A History of Hungary (Barta István, Berend Iván, Hanák Péter, Lackó Miklós, Makkai László, Nagy Zsuzsa, Ránki György)
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A History of Hungary | |
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Author | Barta István, Berend Iván, Hanák Péter, Lackó Miklós, Makkai László, Nagy Zsuzsa, Ránki György |
Publisher | Zrínyi Printing House |
First published | 1973 Budapest |
Source | https://archive.org/details/HistoryHungary/mode/1up |
The Origins of the Hungarian People and State
From Primitive Society to Feudalism
Ugrian Prehistory
Nomadic Pastoral Society
The Hungarian Tribal Federation
The Conquest of the Carpathian Basin
"De sagittis Hungarorum..."
The Independent Hungarian Monarchy to the Battle of Mohács (1000–1526)
The Rise of Feudal Hungary
Conditions during the Transition to Feudalism
The Struggle for Power by Géza and Stephen
The Organization of State and Church under Stephen
The Early Period of Feudalism (11th and 12th Centuries)
Extensive Farming
Slaves, Serfs, Freemen
Handicrafts and Market Places
The German Attack and the Domestic Crisis
The Investiture Struggle and Expansion in the Balkans
Hungarian-Byzantine Rivalry in the Balkans
Disintegration of the Early Feudal System (1196–1241)
The Development of Agriculture, Handicrafts and Commerce
The Decline of the Castle System
Alienation of the Royal Estates
Social Struggles. The 'Golden Bull'
The Invasion of the Mongols
The Dawn of Chivalry
The Emergence of the Towns and the Nobility (1241–1308)
The Growth of Towns
County Administration and Autonomy of the Nobility
Feudal Oligarchy versus Royal Power
The Feudal Anarchy
The Transformation of the Hungarian Peasantry
Attempt at Adriatic Hegemony (1308–1437)
The Development of a New Aristocracy
Economic Policy of Charles I
Foreign Affairs
The Adventure in Naples and Expansion in the Balkans
The Loss of the Hungarian Possessions in the Adriatic
Mature Feudal Society (14th Century)
Nobility versus Peasants
The Growth of Boroughs
Trade and Industry in the Royal Towns
The Peasantry and the Hussite Movement
Gothic Art in Hungary
The Alliance of the Monarchy with the Nobility (1437–1458)
Tensions between Barons and Nobility
The Monarchy and the Estates
Hunyadi's Wars against the Turks
Clash between the King and the Hunyadi Party
An Experiment in Centralized Government (1458–1490)
The Success of Matthias Hunyadi's Policy of Centralization
Foreign Capital in Hungarian Trade
Setback in the Development of the Towns
Attempts to Establish a Central European Empire
The Programme of the Absolute Monarchy
Matthias's Compromises with the Ruling Class
The Renaissance and Humanism in Hungary
The Collapse of Royal Power (1490–1526)
Victory of Feudal Reaction
Economic Decline and Social Tension
The Great Peasant War and the Mohács Disaster
From the Battle of Mohács to 1711
The Division of Hungary into Three Parts (1526–1571)
Two Kings
Frustrated Attempts at Union
Political System of the East Hungarian Kingdom
The New Principality of Transylvania
Political System of the West Hungarian Kingdom
The Establishment of Effective Defences against the Turks
Interruption in Economic and Social Development (16th Century)
The Decay of Town Markets
Increasing Labour Services
The Turkish Occupation and Its Effects on Economic and Social Conditions
Late Renaissance and Reformation
The Crisis of Habsburg Power (1571–1606)
Centralization in Transylvania
A New Court Aristocracy and the Fifteen Years War
The Bocskai Rising
The System of 'Perpetual Serfdom' and the Subjection of the Towns to the Nobility
Transylvania versus Habsburg (1606–1648)
Transylvania, the Stronghold of Resistance
The Confederation of the Estates in the Habsburg Countries and Their Alliance with Transylvania
Gábor Bethlen and the Anti-Habsburg European Coalitions
Gábor Bethlen's Political Legacy
The Cultural Split
Resistance to Hapsburg Absolutism (1648–1703)
Tension between the Habsburg Government and the Hungarian Estates
The Economic and Political Aspirations of the Nobility
Miklós Zrínyi's Political Activity and His Wars against the Turks
The Conspiracy of the Aristocracy and the Kuruc Rising
The Expulsion of the Turks and the Establishment of Habsburg Absolutism
Rákóczi's War of Independence (1703–1711)
Revival of the Kuruc Movement
Initial Success in the War of Independence
The Crisis and End of the War of Independence
The Baroque Culture of the Kuruc Period
Habsburg Absolutism and Hungary (1711–1760)
Habsburg-Hungarian Compromise (1711–1760)
The Consolidation of the System of 'Perpetual Serfdom'
Agrarian Towns and Foreign Merchants
Aristocracy and Nobility
Late Baroque Culture
Aristocratic Mercantilism and the First Manufactories
The Use of Hungary as a Colony
Enlightened Absolutism—Hungarian Enlightenment (1760–1790)
The Urbarial Patent and Its Consequences
The Modernization of Agriculture and New Industries
Cultural Enlightenment
Joseph II and His System
On the Eve of National Development
Towards Bourgeois Transformation, Revolution and War of Independence (1790–1849)
National Resistance and the Republican Movement. The Anti-Revolutionary Compromise and Open Absolutism
The Diet of 1790–91
The Hungarian Jacobins
The Period of the Napoleonic Wars
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