1918 in Hungary

The following lists events in the year 1918 in Hungary.

1918
in
Hungary

Decades:
  • 1890s
  • 1900s
  • 1910s
  • 1920s
  • 1930s
See also:Other events of 1918
List of years in Hungary

Incumbents

Events

January

  • January 5 – Lloyd George claims the dissolution of Austria-Hungary is not their war aim[1]
  • January 8 – Wilson's 14 Points, demands "The people of Austria-Hungary, whose place among the nations we wish to see safeguarded and assured, should be accorded the freest opportunity to autonomous development"; Hungarian papers publish it on January 10[2]
  • January 12 – Galilei Circle banned[3]
  • January 18–25 – General strike in Austria-Hungary[4]
  • January 19 – 89th Common Infantry Regiment mutinies[5]

February

March

April

May

  • May 7 – Treaty of Bucharest: Romania signs a separate peace with the Central Powers

June

  • June 1 – First report of Spanish flu in Budapest newspapers[8]
  • June 10 – SMS Szent István is sunk
  • June 15–23 – Second Battle of the Piave River: Entente defeats Austro-Hungarian offensive in Italy[9]
  • June 29 – France recognizes Czechoslovakia

July

  • July 3 – First case of Spanish flu reported in Hungary[10]

August

  • August 5 – Hunger riots in Cegléd, 300 women arrested[11]
  • August 9 – British foreign minister Balfour recognizes Czechoslovakia as an allied nation[12]

September

  • September 2 – US recognizes Czechoslovakia
  • September 11 – Electoral law Article XVII of 1918 (Lex Vázsonyi) gains royal ascent. The franchise is expanded from 10 to 15%.[13]
  • September 15 – Vardar offensive begins
  • September 20–21 – István Tisza visits Sarajevo

October

  • October 4 – Common Foreign Minister Burián asks for peace by Wilsonian principles
  • October 5–8 – Slovenian-Croatian-Serbian National Council established in Zagreb
  • October 16
    • Charles IV published the Völkermanifest
  • October 17 – Austro-Hungarian compromise abolished, István Tisza declares the war lost
  • October 18 – Alexandru Vaida-Voevod's speech in front of the Hungarian Diet demands self-determination for Romanians in Hungary[14]
  • October 21 – Cisleithanian Germans declare independence[15]
  • October 24 – November 4 Battle of Vittorio Veneto, the Italian Front collapses
  • October 23
    • Wekerle resigns
    • Mutiny of Fiume
    • Hungarian National Council formed at midnight[16]
  • October 25
    • Hungarian National Council officially declared to celebration in Budapest
    • Budapest Soldiers' Council is founded by Imre Csernyák[17]
    • Charles IV in Gödöllő, negotiates on the formation of a new government[18]
  • October 26
    • The Budapest press defies censorship by publishing the program of the Hungarian National Council
    • Charles IV returns to Vienna
    • Refusing to nominate Károlyi, Archduke Joseph August is named Homo Regius
    • Slovak National Council established[19]
  • October 27 – Soldiers' Council negotiates with unions plotting an insurrection scheduled November 4[20]
  • October 28
    • Battle of Chain Bridge
    • Czechoslovakia declares independence
  • October 29
    • Slovak National Council declares independence in Turócszentmárton (St. Martin)
    • State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs declared in Zagreb
    • Charles IV appoints János Hadik as Prime Minister
    • Police in Budapest defects to the National Council[21]
  • October 30
    • 10:00: Third Wekerle Government dissolved, János Hadik takes his oath, starts to work on assembling his government
    • Protests escalate into the Aster Revolution
    • Miklós Horthy ordered to hand over the Austro-Hungarian fleet
  • October 31
    • 3:00: János Hadik resigns his office[22]
    • 16:45 SMS Viribus Unitis handed over to the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, dissolving the Austro-Hungarian fleet
    • 18:00 István Tisza assassinated

November

  • November 1
    • Banat Republic declared
    • West Ukrainian People's Republic declared
    • Mihály Károlyi government established[23]
    • Károlyi is relieved of his oath to Charles IV[24]
  • November 2
    • Officers swear an oath to the Hungarian National Council[25]
    • Minister of Defense Béla Linder's famous line "I never want to see a soldier again!"[26]
    • Budapest Workers' Council established[27]
    • Czech forces enter Hungary at Holics (Holíč)
  • November 3 – Armistice of Villa Giusti, comes into effect next day from 15:00[28]
  • November 4 – Jiu Valley National Council established in Petrozsény (Petroșani)[29]
  • November 5 – US Foreign Minister Lansing recognizes Romanian claim to Transylvania
  • November 7
    • Károlyi government begins armistice negotiations in Belgrade[30]
    • Czechs enter Nagyszombat (Trnava)
  • November 8
    • Linder is replaced by Bartha as defense minister
    • Deserters (mostly Romanian) besiege the Urmánczy mansion in Jósikafalva (Beliș). Nándor Urmánczy recruites a private detachment and crushes the rioters, shoots 20 prisoners[31]
  • November 9
    • Entente forces enter Novi Sad
    • Székely National Council in Budapest
    • Ruthenian National Council lead by Oreszt Szabó declares for Hungary
  • November 10 – Romania declares war on Germany, re-entering the war a day before it ends
  • November 12
    • Entente forces occupy Temesvár (Timișoara)[32]
    • Romanian invasion of Transylvania begins at Gyergyótölgyes (Tulgheș)
    • Mackensen's occupying German Army begins to withdraw from Romania via Hungary, crossing into Hungary at Surduc Pass[33]
  • November 13
    • Belgrade Armistice signed
    • Eckartsau Letter: Charles IV withdraws from all state affairs and recognizes Hungary's future form of government
    • Oszkár Jászi negotiates with the Romanian National Council in Arad (to November 14)[34]
    • Hungarian counter-attack re-captures Nagyszombat
  • November 15
    • Hungarian National Defense Association (MOVE) founded[35]
    • Entente forces enter Pécs[36]
    • Hungarian counter-attacks re-capture Turócszentmárton
  • November 16
    • Both Houses of the Parliament dissolve themselves
    • Hungary declared a republic ("First Republic"), Károlyi becomes provisional head of state[37]
    • Hungarian counter-attacks re-capture Zsolna[38]
  • November 17
    • Béla Kun returns to Hungary[39]
    • General meeting of the Székely National Council, proposal for a Székely Republic
    • Franchet d'Esperey allows Romania to advance to the Belgrade Armistice line[40]
  • November 18 German-Austria declares its territorial demands for the German-inhabited areas of Pozsony, Moson, Sopron, and Vas counties;[41] in response, Hungary decides to cease food shipments
  • November 19 – Ruthenian National Council issues a memorandum to Oszkár Jászi
  • November 20 – Romanian National Council in Arad demands total independence[42]
  • November 21 Austrian Foreign Minister Otto Bauer and Hungarian foreign secretary József Diner-Dénes agree to resume Hungarian food shipments in exchange for ceasing pro-Austrian agitation in Western Hungary[43]
  • November 22 Law 41/1918 in Geman Austria re-affirms Austrian territorial claims to Western Hungary[44]
  • November 23 - No. I of 1918 People's Law expands the franchise to 50%.[45] Universal male suffrage above 21 and female suffrage for literates above 24.
  • November 24 – Hungarian Party of Communists (KMP) established[46]
  • November 25
    • Serbs of Vojvodina declares for Serbia at Novi Sad[47]
    • Fernand Vix arrives to Budapest as the head of the Budapest Allied Military Mission to oversee a French occupation of Hungary which would never be implemented[48]
    • Austrian-Hungarian trade agreement: Hungary provides cereals and animals in exchange for paper, medicine and industrial products[49]
  • November 28 - Székely and Transylvanian Hungarian National Assembly in Marosvásárhely[50]

December

  • December 1
    • A council of Transylvanian Romanians declare for Romania in Alba Iulia
    • State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs unifies with Serbia
    • Székely Division established
  • December 2 – Romanians enter Marosvásárhely[51]
  • December 3 – A note by Vix demands Hungarian withdrawal from "Slovakia", but does not specify a border
  • December 5–7 – Republic of Heinzenland in Burgerland
  • December 6
    • Hodža-Bartha Agreement – Minister of Defense Albert Bartha and Slovak politician Milan Hodža agree on a demarcation line for Slovakia, which is rejected by Czech leaders
    • Romanians enter Székelyudvarhely[52]
  • December 7 – First issue of KMP's newspaper Vörös Újság published[53]
  • December 8 – István Apáthy named High Government Commissioner for Eastern Hungary[54]
  • December 9 – Zipser Germans declare independece[55]
  • December 10 – First French troops arrive to Szeged; they are reinforced by the 157th Inf. Regiment on December 30, and the 210th Inf. Regiment on January 3, 1919[56]
  • December 11 – Slovak People's Republic declared
  • December 12 – Protest by the Soldiers' Council forces defense minister Bartha to resign
  • December 15 – Romanians cross the Belgrade armistice line
  • December 16 – Mackansen arrested in Budapest[57]
  • December 17 – Czechs enter Kežmarok, ending the Zipser Republic
  • December 19 – Dissatisfied with the Hodža-Bartha Agreement, a new demarcation line is drafted by Clemenceau[58]
  • December 21 – French foreign minister Stephen Pichon approves the new demarcation line between Hungary and Czechoslovakia, forwarded to Vix
  • December 22 – Council of Transylvanian Hungarians in Cluj against Romanian occupation[59]
  • December 23 – A note by Vix declares the new demarcation line in Slovakia[60] (Pichon Line)
  • December 24 – Romanians enter Cluj
  • December 25 – Yugoslav forces occupy Međimurje (Muraköz)[61][62]
  • December 27 – Autonomous Rus'ka Krajina declared
  • December 29 – Czech forces enter Košice, Slovak People's Republic dissolved
  • December 31 – Berthelot-Apáthy agreement establishes a 15 km neutral zone in Transylvania, Romanians overstep it[63]

Deaths

  • February 16 – Károly Khuen-Héderváry
  • October 31 – István Tisza
  • December 1 – Margit Kaffka

References

  1. Gusztáv 1992, p. 285
  2. Borsányi 1988, p. 33
  3. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  4. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  5. Borsányi 1988, p. 19
  6. Borsányi 1988, p. 19
  7. Ormos 1998, p. 19
  8. Borsányi 1988, p. 117
  9. Ormos 1998, p. 21
  10. Borsányi 1988, p. 118
  11. Borsányi 1988, pp. 53-54
  12. Gusztáv 1992, p. 287
  13. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  14. Borsányi 1988, p. 66
  15. Ormos 1998, p. 22
  16. Ormos 1998, p. 25
  17. Ormos 1998, p. 27
  18. Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
  19. Borsányi 1988, p. 69
  20. Ormos 1998, p. 27
  21. Juhász 1976, pp. 1219
  22. Ormos 1998, p. 28
  23. Ormos 1998, p. 29
  24. Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
  25. Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
  26. Ormos 1998, p. 33
  27. Juhász 1976, pp. 1220
  28. Ormos 1998, p. 23
  29. Balázs 2005, p. 3
  30. Ormos 1998, p. 34
  31. "Interetnikai konfliktusok Erdélyben, 1918–19 - 2020. július 30., csütörtök -". 3szek.ro (in Hungarian). Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  32. "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  33. Balázs 2005, p. 5
  34. Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
  35. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  36. "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  37. Ormos 1998, p. 31
  38. Ablonczy 2020, p. 32
  39. Borsányi 1988, p. 128
  40. Ormos 1998, p. 37
  41. Murber 2021, p. 44
  42. Borsányi 1988, p. 92
  43. Murber 2021, p. 46
  44. Murber 2021, p. 47
  45. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  46. Romsics 2004, pp. 428
  47. Romsics 2004, pp. 429
  48. Ormos 1998, p. 36
  49. Murber 2021, p. 48
  50. Romsics 2004, pp. 429
  51. "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  52. "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  53. Borsányi 1988, p. 133
  54. Köpeczi, Béla (1986). Erdély Története Három Kötetben. Akadémiai kiadó. ISBN 9630548836.
  55. Sztancs, 2018
  56. Győrffy, Sándor (1954). "Adalékok az antant hatalmak magyarországi politikájához". Századok. 88 (4): 569–592.
  57. Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
  58. Ormos 1998, p. 36
  59. Borsányi 1988, p. 148
  60. Ormos 1998, p. 37
  61. "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  62. Gusztáv 1992, p. 63
  63. Ormos 1998, p. 37

Bibliography

  • Ablonczy, Balázs. (2020). Ismeretlen Trianon. Az összeomlás és a békeszerződés.
  • Balázs Schuller (2005) Impériumváltás a Zsil-völgyében, Bányászati és Kohászati Lapok. 2005/3. 35–38.o.
  • Borsányi, Gy. (1988). Októbertől márciusig. Kossuth Könyvkiadó.
  • Breitt, J. (1925). A magyarországi 1918/19. évi forradalmi mozgalmak és a vörös háború története. Magy. Kir. Hadtörténelmi Levéltár.
  • Gulyás László: A Magyar Királyság román megszállásának szakaszai, különös tekintettel a Partium és a Tiszántúl elfoglalására. In: Lokális Trianon 1. : Csongrád, Csanád és Torontál vármegye az összeomlás éveiben 1918–1920, (28). pp. 27-41. (2021)
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  • Hatos, P. (2018). Az elátkozott köztársaság: az 1918-as összeomlás és az őszirózsás forradalom története.
  • Juhász, G., Pach, Z. P., Ránki, G., Hajdu, T., Berend, T. I., & Tilkovszky, L. (1976). Magyarország története 8/1-2: 1918-1919/1919-1945. Budapest.
  • Murber, Ibolya (2021). Nyugat-Magyarországtól Burgenlandig, 1918-1924. Budapest, BTK Történettudományi Intézet.
  • Ormos, M. (1998). Magyarország a két világháború korában, 1914-1945 (Vol. 6). Csokonai Kiadó.
  • Romsics 2004, pp. 429
  • Suba, J. (2018). Demarkációs vonalak Felvidéken, 1918:(kartográfia-elemzés)= Lines of demarcation in Upper-Hungary, 1918. Közép-Európai Közlemények, 11(1), 107–125.
  • Sztancs, G. (2018). Selbständige Zipser Republik. Fórum Társadalomtudományi Szemle, 20(4), 21–42.
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