DSpace Komunita:http://hdl.handle.net/11025/168792024-03-19T13:11:56Z2024-03-19T13:11:56ZItaly in the european states system of the pre-march period: some reflectionsŠedivý, Miroslavhttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/176612021-09-22T09:15:06Z2015-01-01T00:00:00ZNázev: Italy in the european states system of the pre-march period: some reflections
Autoři: Šedivý, Miroslav
Editoři: Novotný, Lukáš; Clemens, Gabriele
Abstrakt: The aim of the paper is to evaluate the role that Italy played in the European States
System in 1830–1848 from a new, more realist perspective paying particular attention
to the policy of Metternich’s Austria in the Apennines. As it attempts to prove,
from 1830 to 1848 Italy witnessed considerable reluctance on the part of the Great
Powers as well as the Italian states themselves to contribute through cooperation and
restraint to the strengthening of the pillars that upheld the system. Italy, much like
the Ottoman Empire, was an unstable area with dangerous potential for European
peace, and it was no accident that the peace restored in 1815 was disturbed for the
first time in Western Europe during 1848 in Italy.2015-01-01T00:00:00ZŠedivý, MiroslavZACHAR Péter Krisztián. Gazdasági válságok, társadalmi feszültségek, modern válaszkísérletek Európában a két világháború között Budapest: L’Harmattan, 2014. ISBN 978-963-236-955-6, 348 pagesMarengo, Alessandrohttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/176592021-09-22T09:15:06Z2015-01-01T00:00:00ZNázev: ZACHAR Péter Krisztián. Gazdasági válságok, társadalmi feszültségek, modern válaszkísérletek Európában a két világháború között Budapest: L’Harmattan, 2014. ISBN 978-963-236-955-6, 348 pages
Autoři: Marengo, Alessandro
Editoři: Novotný, Lukáš; Clemens, Gabriele2015-01-01T00:00:00ZMarengo, AlessandroCivic gentry in Sáros county in the 19th–20th century: the history of Hazslinyszky family, part II.Koudela, Pálhttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/176582021-09-22T09:15:06Z2015-01-01T00:00:00ZNázev: Civic gentry in Sáros county in the 19th–20th century: the history of Hazslinyszky family, part II.
Autoři: Koudela, Pál
Editoři: Novotný, Lukáš; Clemens, Gabriele
Abstrakt: In the first part of this sequence to discuss the concept of Hungarian gentry, its character,
role in society and depiction in literature I wrote about the Hazslinszky family,
its roots and most relevant member: Frigyes, representative of the first generation of
a newly emerged gentry society in Hungary. In the following, his brother’s, sons’ and
grandsons’ lives are analyzed from the viewpoint of a more and more controversial
social development during the first half of the 20th century. The signs of belonging to
a rather noble strata appeared in the second generation: marriages show high connectedness,
but values were constant. A new administrative stratum evolved in this
period showing a fairly integrated image as a historical formation, but behind the employment
groups, social positions, digging deeply into personal fates we found very
altering value systems. These lives represent an alternate to those mostly described
in Hungarian historiography characterizing a whole period.2015-01-01T00:00:00ZKoudela, PálGreat Britain and China 1908–1909Kodet, Romanhttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/176572021-09-22T09:15:06Z2015-01-01T00:00:00ZNázev: Great Britain and China 1908–1909
Autoři: Kodet, Roman
Editoři: Novotný, Lukáš; Clemens, Gabriele
Abstrakt: At the beginning of the 20th century Great Britain had to guard its interests in China
against the competition of other Great Powers. The British diplomacy therefore payed close attention to the internal situation in China. It focused mainly on the enforcement
of its economic (especially trade) interests and maintaining its concessions in
China. In order to accomplish these tasks, the British diplomats followed closely the
internal situation in China – especially its efforts to reform its government, military
or law. They also payed close attention to the relation of China towards other Great
Powers and their influence in the Middle Kingdom. Great Britain also had to solve
several important problems in its own relations with China. The most important of
these was the question of the opium trade and the effort of the Chinese government
to supperss its consumption. China was able to accomplish this important task only
with the help of Great Britain.2015-01-01T00:00:00ZKodet, Roman