Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

Orsolya Varsányi

Cím (title)

Abū Bakr Muḥammad b. Ǧaʿfar al-Naršaḫī, Bukhara története (History of Bukhara). Translated, introduced, and edited by Miklós Sárközy.

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.105

Absztrakt (abstract)

 

Kulcsszavak (keywords)


Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

Miklós Sárközy

Cím (title)

The Legacy of Sogdian Inscriptions. On a Newly Published Sogdian Chrestomathy

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.98

Absztrakt (abstract)

 

Kulcsszavak (keywords)


Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

Péter Illik

Cím (title)

Interpreting Luck and Heroes in Hungarian History.

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.90

Absztrakt (abstract)

 

Kulcsszavak (keywords)

 


Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

Helén Pál

Cím (title)

Some reasons behind the change of languages and dialects in a South Transdanubian area of Hungary, with special regard to Völgység

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.69

Absztrakt (abstract)

Various national minorities have lived in the South Transdanubian region of Hungary over the centuries. Within this area, the Völgység is a small part of Hungary, belonging partly to Tolna and partly to Baranya counties, a loessy hilly area bordered by rivers. The paper deals with the language and dialect of the ethnic groups still living here after 1945. After WW II, the Germans and Serbs who remained here were joined by Szeklers from Bukovina, Hungarians from Upper Hungary and from other Hungarian areas. To- day, most of the Germans and Serbs have merged with the majority Hungarians, and the (minority) language learnt by young Hungarians is mostly the standard version of the given language. The dialect of the resettled Szeklers from Bukovina, Hungarians from Upper Hungary and other Hungarian-speaking groups can be characterised as converg- ing with the Hungarian vernacular. All these communities are characterised by mixed marriages, which also influence language usage and, in the case of Germans and Serbs, may lead to language shift . The dialect of the above-mentioned Hungarian-speaking groups (as with other Hungarian dialects) is withdrawn from the public language area. The Hungarian dialects (and the German and Serbian dialects in Hungary) have a lower prestige than the vernacular, their use is limited to a more restricted environment, and they are nowadays the language of family use and the language of the more restricted community. The paper reviews the historical background and current status of these languages and language varieties and presents data on their speakers.

Kulcsszavak (keywords)

The South Transdanubian part of Hungary, Völgység, languages of the national minorities, Hungarian dialects, dialects of the national minorities, lan- guage change, language shift, resettlements


Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

László Kövecses

Cím (title)

Hungarian nationhood in the light of the ethnosymbolist theory

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.48

Absztrakt (abstract)

The objective of this paper is to trace the emergence of the ethnic consciousness of the Hungarians and their becoming an ethnie on the basis of the ethnosymbolist par- adigm’s six criteria. Subsequently, the article also presents the transformation from ethnicity to nationhood based on Anthony D. Smith’s model. From the perspective of the ethnosymbolist approach, the emergence of the Hungarian people can be dated to 970, and the birth of the Hungarian nation to 1848. When applying Smith’s model to the Hungarians, it can be concluded that the Hungarian people only became a nation after more than eight centuries of further transformations. All this suggests that eth- nosymbolism does not go astray in its search for an ‘ethnic core’ of modern nations back in the distant past. Rather, it would be more appropriate to reconsider wheth- er the term ‘nation’ can indeed be applied only within the ideological and temporal framework of historical modernity.

Kulcsszavak (keywords)

Hungarians, ethnosymbolism, gentilism, Anthony D. Smith, ethno- genesis, national consciousness, Nationalism Studies


Tanulmány (study): itt

Szerző (author)

Miklós Gálos – Mátyás Darvas

Cím (title)

Inscription on the Votive Painting of Vladislaus II

Hivatkozás (references)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.53644/EH.2023.2.36

Absztrakt (abstract)

The votive picture of Vladislaus II in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Buda- pest is an outstanding work of the Jagiellonian court art. The panel, attributed to the court painter of Emperor Maximilian I, Bernhard Strigel, shows Saint Ladislaus recom- mending Vladislaus II and his children under the protection of the Virgin. The histori- cal source value of the work is reduced by the fact that the facial features of its charac- ters have become victims of iconoclasm. Previous research considered the inscription of the scroll wrapped around the axe of St. Ladislaus to be illegible. The partial reading of the heavily worn inscription published here confirms its supposed votive nature and suggests that the person who commissioned the panel – as opposed to the assump- tions that it would be a commission of Maximilian I – was Vladislaus II himself.

Kulcsszavak (keywords)

scroll inscription, Strigel, Vladislaus II, Saint Ladislaus, Patrona Hungariae