Béla Kun
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Béla Kun see Kun, Béla .
Author not available, BÉLA KUN.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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IN OUR HISTORY; Béla Kun and his 133-day regime
Cleveland Jewish News; 4/8/2005; Geduld, Herb; 591 words
; Geduld, Herb Cleveland Jewish News 04-08-2005 In the two decades between the two world ... believers "non-Jewish Jews." Prominent among them was Bla Kun, born in 1886 in Szilagycseh, Transylvania (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and now part of Romania). Kun's father was a lower-middle-class town ...
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BERTOLT BRECHT AND BÉLA BALÁZS: Paradoxes of Exile
Canadian Journal of Film Studies; 10/1/2004; Petrie, Graham; 8811 words
; ... supported the revolution of 1919 led by Bela Kun, which overthrew the coalition government ... thanks largely to the interference of Bla Kun, who had led the revolution of 1919 commemorated in the film. Kun, who had fled to the Soviet Union upon the ...
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Béla Kun
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... and Social Democrats formed a coalition government under Kun. Kun set up a dictatorship of the proletariat; nationalized banks ... raised a Red Army and overran Slovakia. The allies forced Kun to evacuate Slovakia, and a counterrevolution broke out ...
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Nicholas Horthy de Nagybanya
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... He commanded the Austro-Hungarian fleet in World War I. After Béla Kun seized (1919) power in Hungary, the counterrevolutionary government ... command of its forces. When the Romanian forces that had defeated Kun evacuated Budapest (Nov., 1919), Horthy entered it and in 1920 ...
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György Lukács
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... of the foremost modern literary critics. Converted to Communism in 1918, Lukács served (1919) in the cabinet of Béla Kun. On Kun's fall he fled and lived in Berlin until the rise of Hitler, when he went to the Soviet Union. In 1945 he returned ...
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Ferdinand
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... Bessarabia from Russia and in 1919 ordered the Romanian military intervention in Hungary that broke up the Communist government of Béla Kun . During his reign, universal male suffrage and agrarian reforms were introduced. Ferdinand's son, Carol (see Carol II ), renounced ...
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soviet
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... 1920, workers', peasants', and soldiers' councils were formed. A soviet republic in Bavaria was short-lived, and the regime of Béla Kun in Hungary was put down. Soviets in the Baltic republics met a similar fate. In Russia the soviets remained the basic political ...
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