Hungary

Country article in printed Atlas

Chronology
1802 Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum (National Museum)
1825–30 Magyar Tudományos Akadémia (Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
1830 Verein für Siebenbürgische Landeskunde (Association for Transylvanian Studies) in Nagyszeben (Hermannstadt; Sibiu, Romania)
1840 Journal Archiv des Vereins für Siebenbürgische Landeskunde (Archive of the Association for Transylvanian Studies) first published by the Association for Transylvanian Studies
1850 Uj Magyar Museum (New Hungarian Museum)
1859 Erdélyi Múzeum-Egyesület (Transylvanian Museum Society) in Kolozsvár (Cluj, Romania)
1867 Magyar Történelmi Társulat (Hungarian Historical Association) and its journal Századok (Centuries)
1918 Hadtörténeti Múzeum (Museum of Military History) in Budapest
1927 Magyar Szemle (Hungarian Review)
1948 Magyar Dolgozók Pártja Munkásmozgalmi Intézete in Budapest (Institute of the Workers’ Movement, later Magyar Szocialista Munkáspárt Párttörténeti Intézete – Institute for the History of the Hungarian Socialist Workers Party; today Politikatörténeti Intézet – Institute of Political History)
1949 Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Történettudományi Intézete in Budapest (Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
1958 Történeti Szemle (Historical Review)
1970 Új Magyar Központi Levéltár (New Hungarian Central Archives) in Budapest
1985 Magyarságkutató Intézet in Budapest (Institute of Hungarian Studies, later Teleki László Institute until its closure in 2007)
1991 Az 1956-os Magyar Forradalom Történetének Dokumentációs és Kutatóintézete Közalapítvány in Budapest (Institute and Public Foundation for the History of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution)
1993 Open Society Archives in Budapest
1999 XX. Század Intézet (20th Century Institute)
2002 Terror Háza (House of Terror)
2004 Holokauszt Emlékközpont (Holocaust Memorial Centre)

 

Bibliography

(References are included up to 2009)

Apor, P., & Trencsényi, B. (2007). Fine-tuning the polyphonic past: Hungarian historical writing in the 1990s. In B. Trencsényi, P. Antohi, & P. Apor (Eds.), Narratives Unbound: Historical Studies in Post-Communist Eastern Europe (pp. 1–99). Central European University Press.
Deak, I. (n.d.). Historiographies of the Countries of Eastern Europe: Hungary. In American Historical Review (pp. 1040–1063).
Epstein Raab, I. (1987). Gyula Szekfu: a study in the political basis of Hungarian historiography. Garland Publishing.
Glatz, F. (1990). Writing History in Central Europe. The New Hungarian Quarterly, XXX!(117), 50–55.
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, D. of C. (2016). History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mta.hu/data/MTA_Tortenete_ENG.pdf
Laszlo, P. (Ed.). (1992). Historians and the History of Transylvania. East European  Monographs.
Macartney, C. A. (1953). The Medieval Hungarian Historians: a Critical and Analytical Guide. Cambridge University Press.
Pok, A. (2004). Why Was There No Historikerstreit in Postcommmunist Hungary? RFE/RL East European Perspectives, 17(6), 1–3.
Vardy, S. B. (1976). Modern Hungarian Historiography. East European Monographs.
Varga-Kuna, B., & Bottoni, S. (2010). Hungary. In L. Raphael & I. Porciani (Eds.), Atlas of European Historiography. The Making of a Profession 1800-2005 (pp. 153–156). Palgrave.

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