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Endre Tóth: The first bilateral discussions
between Czechoslovakia and Hungary (1921) - Bruck an der Leitha (1st
part)
From the Czechoslovak-Hungarian relations' aspect,
1921 can be viewed as an important year. After two years of
difficult coexistence in the first part of the mentioned year, in
Middle-Europe that was newly arranged after the war, the backgrounds
for, even if not friendly relations, but traditional communication
between the governments of the two countries were set, of which all
the necessary conditions - through the signing and ratifying the
Trianon Peace-Treaty by the Hungarian National Assembly - were
define from the previous year.
The first bilateral discussions on Ministry level
took place in Lower Austria, Bruck an der Leitha, on 14th - 15th
March 1921 - when the leading politics of the newly-formed
Czechoslovakia and the post-war Hungary met: Edvard Beneš,
Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, and his Hungarian partner, Gratz
Gusztáv, and Teleki Pál, Hungarian Prime Minister - as a result of
the series of secret discussions that began in autumn 1920. This
first meeting determined the process and character of the discussion
that run in the spirit of mutual recognition of the viewpoints
concerning the parties' development of Middle-Europe and of the
arrangement of the relations of the two parties. This meeting on
ministry level meant the clash of the two discussion conceptions at
the same time. While the Czechoslovak party, in contrast with
raising political questions, initiated mainly to discuss the
economic questions, while the Hungarian party connected the
discussion of political issues with raising economic questions.
Moreover, this Ministry-level discussion was not only of informative
character, but there were concrete results. Both parties agreed on
establishing four professional committees - political-legal,
financial, transport and economy -, within the framework of which
the most fundamental issues of the normalisation of neighbour
relations can be solved. Although, the possibilities of solving the
joint problems were very soon broken by Habsburg Károly's first
restoration attempt.
Aranka T. Sápos: The Tőketerebes district's
ethnical composition during the dualism
In modern story writing the numerical development
of population - reproduction, stagnation, and decline - is the
fundamental prerequisite of knowledge of society. My study is about
the population's development in the villages located in the middle
area of Zemplén County during the dualism, mainly about the Terebes
district that is an area that during the period of dualism was not
an administrative unit. Determining the researched region and
finding its source materials was a more difficult task, but these
obstacles were eliminated. Recently, this area of Slovakia is one of
the smallest administrative units, to which the whole
Felső-Bodrogköz belongs. The primary reason of why I have chosen
this area is that from ethnical and religious point of view it was
diversified and it has remained its characteristics up to these
days. It was a place, where through centuries the
Hungarian-Slovak-Ruthenian ethnical language boundaries have met.
The religious division of the areas' majority and the presence of
three religions - Roman Catholic, Greek Catholic, and Calvinist -
living with each other up to these days, reflect its complexity.
As far as I know no such work has been published
that describes a location that went through similar multiple
administrative re-organisations as the Terebes district. The
majority of works that have been published examines only the
population's nationality from the establishment of the Czechoslovak
Republic to the present times. In literature works that deal with
population of small regions, administrative units, or geographical
areas are very rare. In my study I have tried to present the
district's number of population, and its decreasing or increasing
tendency, division by gender, age, ethnical composition, religion,
state of education, process of main indicators of emigration.
Eighty-eight locations are analysed from these aspects.
The analysis of ethnical composition became one of
the central parts of the study. The difficulty was in the fact that
three ethnical borderlines have to be monitored. We take into
consideration not only the official data of population censuses, but
also the records and registries of place names before the dualism.
While analysing and comparing the data we found out that one can not
draw improvident consequences. The comparing method is a necessity
in order to find the differences in the source materials and to
point out the real situation, since there are serious differences
between the language boundaries of the years 1773 and 1851. The task
of examining the population's ethnical classification from the
second part of the 19th century seemed to be easier. The official
population censuses of the years 1880, 1900, 1910 showed the
Hungarians' stabilisation. That large temporary area that was traced
out according to Fényes Elek's data had disappeared. The Hungarian
language area gradually extended to north. The Hungarian-Slovak
ethnical border spread on the line of Kolása, Alsómihályi, Velejte,
Gercsely, and Hardicsa, but the number of population with Hungarian
language in north also increased. From the Slovaks' point of view
this period meant both losses and gains. On the southern parts of
the Gálszécs district their number decreased in favour of the
Hungarians, but the Slovak-Ruthenian language border moved in favour
of the Slovaks. From the three language borders the Ruthenians lost
gradually. Further processes and changes showed the Ruthenians' vast
assimilation.
István Gaucsík: The creation of Hungarian
and German banking associations of financial institutions in
Czechoslovakia (1918-1920)
Except for the publications that are of
economic-history character and deal with the situation of Hungarian
national minority in Slovakia between the two World Wars, works on
bank history are almost entirely lacking. The reason for this is
that firstly the bank archive materials are not processed, and
secondly the dominant position of political history in the Hungarian
research strategies in Slovakia sets the study of economic issues
into the background.
The study deals with the issues of Hungarian
commercial banks in Slovakia in 1918-1920 - that were set up on
ethnical basis and that remained their institutional/commercial
state from before 1918 - and that integrated to the structure of
credit organisation.
The study examines within the frameworks of
economic disintegration of Middle-Eastern Europe after 1918 the
Czechoslovak system of financial institutions (Czech country parts -
specialised institution types, Slovakia and Sub-Carpathia - less
specialised system) that was created from the bank system that had
different developing models. The leading line of the work is the
examination/comparison of bank division from the point of view of
nationalities in Slovakia and Sub-Carpathia, using contemporary
statistical data (number of institutions, introducing the items of
their balances, division of their military loans).
He analyses the changes through the economic
problems (consequences of cutting financial connections, the issue
of the capital that remained in Budapest, foreign exchange problems,
influences of the measures of Czechoslovak acts on banks and
finances).
The author also deals with the banking system that
was created on 19th July 1920 by the Hungarian and German
nationality institutions (trilingual name: Pénzintézetek Egyesülete
Szlovenszkóban és Podkarpatszká-Ruszban; Jednota peňažných ústavov
na Slovensku a Podkarpatskej Rusi; Verband der Geldinstitute in
Slovensko und Podkarpartska Rus), with interest protection and
implementation, in which the Hungarian banks were in majority (in
1919 the association had 147, and in 1922 173 members).
In conditions of Slovakia, their capital strength
and influence in contrast with the Slovak banks decreased, because
to increase their capital a permission from the government is needed
that they did not received because of their economic difficulties
(unclaimable foreign demands, military loans, deposit decrease), and
because of the nationalistic disagreements of governmental circles.
Although, the sources evidence that the
possibilities for economic co-operation - for the reason of dealing
crisis situations - were created, therefore bilateral arrangement of
interests took place (financial governance - Hungarian nationality
bank, Slovak nationality bank - Hungarian nationality bank, Slovak
bank association - Hungarian and German bank association).
The number of Hungarian banks did not decrease in
consequence of the measures of the nationalistic Czechoslovak
economy policy, but as a result of such objective economic processes
(economic crises, structural changes of banking system) that
required the relevant answers (mergers, bank solidarity).
Tamás Török: Examination of the historical
names of Zoboralja
When one sees the research work of historical
material on names it is evident for the first sight that the
designation of contemporary maps, property books is different from
the designation of present spelling rules. In the above study the
author looks for the answer of this question, examining Zoboralja's
historical names from the orthographic point of view. He classifies
separately the designation characteristics of the sounds and the
characteristics present in the way of writing of place names. When
studying the sounds, he defines two sub-classes: the class of vowels
and consonants. In the case of vowels, he emphasises three main
characteristics: a) duration designation, b) vowel change, c)
archaic forms. He also examines the designation of consonants, where
he classifies five characteristics: a) duration designation, b)
consonant change, c) consonant-dropout, d) palatalisation, e)
archaic form. With his analyses the author wants to introduce
writing method characteristics of map creators, influences of the
dialect present in written documents, that the old - archaic - way
of writing continues to live on on the maps of certain periods.
Ferenc Boros: Nationality policy of the
Dzurinda-government
The essay wants to find answers to the following
questions: What changes did the Slovak elections in 1998 bring in
relation to the Hungarian people? Where are the positive changes of
the new government's policy in comparison with the previous period?
In which field did not the government fulfilled its obligations?
Within the government coalition what kind of problems did arise?
What factors did influence the government's policy?
In what extent did the government's "policy
concerning the Hungarian people" become an organic part of the
society's democratisation and of the Euro-Atlantic orientation? And
how did this affect the external and internal (social) judgement and
character of Slovakia?
If we want to answer the above questions generally,
then we can say that comparing with the Mečiar-government period
(1994-1998), significant changes were carried out in the Slovak
government in the field of policy concerning the Hungarian people,
although they were by no means in accordance with the expectations
and given possibilities. A uniform viewpoint on solving the issue of
the largest minority was within the government coalition not formed,
often because of the lack of political will. The decisions were
generally made with difficulties and amid sharp debates and in the
majority of cases half-solutions were born that resulted doubt in
the circles of the Hungarian people in Slovakia.
The author describes all those cases when the Party
of Hungarian Coalition argued with the coalition partners during the
almost four years. Firstly, he examines the issues of setting up the
government in 1998, that after the elections the Party of the
Democratic Left tried to left out the Hungarian party from the
coalition party. Later, he writes about the restoration of bilingual
certificates and the bilingual school documentation that were
blocked by Mečiar. The author also describes the clashes between the
Party of the Democratic Left and the Party of Hungarian Coalition in
the issue of the National Land Fund. In the next part he deals with
the debate that arose in connection with the financial support of
the minority culture and he also introduces the process of passing
the so-called Language Act that regulates the language usage of
minorities. This act was passed by the Slovak Parliament, against
the Hungarian representatives. In the next chapter the author
introduces the dispute that arose in relation to the Act on regional
and local government and also the disputes on the Slovak
Constitution's modification. Finally, he deals with the issue of the
Beneš Decrees that still affects the Hungarians living in Slovakia.
Ilona L. Juhász: Ethnography will still have
subjects to research (Interview with Ujváry Zoltán, aged 70)
Ujváry Zoltán, professor of the Ethnological
Department of the Debrecen University (former Kossuth Lajos
University) turned 70 this year. The professor - who still works
hard with a young spirit - was born in the village of Hét close to
Gömör, commenced his studies at the grammar school of Rimavská
Sobota, and later he studied at the Kossuth Lajos Unviersity. After
receiving his diploma, he became an assistant at the Ethnological
Department, and later he was appointed the position of ethnologist,
Béla Gunda, head of this department. Then, in 1979, he commenced his
researches in Gömör. Within the framework of this work he provided
ethnological research with his students and other well-known experts
on the territories of historical Gömör with Hungarian population,
i.e. on the territories of present Slovakia. As a result of almost
two decades of systematic research work 55 volumes were published in
the Gömör Néprajza series, that was also edited by him, of which
authors were well-known experts, and his students, as well.
Recently, the first volume of his synthesis was published,
introducing Gömör from the ethnologic point of view, that was
planned to have four volumes. Ujváry Zoltán's works are very rich
and detailed. Primarily his works oriented on folklore dominate, but
he was the author /or was the co-author/ of books on other fields of
ethnology (e.g. eating habits, pottery). He was a pioneer in
searching the folklore mask games. In Szatmár he found unbelievably
rich materials on carnivals that had been undiscovered in
literature. He extended the research on this topic to the territory
of the whole country and he published its results in his 4 books
titled Game and Mask. His life work is evidenced with dozens of
books, but the number of books he contributed to is even higher.
Among others, he launched the Néprajz Egyetemi Hallgatóknak
(Ethnology for University Students) series, in which he introduced
the numerous topics of traditional /and non-traditional/ ethnology.
His famous work Szülőföldön hontalanul (In the Country of Birth with
no Home), that have been published in more languages (Hungarian,
Slovak, Czech), in which he describes the Calvary of Hungarian
people living in Slovakia after the Second World War on the basis of
the reminiscences of a villager. According to the Beneš Decree in
the period of 1947-48, masses of Hungarian people were moved to
Hungary or deported to the Czech Republic. This book evoked a strong
reaction not only in Slovakia, but in the Czech Republic, too. A
nationalistic Czech Parliamentary representative in his speech
protested against publishing the book in Czech language.
Professor Ujváry Zoltán besides his scientific,
educational, and writing activities, he always paid attention to and
helped to people in Hungarian museums of Gömör in Slovakia and
encouraged students to continue their ethnological studies at the
Debrecen University.
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