimately culminating in a deep recession It proved to be immensely challenging for the successor states to successfully transform their economies to adapt to the new circumstances All the formal districts of Austria Hungary used to rely on each other s exports for growth and welfare by contrast 5 years after the treaty traffic of goods between the countries dropped to less than 5 of its former value This could be attributed to the introduction of aggressive nationalistic policies by local political leaders 158 159 page needed The drastic shift in economic climate forced the countries to re evaluate their situation and to promote industries where they had fallen short Austria and Czechoslovakia subsidised the mill sugar and brewing industries while Hungary attempted to increase the efficiency of iron steel glass and chemical industries 139 160 The stated objective was that all countries should become self sufficient This tendency however led to uniform economies and competitive economic advantage of long well established industries and research fields evaporated The lack of specialisation adversely affected the whole Danube Carpathian region and caused a distinct setback of growth and development compared to western and northern European regions as well as high financial vulnerability and instability 161 162 Miscellaneous consequences Edit Memorial in Csatalja Romania Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia had to assume part of the financial obligations of the former Kingdom of Hungary on account of the parts of its former territory that were assigned under their sovereignty Some conditions of the treaty were similar to those imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles After the war the Austro Hungarian navy air force and army were disbanded The army of post Trianon Hungary was to be restricted to 35 000 men and there was to be no conscription Heavy artillery tanks and air force were prohibited 150 No railway was to be built with more than one track because at that time railways held substantial strategic importance economically and militarily 163 Articles 54 60 of the treaty required Hungary to recognise various rights of national minorities within its borders 164 Articles 61 66 state that all former citizens of the Kingdom of Hungary living outside the newly defined frontiers of Hungary were to ipso facto lose their Hungarian citizenship in one year 165 Under articles 79 to 101 Hungary renounced all privileges of the former Austro Hungarian monarchy in territories outside Europe including Morocco Egypt Siam and China 166 See also EditUnion of Hungary and Romania Millerand letter Aftermath of World War I Minority Treaties Banat Republic Republic of Prekmurje Serbian Hungarian Baranya Baja Republic Trianon Syndrome Trianon Treaty DayNotes Edit The United States ended the war with the U S Hungarian Peace Treaty 1921 References Edit Hungarian President Janos Ader s Speech on the Day of National Unity Consulate General of Hungary Manchester Dr Dobo Attila Kollar Ferenc Zsoldos Sandor Kohari Nandor 2021 A trianoni bekediktatum The Peace Dictate of Trianon PDF in Hungarian 2nd ed Magyar Kultura Emlekivek Kiado ISBN 978 615 81078 9 1 Prof Dr Gulyas Laszlo 2021 Trianoni kiskate 101 kerdes es 101 valasz a bekediktatumrol in Hungarian Makkai Bela 2019 Chopping Hungary Up by the 1920 Peace Dictate of Trianon Causes Events and Consequences Gulyas Laszlo Anka Laszlo Arday Lajos Csullog Gabor Gecse Geza Hajdu Zoltan Hamerli Petra Heka Laszlo Jeszenszky Geza Kaposi Zoltan Kolontari Attila Koo Artur Kurdi Krisztina Ligeti David Majoros Istvan Maruzsa Zoltan Miklos Peter Nanay Mihaly Olasz Lajos Ordogh Tibor Pelles Marton Popely Gyula Sokcsevits Denes Suba Janos Szavai Ferenc Tefner Zoltan Toth Andrej Toth Imre Vincze Gabor Vizi Laszlo Tamas 2019 2020 A trianoni bekediktatum tortenete het kotetben I kotet Trianon Nagy Haboru alatti elozmenyei az Osztrak Magyar Monarchia bukasa 1914 1918 II kotet A katonai megszallastol a magyar bekedelegacio elutazasaig 1918 1920 III kotet Apponyi beszedetol a Hatarkijelolo Bizottsagok munkajanak befejezeseig IV kotet Terkepek a trianoni bekediktatum tortenetehez V kotet Parhuzamos Trianonok a Parizs kornyeki bekek Versailles Saint Germain Neuilly Sevres Lausanne VI kotet Dokumentumok forrasok VII kotet Kronologia es eletrajzok The history of the Peace Dictate of Trianon in seven volumes Volume I Trianon s history during the Great War the fall of the Austro Hungarian Monarchy 1914 1918 Volume II From the military occupation to the departure of the Hungarian peace delegation 1918 1920 Volume III From Apponyi s speech to the completion of the work of the Boundary Demarcation Committees Volume IV Maps for the history of the Trianon peace decree Volume V Parallel Trianons the peaces around Paris Versailles Saint Germain Neuilly Sevres Lausanne Volume VI Documents sources Volume VII Chronology and biographies in Hungarian Egyesulet Kozep Europa Kutatasara ISBN 9786158046299 Bank Barbara Kovacs Attila Zoltan 2022 Trianon A diktatum teljes szovege Trianon Full text of the dictate in Hungarian Erdelyi Szalon ISBN 9786156502247 Raffay Erno Szabo Pal Csaba A Trianoni diktatum tortenete es kovetkezmenyei The history and consequences of the Dictate of Trianon in Hungarian Trianon Muzeum Craig G A 1966 Europe since 1914 New York Holt Rinehart and Winston Grenville J A S 1974 The Major International Treaties 1914 1973 A history and guides with texts Methnen London Lichtheim G 1974 Europe in the Twentieth Century New York Praeger Text of the Treaty Treaty of Peace Between The Allied and Associated Powers and Hungary And Protocol and Declaration Signed at Trianon June 4 1920 Open Site Hungary Frucht 2004 p 360 a b Trianon Treaty of The Columbia Encyclopedia 2009 Macartney C A 1937 Hungary and her successors The Treaty of Trianon and Its Consequences 1919 1937 Oxford University Press Bernstein Richard 9 August 2003 East on the Danube Hungary s Tragic Century The New York Times a b Toomey Michael 2018 History Nationalism and Democracy Myth and Narrative in Viktor Orban s Illiberal Hungary New Perspectives 26 1 87 108 doi 10 1177 2336825x1802600110 S2CID 158970490 a b van den Heuvel Martin P Siccama J G 1992 The Disintegration of Yugoslavia Rodopi p 126 ISBN 90 5183 349 0 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 p 1183 Virtually the entire population of what remained of Hungary regarded the Treaty of Trianon as manifestly unfair and agitation for revision began immediately Botlik Jozsef June 2008 AZ ORVIDEKI BURGENLANDI MAGYARSAG SORSA vasiszemle hu VASI SZEMLE Szlovakiai Magyar Adatbank pozsonyi hidfo adatbank sk Richard C Hall 2014 War in the Balkans An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia ABC CLIO p 309 ISBN 9781610690317 Irredentist and National Questions in Central Europe 1913 1939 Hungary 2v Volume 5 Part 1 of Irredentist and National Questions in Central Europe 1913 1939 Seeds of conflict Kraus Reprint 1973 p 69 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 pp xxv 9 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 p 1078 Wiest Andrew 2012 The Western Front 1917 1918 From Vimy Ridge to Amiens and the Armistice Amber pp 126 168 200 ISBN 1906626138 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 p 429 Fourteen Points Speech Wikisource a b Pastor Peter 1 September 2014 The United States Role in the Shaping of the Peace Treaty of Trianon The Historian 76 3 550 566 doi 10 1111 hisn 12047 JSTOR 24456554 S2CID 143278311 Sondhaus Lawrence 2011 World War One The Global Revolution Cambridge University Press p 416 ISBN 978 0521736268 Keegan John 1998 The First World War p 442 ISBN 0 09 180178 8 Paxton Robert Hessler Julie 2011 Europe in the Twentieth Century CEngage Learning p 129 ISBN 978 0 495 91319 1 Cornelius Deborah S 2011 Hungary in World War II Caught in the Cauldron Fordham University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 8232 3343 4 Kitchen Martin 2014 Europe Between the Wars Routledge p 190 ISBN 978 1 317 86753 1 Romsics Ignac 2002 Dismantling of Historic Hungary The Peace Treaty of Trianon 1920 Issue 3 of CHSP Hungarian authors series East European monographs Social Science Monographs p 62 ISBN 978 0 88033 505 8 Dixon J C Defeat and Disarmament Allied Diplomacy and Politics of Military Affairs in Austria 1918 1922 Associated University Presses 1986 p 34 Sharp A The Versailles Settlement Peacemaking after the First World War 1919 1923 Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 156 ISBN 9781137069689 Severin Adrian Gherman Sabin Lipcsey Ildiko 2006 Romania and Transylvania in the 20th Century Corvinus Publications p 24 ISBN 978 1 882785 15 5 WW1 and the First Hungarian Republic Political and Military Situation before the Foundation of the Communist Party Scholarly Community Encyclopedia 9 June 2023 Agardy Csaba 6 June 2016 Trianon volt az utolso csepp A Magyar Kiralysag sorsa mar joval a bekeszerzodes alairasa elott eldolt VEOL Veszprem Varmegye Hirportal Fassbender Bardo Peters Anne Peter Simone Hogger Daniel 2012 The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 19 959975 2 Armistice with Austria Hungary PDF Library of Congress US Congress Convention PDF 11 November 1918 archived from the original PDF on 23 November 2018 Agardy Csaba 6 June 2016 Trianon volt az utolso csepp A Magyar Kiralysag sorsa mar joval a bekeszerzodes alairasa elott eldolt veol hu Mediaworks Hungary Zrt Military arrangements with Hungary PDF Library of Congress US Congress Naval War College U S 1922 International Law Studies U S Government Printing Office p 187 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Krizman B 1970 The Belgrade Armistice of 13 November 1918 The Slavonic and East European Review 48 110 67 87 JSTOR 4206164 Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Roberts P M 1929 World War I A Student Encyclopedia Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p 1824 ISBN 978 1 85109 879 8 Breit J 1929 Hungarian Revolutionary Movements of 1918 19 and the History of the Red War in Main Events of the Karolyi Era Budapest pp 115 116 Sachar H M 2007 Dreamland Europeans and Jews in the Aftermath of the Great War Knopf Doubleday p 409 ISBN 9780307425676 Tucker S World War I the Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection ABC CLIO 2014 p 867 ISBN 9781851099658 Dowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 447 ISBN 978 1 59884 948 6 Andelman D A 2009 A Shattered Peace Versailles 1919 and the Price We Pay Today John Wiley and Sons p 193 ISBN 9780470564721 Swanson John C 2017 Tangible Belonging Negotiating Germanness in Twentieth Century Hungary University of Pittsburgh Press p 80 ISBN 978 0 8229 8199 2 Aliaksandr Piahanau Each Wagon of Coal Should Be Paid for with Territorial concessions Hungary Czechoslovakia and the Coal Shortage in 1918 21 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 34 1 2023 86 116 Okey Robin 2003 Eastern Europe 1740 1985 Feudalism to Communism Routledge p 162 ISBN 978 1 134 88687 6 Lukacs John 1990 Budapest 1900 A Historical Portrait of a City and Its Culture Grove Press p 2012 ISBN 978 0 8021 3250 5 Eotvos Lorand University 1979 Annales Universitatis Scientiarum Budapestinensis de Rolando Eotvos Nominatae Sectio philosophica et sociologica Vol 13 15 Universita p 141 Goldstone Jack A 2015 The Encyclopedia of Political Revolutions Routledge p 227 ISBN 978 1 135 93758 4 Pastor Peter 1988 Revolutions and Interventions in Hungary and Its Neighbor States 1918 1919 Vol 20 Social Science Monographs p 441 ISBN 978 0 88033 137 1 Sugar Peter F Hanak Peter Frank Tibor 1994 A History of Hungary Indiana University Press p 308 ISBN 978 0 253 20867 5 Hanak Peter 1992 Hungary on a fixed course An outline of Hungarian history 1918 1945 in Joseph Held ed Columbia history of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century p 168 ISBN 9780231076975 Zeidler Miklos 2018 A Magyar Bekekuldottseg naploja Diary of the Hungarian Peace Delegation in Hungarian Budapest MTA MTA Bolcseszettudomanyi Kutatokozpont Tortenettudomanyi Intezet Historical Sciences Institute Social Sciences Research Centre Hungarian Academy of Sciences Grand Trianon in Versailles Palace Facts Paris Digest 2019 The Paris Peace Conference 1919 Office of the Historian US Department of State This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Ciobanu Vasile 11 December 2010 1918 1919 az erdelyi szasz elit politikai diskurzusaban a Transindex ro portalrol transindex ro Transindex Kurti Laszlo 2014 The Remote Borderland Transylvania in the Hungarian Imagination SUNY Press Povijest saborovanja History of parliamentarism in Croatian Sabor Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Constitution of Union between Croatia Slavonia and Hungary H net org Wide anarchy in Austria PDF The New York Times 1 November 1918 Hrvatski sabor Sabor hr Vuk Ivan 2019 Pripojenje Međimurja Kraljevstvu Srba Hrvata i Slovenaca Od neuspjeloga pokusaja 13 studenog do uspjesnoga zaposjedanja Međimurja 24 prosinca 1918 godine The Annexation of Međimurje to the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes From the unsuccessful attempt on 13 November to the successful occupation of Međimurje on 24 December 1918 Casopis za suvremenu povijest in Croatian Zagreb Croatian Institute of History 51 2 520 527 doi 10 22586 csp v51i2 8927 ISSN 0590 9597 S2CID 204456373 Die Ereignisse in der Slovakei Der Demokrat morning edition 4 June 1919 Die italienisch ungarische Freundschaft Bohemia 29 June 1919 a b c Mayer Arno J 1967 Politics and Diplomacy of Peacemaking Containment and Counterrevolution at Versailles 1918 1919 New York Knopf p 369 David Hunter Miller XVIII 496 a b Deak 1942 p 45 a b Miller Vol IV 209 Document 246 Outline of Tentative Report and Recommendations Prepared by the Intelligence Section in Accordance with Instructions for the President and the Plenipotentiaries 21 January 1919 Miller IV 234 245 Tortenelmi vilagatlasz World Atlas of History in Hungarian Cartographia 1998 ISBN 963 352 519 5 a b Pastor Peter 2019 Hungarian And Soviet Efforts To Possess Ruthenia 1938 1945 The Historian 81 3 398 425 doi 10 1111 hisn 13198 JSTOR 4147480 S2CID 203058531 Michalek Slavomir 1999 Diplomat Stefan Osusky in Slovak Bratislava Veda ISBN 80 224 0565 5 page needed Prague Congress of Oppressed nations Details that Austrian censor suppressed Text of revolutionary proclamation The New York Times 23 August 1918 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Teleki Pal egy ellentmondasos eletut National Geographic Hungary in Hungarian 18 February 2004 Retrieved 30 January 2008 A kartografia tortenete in Hungarian Babits Publishing Company Retrieved 30 January 2008 Spatiul istoric si etnic romanesc Editura Militara Bucuresti 1992 Browse Hungary s detailed ethnographic map made for the Treaty of Trianon online dailynewshungary com 9 May 2017 a b Menyhert Anna 2016 The Image of the Maimed Hungary in 20th Century Cultural Memory and the 21st Century Consequences of an Unresolved Collective Trauma Environment Space Place 8 2 69 97 doi 10 5840 esplace20168211 a b Frucht 2004 p 356 Taylor A J P 1976 The Habsburg Monarchy 1809 1918 Univ of Chicago Press Kocsis amp Kocsis Hodosi 1998 p 116 a b Kocsis amp Kocsis Hodosi 1998 p 57 a b c Brass 1985 p 156 Brass 1985 p 132 Teich Mikulas Kovac Dusan Brown Martin D 2011 Slovakia in History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80253 6 Murad Anatol 1968 Franz Joseph I of Austria and his Empire New York Twayne Publishers p 20 Seton Watson Robert William 1933 The Problem of Treaty Revision and the Hungarian Frontiers International Affairs 12 4 481 503 doi 10 2307 2603603 JSTOR 2603603 Slovensky naucny slovnik I zvazok Bratislava Cesky Tesin 1932 Kirk Dudley 1969 Europe s Population in the Interwar Years New York Gordon and Bleach Science Publishers p 226 ISBN 0 677 01560 7 a b Varga Arpad Hungarians in Transylvania between 1870 and 1995 Tapon Francis 2012 The Hidden Europe What Eastern Europeans Can Teach Us Thomson Press India p 221 ISBN 9780976581222 Molnar Miklos 2001 A Concise History of Hungary Cambridge University Press p 262 ISBN 9780521667364 Frucht 2004 pp 359 360 Eberhardt Piotr 2003 Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth century Central Eastern Europe History Data and Analysis M E Sharpe pp 290 299 ISBN 9780765618337 Ra anan Uri 1991 State and Nation in Multi ethnic Societies The Breakup of Multinational States Manchester University Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 7190 3711 5 Kocsis amp Kocsis Hodosi 1998 p 19 A nepesseg valtozo etnikai arculata Magyarorszag mai teruleten map data essay Kocsis Karoly Bottlik Zsolt Hungarian Academy of Sciences Foldrajztudomanyi Kutatointezet Budapest 2009 ISBN 978 963 9545 19 9 Corni Gustavo Stark Tamas 2008 Peoples on the Move Population Transfers and Ethnic Cleansing Policies during World War II and its Aftermath Berg p 83 ISBN 978 1 84520 480 8 Sutaj Stefan 2007 The Czechoslovak government policy and population exchange A csehszlovak kormanypolitika es a lakossagcsere Slovak Academy of Sciences Retrieved 10 January 2010 Putz Orsolya 2019 Metaphor and National Identity Alternative conceptualization of the Treaty of Trianon John Benjamins Publishing Company page needed Assaults on Minorities in Vojvodina Human Rights Watch Retrieved 15 April 2008 Official Letter from Tom Lantos to Robert Fico PDF Congress of the United States Committee on Foreign affairs 17 October 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 9 April 2008 Retrieved 15 April 2008 U S lawmaker blames Slovak government for ethnically motivated attacks on Hungarians International Herald Tribune 5 September 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 a b Kulish Nicholas 7 April 2008 Kosovo s Actions Hearten a Hungarian Enclave The New York Times Retrieved 8 April 2008 Gyori Robert Withers Charles W J 2019 Trianon and its aftermath British geography and the dismemberment of Hungary c 1915 c 1922 PDF Scottish Geographical Journal 135 1 2 68 97 doi 10 1080 14702541 2019 1668049 S2CID 204263956 Duroselle Jean Baptiste 1968 From Wilson to Roosevelt Harper amp Row Torchbooks Macmillan Margaret 2003 Paris 1919 Six Months that Changed the World Random House ISBN 978 0 375 50826 4 Britain census 1911 Genealogy about com Retrieved 4 June 2013 a b Present Day Romania census 1912 population of Transylvania a b c World War I casualties Kilidavid com Retrieved 4 June 2013 Clarey Christopher France census 1911 International Herald Tribune Retrieved 4 June 2013 Fest Wilfried 1978 Peace or Partition The Habsburg Monarchy and British Policy 1914 1918 New York St Martin s p 37 ISBN 9780860431077 a b White George W 2000 Nationalism and Territory Constructing Group Identity in Southeastern Europe Rowman amp Littlefield pp 67 109 ISBN 978 0 8476 9809 7 Szaray Miklos 2006 Tortenelem III Muszaki Kiado p 132 a b Gelardi Julia P 2006 Born to rule granddaughters of Victoria queens of Europe Maud of Norway Sophie of Greece Alexandra of Russia Marie of Romania Victoria Eugenie of Spain ISBN 978 0 7553 1392 1 a b Ethnic map of Kingdom of Hungary without Croatia Slavonia Variously mentioned throughout Glenny Misha 2012 The Balkans Penguin Books ISBN 9780142422564 Gelfand Laurence Emerson 1963 The Inquiry American Preparation for Peace 1917 1919 New Haven Yale University Press p 332 Dent Peter 26 May 2010 Trianon tribulations Budapest Times Nitti Francesco Saverio 1922 Peaceless Europe Peaceless Europe by Francesco Saverio Nitti Full Text Free Book Part 3 5 Traub James 28 October 2015 Hungary s 500 Year Old Victim Complex Foreign Policy Sandford Alasdair Magyar Adam 4 June 2020 Trianon trauma Why is the peace treaty signed 100 years ago seen as a national tragedy for Hungary EuroNews NATO Seen Favorably Across Member States pewresearch org 10 February 2020 Chmel Rudolf 2002 Syndrom of Trianon in Hungarian Foreign Policy and Act on Hungarians Living in Neighboring Countries Slovak Foreign Policy Affairs 3 1 93 106 Nohlen Dieter and Stover Philip 2010 Elections in Europe A data handbook p 899 ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 New Hungary citizenship law fuels passport demand BBC Slovaks retaliate over Hungarian citizenship law BBC a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hungary Commerce Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 899 Vide for the controversy of the role of the state Berend Ivan T and Ranki G 1978 Az allam szerepe az europai periferia XIX szazadi gazdasagi fejlodesben The Role of the State in the 19th Century Economic Development of the European periphery Valosag 21 no 3 Budapest pp 1 11 Lengyel L 1978 Kolcsonos tarsadalmi fuggoseg a XIX szazadi europai gazdasagi fejlodesben Socio Economic Interdependence in the European Economic Development of the 19th Century Valosag 21 no 9 Budapest pp 100 106 Good David 1984 The Economic Rise of the Habsburg Empire University of California Press p 239 ISBN 9780520050945 Gonnard R 1908 La Hongrie au XXe siecle etude economique et sociale Paris p 72 Teichova Alice 1978 An Economic Background to Munich International Business and Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Cambridge Olsovsky R Prucha V et al 1961 Prehled gospodursveho vyvoje Ceskoslovehska v letech 1918 1945 Survey of the economic development of Czechoslovakia Prague Ivan T Berend and Gyorgy Ranki Magyarorszag gazdasaga 1919 1929 Hungary s economy Budapest 1965 Buda Castle Varkert Bazar Permanent exhibition A New World Was Born Wittmer Felix 1937 Flood light on Europe a guide to the next war C Scribner s sons p 114 Kosary Domokos G and Vardy Steven Bela 1969 History of the Hungarian Nation Danubian Press p 222 a b Tucker Spencer C Wood Laura M 1996 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia Garland Pub p 698 ISBN 978 0 8153 0399 2 Treaty of Trianon A Dictionary of Contemporary World History Oxford Reference 4 June 1920 Deak 1942 p 436 Gratz G and Schuller R 1930 Die Wirtschaftliche Zusammenbruch Oesterreich Ungarns Vienna Rotschild K 1946 Austria s Economic Development Between the Two Wars London Layton Walter T Rist Charles 1925 The Economic Situation of Austria League of Nations Geneva Faltus T 1966 Povojnova hospodarska kriza v rokoch 1912 1923 v Ceskoslovensku Postwar Depression in Czechoslovakia Bratislava Deak 1942 p 16 Basch A 1943 European Economic Nationalism Washington Pasvolsky L 1929 Economic Nationalism of the Danubian States New York Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bohemia Manufactures and Commerce Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 123 Svennilson I 1954 Growth and Stagnation in the European Economy Geneva Berend Ivan T and Ranki G 1974 Economic Development of East Central Europe New York Pratt Edwin A 2013 The Rise of Rail Power in War and Conquest Project Gutenberg p X ISBN 978 1499286458 Wikisource Protection of minorities Wikisource Nationality Wikisource Hungarian Interests outside EuropeCited sources EditDeak Francis 1942 Hungary at the Paris Peace Conference The Diplomatic History of the Treaty of Trianon Howard Fertig Frucht Richard C 2004 Eastern Europe An Introduction to the People Lands and Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 800 6 Kocsis Karoly Kocsis Hodosi Eszter 1998 Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin ISBN 978 963 7395 84 0 Brass Paul R 1985 Ethnic Groups and the State Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 7099 3272 7 Tucker Spencer Roberts Priscilla Mary 2005 Encyclopedia of World War I 1 ed ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 420 2 Further reading EditBadescu Ilie Peacebuilding in an Era of State Nations The Europe of Trianon Romanian Journal of Sociological Studies 2 2018 87 100 online Balogh Eva S Peaceful Revision The Diplomatic Road to War Hungarian Studies Review 10 1 1983 43 51 online Bandholtz H H An Undiplomatic Diary by the American Member of the Inter Allied Military Mission to Hungary 1919 1920 1933 online Bartha Dezso Trianon and the Predestination of Hungarian Politics A Historiography of Hungarian Revisionism 1918 1944 Thesis University of Central Florida 2006 online Bihari Peter Images of defeat Hungary after the lost war the revolutions and the Peace Treaty of Trianon Crossroads of European histories multiple outlooks on five key moments in the history of Europe 2006 pp 165 171 Hanak Peter Hungary on a fixed course An outline of Hungarian history 1918 1945 in Joseph Held ed Columbia history of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century 1992 pp 164 204 Jeszenszky Geza The Afterlife of the Treaty of Trianon The Hungarian Quarterly 184 2006 101 111 Kiraly Bela K and Laszlo Veszpremy eds Trianon and East Central Europe Antecedents and Repercussions Columbia University Press 1995 Macartney Carlile Aylmer Hungary and Her Successors The Treaty of Trianon and Its Consequences 1919 1937 1937 Macartney Carlile AylmerOctober Fifteenth A History of Modern Hungary 1929 1945 Edinburgh University Press 1956 Piahanau Aliaksandr Each Wagon of Coal Should Be Paid for with Territorial concessions Hungary Czechoslovakia and the Coal Shortage in 1918 21 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 34 1 2023 86 116 online Aliaksandr Piahanau Hungary s Policy Towards Czechoslovakia 1918 36 PhD dissertation Toulouse University 2018 Hungary s Policy Towards Czechoslovakia in 1918 36 Romsics Ignac The Dismantling of Historic Hungary The Peace Treaty of Trianon 1920 Boulder CO Social Science Monographs 2002 Romsics Ignac The Trianon Peace Treaty in Hungarian Historiography and Political Thinking East European Monographs 2000 89 105 Romsics Ignac Hungarian Revisionism in Thought and Action 1920 1941 Plans Expectations Reality in Marina Cattaruzza ed Territorial Revisionism and the Allies of Germany in the Second World War Goals Expectations Practices 2013 pp 92 101 online Steiner Zara S The lights that failed European international history 1919 1933 2007 Trianon in relation to powers and nearby countries Steiner Zara The triumph of the dark European international history 1933 1939 2011 continued Vardy Steven Bela The Impact of Trianon upon Hungary and the Hungarian Mind The Nature of Interwar Hungarian Irredentism Hungarian Studies Review 10 1 1983 21 online Wojatsek Charles From Trianon to the First Vienna Arbitral Award The Hungarian Minority in the First Czechoslovak Republic 1918 1938 Montreal Institute of Comparative Civilizations 1980 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Treaty of Trianon Wikisource has original text related to this article Treaty of Trianon Zeidler Miklos Treaty of Trianon in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Sharp Alan The Paris Peace Conference and its Consequences in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Czechoslovak Hungarian Border Conflict in 2 Trianon Treaty text in English Map of Hungarian borders in November December 1918 Map of Europe and Treaty of Trianon Archived 16 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine at omniatlas com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Treaty of Trianon amp oldid 1159306818, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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