LGBT history in Hungary - определение. Что такое LGBT history in Hungary
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Что (кто) такое LGBT history in Hungary - определение


LGBT history in Hungary         
LGBT history in Hungary, while an increasingly debated political and civil rights issue, has received very little scholarly attention. Historians of Hungary have clearly ignored sexuality, especially queer or non-normative sexuality, with the exception of prostitution.
History of Hungary         
  • [[Lake Balaton]] in the 1930s just before the Second World War.
  • [[Golden Bull of 1222]].
  • Map of Southeastern Europe around 850 AD
  • [[Budapest University of Technology and Economics]], the oldest University of Technology in the world, founded in 1782.
  • Ernö Gömbös, (r.) aide-de-camp to Ferenc Szálasi and Gyula Gömbös's son, along with a Honved officer and a member of the [[Arrow Cross Party]], in front of the Ministry of Defense, 1944.
  • Western Roman]] empires
  • The Kingdom of Hungary, Principality of Upper Hungary and Principality of Transylvania in the 17th century.
  • archive-date=14 September 2021}}</ref> During this decade, Hungary was one of the countries with the most [[democratic backsliding]].
  • Kingdom of Hungary around 1250.
  • Hungarian]] victory.
  • Cutaway drawing of [[Millennium Underground]] in [[Budapest]] (1894–1896) which was the first underground in continental Europe.
  • Géza]] circa the end of 970s.
  • Ferenc Gyurcsány in 2006.
  • Avar Khaganate in the first half of the [[7th century]]
  • [[Miklós Horthy]] de Nagybánya, Regent of Hungary.
  • The [[Kingdom of Hungary]] in the 1090s.
  • Ferenc Rákóczi]].
  • Chronicon Hungariae Pictum]]).
  • [[John Hunyadi]] – one of the greatest generals and a later regent of Hungary.
  • Hungarian campaigns across Europe]] in the 10th century.
  • A map of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1941.
  • Map of the counties in Hungary around 1880.
  • [[Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia]] – the young king, who died at the Battle of Mohács, painted by [[Titian]].
  • Hungarian and the [[Little Entente]] forces in strength of the 1920s.
  • isbn=1-57607-800-0}}</ref> The country lost five of its ten biggest Hungarian cities.
  • Magyars in the Kingdom of Hungary in 1890.
  • Artist Mihály Zichy's rendition of [[Sándor Petőfi]] reciting the [[Nemzeti dal]] (national anthem) to a crowd on 15 March 1848.
  • Hungarian leader [[Miklós Horthy]] and German leader [[Adolf Hitler]] in 1938.
  • World War I Memorial in Solt, Hungary.
  • Europeans from various countries relaxing in the wave pool in Budapest in 1939.
  • Ancient peoples in [[Pannonia]], [[2nd century BC]]
  • 2nd century AD]]: provinces of the [[Roman Empire]] and the [[Barbaricum]]
  • Withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary, 1 July 1990.
  • King Charles's last battle against the oligarchy, Rozgony (1312)]].
  • Hungarian Jews being sent to their deaths in the [[gas chamber]]s at [[Auschwitz death camp]] (May 1944).
  • A Soviet tank attempts to clear a road barricade in Budapest, October 1956.
  • Western conquests of Matthias Corvinus.
  • [[Viktor Orbán]], the [[Prime Minister of Hungary]] (1998–2002, 2010–present)
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Sources of early Hungarian history; Conquest of Hungary; Hungarian history; Third Republic of Hungary; History of hungary; History of Hungary (1989 to present); History of Hungary (1956-1989); Third Hungarian Republic; Hungary/History; Medieval Hungary; History of the Habsburg monarchy in Hungary; Modern history of Hungary; Tourkia (Hungary)
Hungary in its modern (post-1946) borders roughly corresponds to the Great Hungarian Plain (the Pannonian Basin). During the Iron Age, it was located at the crossroads between the cultural spheres of the Celtic tribes (such as the Scordisci, Boii and Veneti), Dalmatian tribes (such as the Dalmatae, Histri and Liburni) and the Germanic tribes (such as the Lugii and Marcomanni).
History of the Jews in Hungary         
  • Neolog]] community in 1869.
  • Adolf Eichmann in 1942
  • Holocaust Shoe Memorial]] beside the [[Danube]] River in Budapest. The shoes represent Hungarian Jews who lost their lives in January 1945.
  • Captured Jewish women in Wesselényi Street, Budapest, October 20–22, 1944
  • Hungarian Jews from [[Carpatho-Ruthenia]] arriving at Auschwitz
  • A Memorial plaque for [[Carl Lutz]], a Swiss diplomat who saved the lives of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during the Holocaust.
  • Miksa (Maxmilian) Falk]] returned to Hungary from Vienna following the emancipation in 1867. He was a national-level politician from 1875 to 1905.
  • Local customers in front of a Jewish grocery in [[Berzence]], around 1930.
  • A Jewish Hungarian country girl around 1930.
  • The Jewish Cemetery in the city of [[Timișoara]], now part of Romania.
  • A medal minted during the reign of Josef II, commemorating his grant of religious liberty to Jews and [[Protestants]].
  • Keren Kayemet/JNF]].
  • The weeping willow monument in Budapest to Hungarian victims of the Holocaust. Each leaf is inscribed with the family name of one of the victims.
  • [[Neoclassical architecture]] was used for this Synagogue in [[Szeged]].
  • Medieval pottery artifacts inside the Sopron Synagogue Museum.
  • transport trains]]. To be sent to the right meant labor; to the left the [[gas chamber]]s. Photo from the [[Auschwitz Album]] (May/June 1944)
  • The Orthodox Synagogue of Sopron, Hungary, dates from the 1890s.
  • [[Szeged Synagogue]]
  • [[Móric Ullmann]] (1782–1847), Hungarian Jewish banker, trader, founder of the Pesti Magyar Kereskedelmi Bank (Pesti Hungarian Commercial Bank).
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Hungarian-Jewish; Jews of Hungary; Jews in Hungary; Hungarian Jewish; Judaism in Hungary; History of the jews in hungary; Hungarian Jew; History of the Jews and Judaism in Hungary; Jewish Hungarian; Jewish-Hungarian; Hungarian Jews in the Revolution; Hungarian jew; Hungarian Jews; Hungary's Jews; History of Jews in Hungary; Magyarországi Zsidó Hitközségek Szövetsége
48,600 (core population, estimation) (2010)120,000 (estimated population) (2012)10,965 (self-identifying Jews by religion, 2011 census) 32,023 (immigrants to Israel) (2010)