Yalta desde las calles de Budapest

Main Article Content

Edit Antal Fodroczy

Abstract

Hungary is one of the countries that lost the Second World War and was occupied by the Red Army. According to the author’s interpretation, in 1945 the country not only lost the war, but also the possibility of exercising its freedom. This was, to a great extern, the outcome of the Yalta and Potsdam Agreements between the great powers that had won the war. However, there is a whole series of domestic reasons that contributed to it and help to explain why Hungary became part of the Soviet Bloc. This paper analyzes the agrarian reform, the people’s courts, the elections, the position of the political parties and the status of the Soviet occupation forces and their relationship with the population in 1945. At that time, the connection and even the identification between being a collaborationist and being a class enemy, according to the tenets of communist ideology had an enormous weight.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Antal Fodroczy, E. (2015). Yalta desde las calles de Budapest. Revista Mexicana De Ciencias Políticas Y Sociales, 41(166). https://doi.org/10.22201/fcpys.2448492xe.1996.166.49500

References

Historia, revista especializada en historia húngara publicada en Budapest. El material documental utilizado en el artículo proviene de los siguientes números de esta publicación: nos. 4-5 de 1982; 3 de 1993; 2 de 1980; 1 de 1994; 3 de 1995; 2 de 1980; 1 de 1985 y 2 de 1982.

Bogdan, Henry, Historia de los países del Este. De los orígenes a nuestros días, Buenos Aires, Ed. Vergara, 1991.

Fehér, Ferenc y Heller Ágnes, Jalta után, Budapest, Ed. Kossuth, 1990 (existe coedición en inglés).

Bibó, István, Demokratikus Magyarország, Obras seleccionadas del autor, Budapest, Ed. Magveto, 1994.

Seifert, Tibor, Magyarország története. 1938-1990, Libro de texto de la preparatoria en Hungría, Budapest, Ed. IKVA, 1992.

Victims and perpetrators, Budapest, Ed. Cultural Exchanges Foundation, 1995.