Will to Survive: A History of Hungary

Will to Survive: A History of Hungary

by Bryan Cartledge
Will to Survive: A History of Hungary

Will to Survive: A History of Hungary

by Bryan Cartledge
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

The Will to Survive describes how a small country, for much of its existence squeezed between two empires, surrounded by hostile neighbours and subjected to invasion and occupation, survived the frequent tragedies of its eventful history to become a sovereign democratic republic within the European Union. The Mongol, Ottoman, Habsburg, Nazi and Soviet empires have all since vanished; but Hungary, a victim of all five and despite suffering the consequences of being on the losing side in every war she has fought, still occupies the territory the Magyar tribes claimed for themselves in the ninth century. The author, whose interest in Hungary stems from his service there as British Ambassador during the declining years of Kadar's Communist regime, traces Hungary's story from the arrival of the Magyars in Europe to the accession of Hungary to membership of NATO and the European Union. The eleven hundred years covered by this stirring account embrace medieval greatness, Turkish occupation, Habsburg domination, unsuccessful struggles for independence, massive deprivation of territory and population after the First World War, a disastrous alliance with Nazi Germany motivated by the hope of redress, and forty years of Soviet-imposed Communism interrupted by a gallant but brutally suppressed revolution in 1956.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199327348
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/19/2011
Pages: 600
Sales rank: 220,742
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.40(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

After taking a double first in history at Cambridge and continuing his historical studies as a Research Fellow of St Antony's College, Oxford, Bryan Cartledge joined the British Diplomatic Service in 1960, subsequently serving in Sweden, the Soviet Union and Iran. He was seconded to 10 Downing Street as Private Secretary for Overseas Affairs to James Callaghan and Margaret Thatcher and served as British Ambassador to Hungary from 1980 to 1983, and to the Soviet Union from 1985 to 1988, when he left the Diplomatic Service on his election to be Principal of Linacre College, Oxford. He was knighted in 1985.

Table of Contents

Preface

C. 1 Magyars (400 BC - AD 1000)

C. 2 Young Hungarians (1000-1301)

C. 3 Hungary Ascendant (1301-1444)

C. 4 From Light into Darkness (1444-1526)

C. 5 Hungary Divided (1526-1711)

C. 6 Struggle for Independence (1547-1711)

C. 7 Habsburg Rule and National Awakening (1711-1825)

C. 8 Reform, Language and Nationality (1825-43)

C. 9 Opposition, Revolution and War (1844-49)

C. 10 Politics of Compromise and Dualism (1849-1906)

C. 11 Economic Advance in a Troubled Society (1850-1913)

C. 12 War and Revolution (1906-19)

C. 13 The Road to Trianon (1914-20)

C. 14 Horthy's Hungary (1920-42)

C. 15 Faustian Pact I, 1936

C. 16 Faustian Pact II, 1941-45

C. 17 Two False Dawns, 1945-56

C. 18 Revolution

C. 19 Second Compromise, 1956-88

C. 20 Round Table, 1988-2000

Appendices

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Harper's Magazine - John Lukacs

[T]here are occasions when the sympathetic and interested eye... of a foreigner may penetrate the jungle of confusing events and complicated sentiments with a clarity of vision... amounting to something more than the antiseptic desideratum of 'objectivity.'... Such is the case with The Will to Survive.... Many professional historians, including Hungarians, could learn from the judgments of this former guest in their midst.

John Lukacs

[T]here are occasions when the sympathetic and interested eye... of a foreigner may penetrate the jungle of confusing events and complicated sentiments with a clarity of vision... amounting to something more than the antiseptic desideratum of 'objectivity.'... Such is the case with The Will to Survive.... Many professional historians, including Hungarians, could learn from the judgments of this former guest in their midst.

— Harper's Magazine

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews