Hungarian nationalism
Hungarian nationalism developed in the early nineteenth century along the classic lines of scholarly interest leading to political nationalism and mass participation.[1][2]
Parties
Current
- Fidesz (1988–present)
- Hungarian Justice and Life Party (1993–present)
- Jobbik (2003–present)
- Pax Hungarica Movement (2008–present)
- Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement (2001–present)
Former
- Arrow Cross Party (1935–1945)
- Christian National Socialist Front (1937–?)
- Hungarian National Socialist Agricultural Labourers' and Workers' Party (1932–?)
- People of the Orient Party – Christian Democrats (1989–1998)
- United Hungarian National Socialist Party (?–?)
See also
- Austrian nationalism
- Greater Hungary (political concept)
- Hungarian Revolution of 1848
- Magyarisation
- Doctrine of the Holy Crown
- National symbols of Hungary
- Hungarian Turanism
References
- ↑ Mark James Hoolihan, p. 17, 2007
- ↑ Colquhoun, A. R., & Colquhoun, E. M. C. (1914). The whirlpool of Europe, Austria-Hungary and the Habsburgs. New York: Dodd, Mead.
Further reading
- Maxwell, Alexander (2005). Multiple Nationalism: National Concepts in Nineteenth-Century Hungary and Benedict Anderson's "Imagined Communities. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Volume 11, Issue 3. doi:10.1080/13537110500255619.
External links
- Nationalism in Hungary, 1848-1867, Steven W. Sowards, Michigan State University
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