Babucs Zoltán - Hazatért Nagyvárad! - (1940. szeptember 6.)
Product description
Zoltán Babucs (Jászberény, 1974) is the scion of a deep-rooted Jászkun family, his wife is Éva Madarász, born in Kézdivásárhely. A military historian and museologist, he completed his higher education at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest. He is the managing expert of the Historical Research Center of the Hungarian Research Institute and the editor of Magyar Hírlap (civilian public daily). Area of expertise: the Second World War Hungarian Royal Army, the 1848/49. the history of the Hungarian army of the Hungarian War of Independence, the military service of the Jászkuns and the Székelys. In addition to more than five hundred studies and scientific articles, he is the author or co-author and editor of thirty volumes. As a nationally recognized expert in his field of research, he is a participant in public media programs and broadcasts, and an invited historian speaker at festive commemorations in the Carpathian Basin and beyond. Previously, his military history writings and studies were published in the conservative historical periodical Nagy Hungary and the Történelemportál magazine. His articles can be read in Magyar Hírlap since 2011 - while in 2016 his writings were also published in the columns of Magyar Idők and Magyar Demokrata - as well as in the Hungarian weekly Magyar7, the historical magazines Rubicon and Trianoni Szemle. His publications can also be found on the Internet, and he has an independent military historian section on the Felvidek.ma website. "Oradea is dead. The cause of death: the dawn of law and justice. The second decision in Vienna erased this name from the map of Europe. Time, in the endless field of memory and adorned with the flowers of suffering, erected a head tree above the Romanian name of the city and scratched it with soot letters: lived 21 year... The Hungarian people would like to forever erase from their memory the sad days of humiliation, servitude and shackles. Nagyvárad rose from a long voluntary death on September 6, 1940, and was given a new life. That bright, feverishly beautiful day, shining in a flood of sunlight, on which, together with its troops, Nagyvárad the Supreme Warlord stepped in for the first time, encouraging and hopeful guidance remained that the Hungarians must also arrive at the promised land of a better future earned with so much suffering." - noted Árpád Árvay. We invite the reader to travel back in time to get to know the homecoming of the city of Szent László eighty years ago with the help of this volume and the 250 archival photographs it contains.