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SUMMARY
A Brief History of Hungary: The Árpáds, the Habsburgs, and the Iron Curtain is a sharp, unsentimental journey through a thousand years of Hungarian history, from steppe migrations to EU membership, from medieval kingship to managed democracy. It treats Hungary not as an exception or a mystery, but as a country that repeatedly survives by adapting—often cleverly, sometimes desperately—to forces larger than itself.
The book follows Hungary as a place people keep arriving in, ruling, reorganizing, and losing, while the inhabitants learn how to remain. Celts, Romans, nomads, Christian kings, Ottoman governors, Habsburg administrators, revolutionaries, bureaucrats, communists, and post-socialist technocrats all take their turn, rarely as planned and never as advertised. Statehood appears, disappears, and reappears in altered form, while institutions outlive dynasties and symbols outlast borders.
Rather than searching for timeless national character, the narrative focuses on strategies of survival: how Hungary governs diversity, negotiates subordination, uses rebellion as communication, and turns defeat into structure. Language, law, and memory matter more here than triumph. The Hungarian language remains stubbornly unassimilated; political autonomy is repeatedly lost and partially recovered; history refuses to settle into the past.
Modern Hungary is treated not as a break from earlier eras but as their continuation under new conditions. The legacy of Trianon, the experience of state socialism, the compromises of 1989, EU and NATO membership, demographic anxiety, and diaspora politics are shown as chapters in a longer story about sovereignty under constraint. Centralization, suspicion of fragmentation, and the instrumental use of history emerge not as anomalies, but as learned responses.
Written for readers who want clarity without myth and context without nostalgia, this book explains why Hungary keeps reappearing in European history—smaller, rearranged, occasionally defiant, but never quite gone—and why, here more than elsewhere, history remains an active political resource rather than a closed archive.