Karolyi & Bethlen: Hungary
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Karolyi & Bethlen - Bryan Cartledge
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Prologue
Budapest, 8 June 1896. On a fine summer’s day, the Hungarian capital was en fête. Franz Josef, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, was making one of his infrequent visits to his Kingdom and second capital. The Empress Elisabeth, a melancholy beauty known to prefer Hungary’s open spaces and lively horses to the cold formality of the Hofburg, was at the Emperor’s side, cheered with special warmth by the Hungarian crowds. Some 1,700 horsemen in traditional uniforms, representing all the county regiments and feudal militia of the nation, escorted their state coach from the Royal Palace to the Matthias Coronation Church, and thence across the Danube to the new gothic Parliament building. Even the correspondent of the London Times, down from Vienna for the occasion, was impressed:
‘It would be a hopeless task to endeavour to give anything like a complete idea of the hundreds of uniforms and costumes of all the colours of the rainbow in a procession that took nearly two hours to cross the Danube. The 80 municipal and county bands presented numerous variations of Hussar uniforms, a number of peasant costumes, and various suits of chain mail, with battle-axes and loaded clubs. These costumes rang all sorts of changes on the polychromatic scale, from the sober tints favoured by the sturdy peasants … to the most aggressive scarlet and sulphur yellow, azure and dazzling white, violet, purple, gold, rich crimson and ruby. There were innumerable leopard skins and panther fells slung over the shoulder with careless grace.’¹
As the procession slowly wound its way down Castle Hill and across the Margaret Bridge, trumpet fanfares blared and cannon thundered salutes to the Monarch and his consort. When they were not admiring this pageant of Hungary’s ruling class, the people of Budapest and their fellow Hungarians from throughout the kingdom could regale themselves at the mass picnic in Vérmező Park, where oxen roasted on spits, and from the myriad stalls in City Park. During the celebrations, 5,600 litres of wine and 32,000 pairs of sausages were consumed daily.
The Hungarian nation was celebrating its Millennium, 1,000 years of history since the occupation of the Carpathian basin by the Magyar tribal confederacy in the year AD 896. Two future Prime Ministers of Hungary rode in the procession, perspiring with their fellow nobles in full ceremonial dress: Count Mihály Károlyi, with the regiment of his native county, and Count István Bethlen, a law student at the University of Budapest, with the large Transylvanian contingent. They were both destined to play leading roles in the most disastrous series of events ever to befall their country; one of them would guide her towards recovery.
I
Two Lives and the Land
1
Hungary’s Thousand Years
The history of more fortunate nations is punctuated by triumphs and victories. The history of Hungary is punctuated by disasters and defeats. The Hungarian achievement is survival and recovery.
One hundred years after the Magyar tribes had occupied the fertile Carpathian basin and, for half a century, terrorised Europe in predatory raids which extended from Bremen to Bologna, King Stephen I laid the foundations of a Christian European kingdom. Although he displayed great military talent in defeating those who challenged his authority, Stephen I was above all a man of peace and order. He gave Hungary her Western orientation, embracing Roman Christianity rather than Orthodoxy, and an administrative structure of which the central feature, the county, has survived to this day. His political achievements fully justify the reverence that Hungarians still, a thousand years later, accord to his memory. The Holy Crown which Pope Sylvester II sent to Stephen for his coronation on Christmas Day in the year 1000 became, and remains, the prime symbol of Hungary’s statehood. Stephen was canonised in 1083.
Stephen’s legacy survived Hungary’s first major disaster, the invasion in the 13th century by Mongol hordes which overran the country, sacked her towns and villages and decimated her population. Béla IV, one of the few competent rulers of the Árpád dynasty, rebuilt the kingdom, improved its defences, re-established the rule of law and bequeathed to the succeeding Anjou kings a viable state, respected by its neighbours and by now controlling not only the Carpathian basin but Croatia and the Dalmatian coast as well. Building on this inheritance, the Angevins made Hungary one of the most powerful states in Europe, uniting in the person of Louis the Great the Hungarian and Polish crowns and producing (by marriage) in Sigismund I her first Holy Roman Emperor. But Hungary’s strength was more apparent than real. The extensive territories whose allegiance the Hungarian crown commanded far exceeded its capacity to control or defend them. Growing internal antagonisms – between crown and over-mighty barons, between over-privileged nobles and over-burdened peasants – together with a small population and an underdeveloped economy, imposed severe handicaps on Hungary’s ability to hold her own, sandwiched as she was between the rising empires of Habsburg Austria to the north and the Ottoman Turks to the south. Not for the last time in Hungary’s often tragic story, nemesis succeeded hubris: in 1526, on the field of Mohács, the invading Turks under Suleiman the Magnificent annihilated Louis II’s army. Louis himself perished, together with the majority of Hungary’s barons and nobility. Hungary lay prostrate, a battlefield over which the Turks and rival claimants to the Hungarian crown fought and pillaged.
For nearly two centuries Hungary, like Caesar’s Gaul, was divided into three parts: a large central and southern zone occupied by the Turks, a north-western crescent ruled by the Austrian Habsburgs, who had won the struggle for the Hungarian crown and, to the east of the river Tisza, the autonomous principality of mountainous Transylvania where, under successive Hungarian rulers but under Turkish protection, the flame of Hungarian independence and the first shoots of Hungarian culture were kept alive. Transylvania became the base from which, during the 17th century, repeated attempts were launched, with or without Turkish sanction, to oust the alien Habsburgs and forge a united, independent Hungary. They all failed – but with honour and glimpses of eventual triumph. In the early 18th century Ferenc Rákóczi, who led a predominantly Protestant army in the eight-year War of Independence, fought the Austrians to a virtual draw but failed to oust them. Meanwhile, the defeat of the Turks before Vienna by the Austrians and Poles and the subsequent liberation of Buda (not yet united with Pest) had led in 1699 to the final expulsion of the Turks from Hungary – but also to the consolidation of Habsburg rule, which was to remain unchallenged for over a century.
MAGYAR – THE LANGUAGE OF HUNGARIANS
The term ‘Hungarian’ embraces all inhabitants of the Hungarian state, including the ‘nationalities’ – Slovaks, Romanians, Serbs, Croats, Germans and Ruthenians. The term ‘Magyar’ relates to those Hungarians whose first language is Magyar and who think of themselves as descendants, however remote, of the original progenitors of the Hungarian nation. The impact of the Enlightenment on Hungary, from the mid-18th century onwards, inspired interest in and enthusiasm for the Hungarian language. Hungary’s political and literary language, used by the educated classes for many purposes except informal conversation, was still Latin, a circumstance unique in Europe. Hungary’s leading poets of the Enlightened era not only promoted the vernacular as a literary language but married that language to patriotism and a national ideal, thus planting the roots of nationalism. By the turn of the century, enthusiasm for the Hungarian language had begun to acquire nationalistic overtones; non-Hungarian speaking ethnic groups began to be held in contempt. The ‘nationality question’, which was to exert a malign influence on Hungarian political life for the next century and a half, had been born.
The absence of an open challenge to the Habsburgs by no means implied that the Hungarians had lapsed into passive submission. The bicameral Diet (Parliament), through which since the early Middle Ages Hungary’s noble ruling class – the magnates and the gentry – had expressed their views to the Crown and when necessary defended their interests against it, conducted, during the 18th century, a stubborn defence of the constitutional rights and privileges which successive Hungarian kings had been obliged to recognise. Of these, the most conspicuous and the most controversial was the exemption of the Hungarian nobility from taxation, which provided Habsburg rulers with a pretext to impose harshly discriminatory tariffs on Hungarian exports to the rest of the Monarchy. The attempts of the Empress Maria Theresa and her son, Joseph II, both to oblige Hungarian nobles to contribute their share towards the defence of their kingdoms and to impose upon them badly-needed measures of social and economic reform generated tensions between Hungary and Vienna which made an eventual rupture probable if not inevitable. At the century’s end, Hungary was still a feudal society whose backward rural economy depended in large part on the medieval institution of serfdom. It was also a heterogeneous society in which ethnic Hungarians – the Magyars – accounted for only 39 per cent of a population of 8.6 million; the growth in numbers of ethnic minorities, the so-called ‘nationalities’ – Slovaks, Romanians, Croats, Ruthenians, Serbs and Germans – created another potential source of tension alongside the economic deprivation and hardship of the countryside. The ideas of the Enlightenment had inspired a rapidly developing sense of Hungarian nationhood and patriotism.
Ominously, however, the influence of the Enlightenment was encouraging a sense of national identity and cultural pride among the ‘nationalities’ as well. Surrounded by Slavs, the Hungarians had always harboured a sense of being under threat from without; they now began to sense a mounting threat from within.
Economic backwardness and consequent vulnerability to the collapse of agricultural prices after the Napoleonic wars, together with increasing social tensions, persuaded the thinking members of Hungary’s noble class – the writers, poets and political activists – that something had to be done. This imperative inspired, during the first half of the 19th century, the activities of a remarkable group of men – István Széchenyi, Lajos Kossuth and Ferenc Deák prominent among them – who during ‘the age of reform’ wrote the greatest pages of their country’s history.
By the mid-1840s, their parliamentary work, their writing and their rhetoric had resulted in a torrent of measures of economic, social and administrative reform which dismantled the institutions of feudalism and established the essentials of a civil society. The experience of exercising more active control over Hungary’s affairs in those areas of policy within its jurisdiction, together with the example of revolutionary movements elsewhere in Europe, encouraged the Hungarian Diet to challenge royal authority in areas traditionally reserved to the monarch’s prerogative. Unnerved by open revolt on the streets of both Vienna and Pest in March, 1848, Emperor Ferdinand V reluctantly sanctioned a body of legislation, the ‘April Laws’, which completed Hungary’s transformation from a backward, stagnant province of his Empire into a vital, reformed and all but independent state.
ISTVÁN SZÉCHENYI (1791–1860)
Count István Széchenyi was born in 1791 into one of Hungary’s most eminent magnate families. After a short but distinguished military career he became a dedicated traveller, driven by an intense and intelligent curiosity about the workings of countries other than his own. His visits to England gave him a profound admiration for English political institutions, social mobility and way of life. He agreed with Jeremy Bentham that old laws and customs, however hallowed, should be discarded if they were no longer useful – the dead should not exercise a tyranny over the living. He was no democrat, believing that ‘the continued preponderance of the landowning classes [is] the sole guarantee for the survival of the nation’. But he also believed, passionately, in the urgent necessity for social and economic reform – gradual reform, by consensus – in Hungary. He argued that the landowner, as much as the peasant, was a prisoner and victim of the feudal system by which Hungary was still afflicted and directed his efforts to persuading his own class of this in three ground-breaking books, of which the best known is Hitel (‘Credit’). Landowners, he urged, should be freed from the shackles of the law of entail which prevented them from obtaining credit for investment, since they could not offer their land as security. Széchenyi was no mere theoretician but a hands-on reformer: he helped to found and fund Hungary’s Academy of Sciences, launched the project for a Chain Bridge to link Buda with Pest, introduced horse breeding and horse racing into