Hungarian Geopolitics during the interwar period
Hungarian Geopolitics during the interwar period
Author(s): Andi Mihail BANCILASubject(s): Local History / Microhistory, WW II and following years (1940 - 1949)
Published by: Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti
Keywords: Hungary;Transylvania;revisionism; geopolitics; dictation;
Summary/Abstract: The end of the First World War produced a major reconfiguration of the political map of Europe. The three anachronistic empires that continued to exist in the Eastern part of the continent (Ottoman, Tsarist, and Austro-Hungarian) quickly disintegrated and gave way to a system of politically unstable nation-states. The Trianon Treaty signed in 1920 annulled the Hungarian multiethnic state formed by a context of circumstances in 1867 and sowed the seeds of the conflicts that followed. The Hungarians, the main losers of the peace treaty, developed a real cult for the Hungarian "millennial" state and tried to identify solutions for its recreation. Geopolitics, a rising science at that time, became the main instrument of Hungarian revisionism and created the necessary conditions for the renegotiation of borders at the beginning of the Second World War.
Journal: Euro-Atlantic Studies
- Issue Year: 2020
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 7-23
- Page Count: 17
- Language: English