Hungarian

Revolution and Protest Online

This database provides comparative documentation, analysis, and interpretation of political processes through the lens of revolutions, protests, resistance, and social movements. The collection includes videos, printed materials, and images from a variety of time periods, regions, and topics, including material on the Russian Revolutions of 1905 and 1917, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, and the Prague Spring.

Visual History Archive (VHA)

A digitized, fully searchable and hyperlinked repository of visual testimonies by almost 52,000 survivors of genocidal wars. The vast majority of the testimonies in the USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive are from Jewish survivors of the Holocaust (1939-1945), as well as other Holocaust witnesses, rescuers, and aid providers.

Declassified Documents Reference System--US Government Documents Archive

The Declassified Documents Reference System provides online access to over 500,000 pages of previously classified United States government documents. Covering major international events from the Cold War to the Vietnam War and beyond, this single source enables users to locate key information underpinning studies in international relations, American studies, United States foreign and domestic policy studies, journalism and more. A wide range of documents is devoted to the Soviet Union, selected Soviet republics, and its satellite states in Eastern Europe. Highlights include U.S.

University of Toronto. Hungarian Chair

The Chair of Hungarian Studies was created at the University of Toronto in 1978 through a fundraising initiative launched by the Canadian Hungarian community to establish a permanent teaching position in Hungarian studies.  The first Chair in Hungarian Studies was George Bisztray, who taught in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures until his retirement in 2004.

Files of George Bisztray, Hungarian Chair, covering various topics, including establishment of the chair in 1978 and other academic and administrative matters.

U.S. National Archives. Collection of Hungarian Political and Military Records, 1909-1945

The collection includes Hungarian political records pertaining to the Hungarian Nazi Party known as the Arrow-Cross Party under the leadership of Ferenc Szalasi, a Regent and Premier of Hungary in late 1944. Also included are collections of speeches, essays, and other writings of Ferenc Szalasi which serve to complete his diary. In addition, this collection contains Hungarian military records, personal name files of Hungarian Army officers for the World War II period and earlier, maps, books, pamphlets and newspapers in Hungarian.

Hungarian Biographical Archive = Ungarisches Biographisches Archiv (UBA)

The collection includes 115,000 biographical entries taken from lexica, handbooks, yearbooks, almanacs and biographical reference works. It contains articles on some 90,000 people (often more than one article about one person) from Hungarian history beginning in the 9th century through the founding of the Habsburg Empire, its division following the Austro-Prussian War (1866), the Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy (the so-called Austro-Hungarian settlement), up to the present.