1918 in Hungary
The following lists events in the year 1918 in Hungary.
| |||||
Decades: |
| ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: | Other events of 1918 List of years in Hungary |
Incumbents
- King: Charles IV (Until November 13/16)
- Homo regius: Archduke Joseph August (October 26 – November 16)
- President: Mihály Károlyi (until November 16)
- Prime Minister: Sándor Wekerle (until 30 October), János Hadik (October 30–31), Mihály Károlyi (from October 31)
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: Károly Szász (until November 16)
- Speaker of the House of Magnates: Endre Hadik-Barkóczy (until June 22), Gyula Wlassics (June 22 – November 16)
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
- February 1–3 – Cattaro Mutiny[6]
- February 9 – Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Central Powers and Ukrainian People's Republic
March
- March 3 – Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Central Powers and Soviet Russia[7]
April
- April 8–10 – Congress of Oppressed Nationalities of the Austro-Hungarian Empire held in Rome
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
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
- 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
- November 2
- 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
- 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
- November 16
- November 17
- 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
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 285
- Borsányi 1988, p. 33
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- Borsányi 1988, p. 19
- Borsányi 1988, p. 19
- Ormos 1998, p. 19
- Borsányi 1988, p. 117
- Ormos 1998, p. 21
- Borsányi 1988, p. 118
- Borsányi 1988, pp. 53-54
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 287
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- Borsányi 1988, p. 66
- Ormos 1998, p. 22
- Ormos 1998, p. 25
- Ormos 1998, p. 27
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
- Borsányi 1988, p. 69
- Ormos 1998, p. 27
- Juhász 1976, pp. 1219
- Ormos 1998, p. 28
- Ormos 1998, p. 29
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
- Ormos 1998, p. 33
- Juhász 1976, pp. 1220
- Ormos 1998, p. 23
- Balázs 2005, p. 3
- Ormos 1998, p. 34
- "Interetnikai konfliktusok Erdélyben, 1918–19 - 2020. július 30., csütörtök -". 3szek.ro (in Hungarian). Retrieved April 13, 2023.
- "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
- Balázs 2005, p. 5
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
- Ormos 1998, p. 31
- Ablonczy 2020, p. 32
- Borsányi 1988, p. 128
- Ormos 1998, p. 37
- Murber 2021, p. 44
- Borsányi 1988, p. 92
- Murber 2021, p. 46
- Murber 2021, p. 47
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- Romsics 2004, pp. 428
- Romsics 2004, pp. 429
- Ormos 1998, p. 36
- Murber 2021, p. 48
- Romsics 2004, pp. 429
- "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
- "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
- Borsányi 1988, p. 133
- Köpeczi, Béla (1986). Erdély Története Három Kötetben. Akadémiai kiadó. ISBN 9630548836.
- Sztancs, 2018
- Győrffy, Sándor (1954). "Adalékok az antant hatalmak magyarországi politikájához". Századok. 88 (4): 569–592.
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 344
- Ormos 1998, p. 36
- Borsányi 1988, p. 148
- Ormos 1998, p. 37
- "Az MTA BTK Történettudományi Intézet első világháborús honlapja - Térképek". 1914-1918.btk.mta.hu. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
- Gusztáv 1992, p. 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)
- Gusztáv, G. (1992). A forradalmak kora: Magyarország története: 1918-1920. Magyar Szemle Társaság.
- 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.
- Völgyes, Iván (1971). Hungary in Revolution, 1918-19: Nine Essays. p. 100–105. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0803207883.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.