Background The independent
Kingdom of Hungary was established in 1000 AD, and remained a regional power in Central Europe until
Ottoman Empire conquered its central part in 1526 following the
Battle of Mohács. In 1541 the territory of the former Kingdom of Hungary was divided into three portions: in the west and north,
Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary retained its existence under
Habsburg rule; the Ottomans controlled the south-central parts of former Kingdom of Hungary; while in the east, the
Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (later the
Principality of Transylvania) was formed as a semi-independent entity under Ottoman
suzerainty. After the Ottoman conquest in the Kingdom of Hungary, the ethnic structure of the kingdom started to become more multi-ethnic because of immigration to the sparsely populated areas. Between 1683 and 1717, the Habsburg monarchy conquered all the Ottoman territories that were part of the Kingdom of Hungary before 1526, and incorporated some of these areas into the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary. After a
suppressed uprising in 1848–1849, the Kingdom of Hungary and its
diet were dissolved, and territory of the Kingdom of Hungary was divided into 5 districts, which were
Pest &
Ofen,
Ödenburg,
Preßburg,
Kaschau and
Großwardein, directly controlled from
Vienna while Croatia, Slavonia, and the
Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar were separated from the Kingdom of Hungary between 1849 and 1860. This new centralized rule, however, failed to provide stability, and in the wake of
military defeats the
Austrian Empire was transformed into
Austria-Hungary with the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, by which the Kingdom of Hungary became one of two constituent entities of the new
dual monarchy with self-rule in its internal affairs. A considerable number of the figures who are today considered important in Hungarian culture were born in what are today parts of
Romania,
Slovakia,
Poland,
Ukraine, and
Austria (
see List of Hungarians who were born outside present-day Hungary). Names of Hungarian dishes, common surnames, proverbs, sayings, folk songs etc. also refer to these rich cultural ties. After 1867, the non-Hungarian ethnic groups were subject to assimilation and
Magyarization. Before
World War I, only three European countries declared ethnic minority rights, and enacted minority-protecting laws: the first was Hungary (1849 and 1868), the second was Austria (1867), and the third was Belgium (1898). In contrast, the legal systems of other pre-WW1 era European countries did not allow the use of European minority languages in primary schools, in
cultural institutions, in offices of public administration and at the legal courts. Among the most notable policies was the promotion of the
Hungarian language as the country's official language (replacing
Latin and
German); however, this was often at the expense of
West Slavic languages and the
Romanian language. The new government of autonomous Kingdom of Hungary took the stance that Kingdom of Hungary should be a Hungarian
nation state, and that all other peoples living in the Kingdom of Hungary—
Germans,
Jews,
Romanians,
Slovaks,
Poles,
Ruthenes and other ethnicities—should be assimilated. (The
Croats were to some extent an exception to this, as they had a fair degree of self-government within Croatia-Slavonia, a dependent kingdom within the Kingdom of Hungary.)
World War I The peace treaties signed after the First World War redefined the national borders of Europe. The dissolution of
Austria-Hungary, after its defeat in the First World War, gave an opportunity for the subject nationalities of the old Monarchy to all form their own nation states (however, most of the resulting states nevertheless became multi-ethnic states comprising several nationalities). The
Treaty of Trianon of 1920 defined borders for the new Hungarian state: in the north, the Slovak and Ruthene areas, including Hungarian majority areas became part of the new state of
Czechoslovakia. Transylvania and most of the
Banat became part of
Romania, while Croatia-Slavonia and the other southern areas became part of the new state of
Yugoslavia. The arguments of Hungarian irredentists for their goal were: the presence of
Hungarian majority areas in the neighboring countries, perceived historical traditions of the
Kingdom of Hungary, or the perceived geographical unity and economic symbiosis of the region within the
Carpathian Basin, although some Hungarian irredentists preferred to regain only ethnically Hungarian majority areas surrounding Hungary. Post-Trianon Hungary had about half of the population of the former Kingdom. The population of the territories of the Kingdom of Hungary that were not assigned to the post-Trianon Hungary had, in total, non-Hungarian majority, although they included a sizable proportion of ethnic Hungarians and Hungarian majority areas. According to Károly Kocsis and Eszter Kocsis-Hodosi, the ethnic composition (by their native language) in 1910 (note: three-quarters of the
Jewish population stated Hungarian as their mother tongue, and the rest, German, in the absence of
Yiddish as an option): , a political concept known as Hungarian Irredentism became popular in Hungary. The Treaty of Trianon was an injury for the Hungarian people and Hungarian nationalists have created an ideology with the political goal of the restoration of borders of historical pre-Trianon Kingdom of Hungary. The justification for this aim usually followed the fact that two-thirds of the country's area was taken by the neighboring countries with approximately 3 millionHungary's government allied itself with
Nazi Germany during World War II in exchange for assurances that Greater Hungary's borders would be restored. This goal was partially achieved when Hungary reannexed territories from Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Yugoslavia at the outset of the war. These annexations were affirmed under the
Munich Agreement (1938), two Vienna Awards (
1938 and
1940), and aggression against Yugoslavia (1941), the latter achieved one week after the German army had already invaded Yugoslavia. The percentage of Hungarian speakers was 84% in southern Czechoslovakia and 15% in the
Sub-Carpathian Rus. In
Northern Transylvania, the Romanian census from 1930 counted 38%
Hungarians and 49%
Romanians, while the Hungarian census from 1941 counted 53.5%
Hungarians and 39.1%
Romanians.
Ferenc Szálasi, leader of Hungary from 16 October 1944 envisioned the creation a "Carpathian-Danubian" federation where nationalism is region based ("connationalism") and other peoples are willing to join independently. He excluded the Jews who were not "rooted in" the
Carpathian Basin, so they had to be relocated into a
Jewish state, but not killed ("asemitism") according to him. Szálasi called his ideology
Hungarism. The Yugoslav territory occupied by Hungary (including Bačka, Baranja,
Međimurje and Prekmurje) had approximately one million inhabitants, including 543,000 Yugoslavs (Serbs, Croats and Slovenes), 301,000 Hungarians, 197,000 Germans, 40,000 Slovaks, 15,000 Rusyns, and 15,000 Jews. In Bačka region only, the 1931 census put the percentage of the speakers of Hungarian at 34.2%, while one of interpretations of later Hungarian census from 1941 states that, 45,4% or 47,2% declared themselves to be Hungarian native speakers or ethnic Hungarians The establishment of Hungarian rule met with insurgency on part of the non-Hungarian population in some places and retaliation of the Hungarian forces was labelled war crimes such as
Ip and
Treznea massacres in Northern Transylvania (directed against Romanians) or
Bačka, where Hungarian military between 1941 and 1944 deported or killed 19,573 civilians, mainly
Serbs and Jews, but also Hungarians who did not collaborate with the new authorities. About 56,000 people were also expelled from Bačka. Tens of thousands of Romanians fled from Hungarian-ruled Northern Transylvania, and vice versa. After the war the areas were returned to neighboring countries and Hungary's territory was slightly further reduced by ceding three villages south of Bratislava to Slovakia. Some Hungarians were killed both in Yugoslavia by Yugoslav partisans (the exact number of ethnic Hungarians killed by Yugoslav partisans is not clearly established and estimates range from 4,000 to 40,000; 20,000 is often regarded as most probable), and in Transylvania by the
Maniu Guard towards the end of World War II. ==Modern era==