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==Requested move 2013== | |||
I stick to my former version because | |||
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: #efe; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;"><!-- Template:polltop --> | |||
:''The following discussion is an archived discussion of the proposal. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section. '' | |||
The result of the proposal was '''moved'''. --] (]) 23:35, 6 August 2013 (UTC) | |||
* not only the nortwestern part of Transdanubia belonged to the Royal Hungary but all the western half of it (the historical counties of Zala, Vas, Sopron, Moson, Győr, Komárom, Veszprém) | |||
**I do not know what you are talking about, any map you look at clearly shows that it was the northwestern part, not the western - unless you are considering Burgenland part of Transdanubia, but than the text has to be changed | |||
] → {{no redirect|Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867)}} – 1538 as a starting date cannot be substantiated by reliable sources. Please also comment on ] ] (]) 04:07, 29 July 2013 (UTC) | |||
* almost all the present Northern-Hungary region was part of Royal Hungary ie. Borsod, Abaúj, Zemplén, Heves, Nógrád counties + Szabolcs, Szatmár and Bereg | |||
*'''Support'''. As we discussed it here ]. ] (]) 07:49, 29 July 2013 (UTC) | |||
**it is very weird to use the very modern term "Northern Hungary" without any addition in this context and since this is so evident, I see this as a deliberate attempt of deception, actually | |||
*'''Support''', Hungarian historiography markes the year of 1526 as a dividing line. --] (]) 17:38, 29 July 2013 (UTC) | |||
:''The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the proposal. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.''</div><!-- Template:pollbottom --> | |||
== Austrian Empire 1804-1867 == | |||
* the Royal Hungary had its own parliament, the Hungarian Diet and institutions, the Habsburg kings were elected by the Diet and they should take on oath on the constitution of the Kingdom of Hungary - this is more than enough to say that the Royal Hungary wasn't a province but a de iure independet kingdon in personal (and partly real) union with the Habsburg Monarchy. ] 17:44, 15 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
**And what do you think the situation was say in Bohemia and other "provinces" (that's what the word is supposed to mean and it does not stem from me) of the Habsburg Empire??? Which other "provinces" do you think are meant by the sentence??? "Autonomy" is a wrong term, because it implies some "technical" arrangement. And, irrespective of this, the degree of "autonomy" (in your sense) was by far the lowest out of the "provinces" of the Empire, because the territory was very small and because it was in constant conflict with the Turks. ] 08:53, 16 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
The article states that "The kingdom was only formally part of Empire of Austria.<ref name="Péter">László Péter, , BRILL, 2012, p. 6</ref> It was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated.<ref name="Péter"/> After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript,<ref>József Zachar, , In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557</ref> thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch.<ref name="Péter"/>". The source quoted (Laszlo) however is grossly misinterpreted. Take in mind that there was no Empire of Austria before 1804. Laszlo actually writes on page six of the quoted source: "From the perspective of the Court, since 1723 regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty’s three main branches on both Lines. From the perspective of the orstzág, Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch. The Imperial matters- foreign policy, defence and state finance- were handled by the monarch as a reservata exercized by him as the king of Hungary. '''In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of of the Empire of Austria.''' The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary." It seems that statements by Laszlo that are in the article have nothing to say about the period 1804-1867, but pertain mostly to the situation as it existed before 1804. I will attempt a rewrite of the fragment in the article. ] (]) 20:30, 19 May 2015 (UTC) | |||
Bohemia had the same degree of independence until the Czech Uprising in 1620 when it was abolished. Hungary wasn't part of the "hereditary lands", and theoretically only the person of the King connected it to the provinces. Of course in the 16-17th centuries personal union always meant real union in some degree. ] 15:48, 16 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
:Laszlo clearly says that after 1804 the Hungarian kingdom was joined to Austria "largely" through the monarch. ''"After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript, thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch."'' ] (]) 13:27, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:Laszlo doesn't say that. Try reading the fragment better. Laszlo talks about the pre 1804 situation. ] (]) 13:29, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::What? No, Laszlo talks about the situation around 1804. It was me who inserted Laszlo's opinion into the article. I know well what he wrote. The Francis I proclaimed the rescript after the announcement of Empire of Austria because he wanted to calm down the Hungarian diet. ] (]) 13:35, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::When Laszlo says that the Hungarian kingdom was joined to Austria "largely" through the monarch" he is in a discourse about the pre 1804 situation. He then goes on to say that after 1804, Hungary formally became part of the Empire, which is a step further. ] (]) 13:43, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::], You do realize I hope that the text you tried to restore here, differs quite substantially from the text you and Keingir tried to restore at ]? ] (]) 14:02, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::Please take a look at the paragraph (in the book). Laszlo says in the first sentence that "the '''empire''' wasn't a unified state but a monarchic union of Lands". Laszlo analyses the legal framework of the kingdom from the perspective of 1804. If my understanding is correct the rescript of 1804 reaffirmed the stipulation of Article X of 1790, therefore according to Laszlo during the period (before and after 1804) the kingdom was connected to the empire largely through the monarch.... ] (]) 14:17, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::That's not entirely the way I read it. The moment he mentions 1804 seems like a transfer to a new situation to me, in which "largely through the monarch" must get a different meaning. Also the "monarchic union of Lands" seems to pertain to the Habsburg Monarchy more than the Empire of Austria. As in "just a personal union <1804" versus "more than just a personal union >1804", although other pre 1804 notions remain largely unchanged afterwards. The present text in the article does not deny that. Empire is a word with more than one meaning. It's not just pertaining to an Imperial state. I feel Laszlo is using it to describe the Habsburg Monarchy rather than the Imperial state. Here's what. I wrote something. For THIS article mind you. If you can live with that I can as well: | |||
"As article X of ……….. (whatever it was, I forgot) of 1790 stipulated, Hungary was a regnum independens, a separate Land .<ref name="Péter">László Péter, , BRILL, 2012, p. 6</ref> After the proclamation of the Empire of Austria in 1804, which came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by ] (including Hungary) this did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript .<ref>". In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary {{Citation|last=Laszlo|first=Péter|title=Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions |publisher= Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, the Netherlands |year=2011|page=6}}</ref>,<ref>József Zachar, , In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557</ref>" | |||
The point was: Bohemia, just like (I assume: any) other land ("province") of the monarchy had its own diet and its own authorities, even if some powers were repealed in 1627. What you are talking about are formalities of the royal title arrangement, the real situation is or rather should be what matters in retrospect. The Hungarian throne was de-facto also "hereditary" after 1526. ] 01:14, 18 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
And then there's the quotes of course.... You should read it in the editing mode. ] (]) 14:43, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
This is what the Habsburgs thought when they tried to put away the obligations of the Hungarian constitution. There were several attempt to do this but every time an uprising followed (Bocskai, Bethlen, Rákóczi György, Thököly, Rákóczi Ferenc) and they should accept the former status quo. This is really different than the fate of the other provinces that never resisted to the Absolutist intentions of the Habsburgs or they had a catastrophal defeat as the Czech Uprising. Of course the relative success of the Hungarians were mainly due to the help of the Transylvanian Princes in the 16-17th century. ] 17:45, 18 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
::], I'm also trying to write something to better explain myself and what I'm on about (and not on about) in the light of what is and was in the article and in Laszlo's book. That won't be before tomorrow so please bare with me. ] (]) 15:33, 14 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
This is correct, but technically this was not topic. The issue was not to what extent the individual parts of the monarchy resisted or tried to resist Habsburg centralism. ] 00:17, 19 June 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::I read the complete section and Fakirbakir has right, as you read, it is totally wrong! But even if would accept you way of interpreting, it also does not have a sense, because any "assumption" and "formal" thing has no connection with the corresponding legal laws, articles and agreements. I can assume anything, it does not matter, until it is not written or justified legally. You should introduce a contemporary legal document to prove your claims, but such did not exist. Yes, Misplaced Pages referenced sources can be cited, but the good sense also needed to add only such material that is supporting the facts. Your dubios and far-fetched interpretation anyway fails, assumptions and formality has nothing to do with any legalty! (] (]) 00:07, 15 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
==Tired== | |||
Hello ]. For some time now I’ve taken issue with the pov of some editors that somehow, the Kingdom of Hungary was not included in the Empire of Austria as it existed from 1804-1848 and from 1849-1867. This goes against all historiographical notions you can think of. Even if much can be said (and it can) to see another perspective as well. Laszlo writes: “From the perspective of the Court, since 1723 regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty’s three main branches on both Lines. From the perspective of the orstzág, Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch.” I think that’s a very important sentence because it highlights the dual nature of the situation as it existed in the 18th century. Not just a personal union between separate states, but also (because of the big clout the monarch had) part of an informal state union. | |||
I am tired of attacks by hungarian users on article about Croatian history. Because I do not want to play defensive any more, maybe is time to solve few questions about Hungarian history: | |||
What changed in 1804 was that the Court side of this equation was institutionalised in a more formal way than it had been before. An overarching Imperial state was erected. As Laszlo says: “In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria”. | |||
*Source is not saying:"Royal Hungary was the name of medieval Hungary " | |||
That is what I want to be acknowledged clearly in this article and some others. And ‘formally’ here doesn’t mean ‘just formally’ . It means that a situation on the ground in which the mutual monarch already had substantial overarching power, was formalised. That however doesn’t take away that, and I quote Laszlo: “the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary”, which should be clearly reflected as well. After 1804 it wasn’t just “largely through the monarch” anymore (although “just” is a euphemism, the monarch carried great power before and after 1804) but also through a new institution. | |||
*Revisionist statement:"Habsburgs were recognized as Kings of Hungary" When by Who ? From my history knowledge hungarian parliament has not elected Habsburgs, but only minority of nobles (rebels ?) | |||
Nobody says that the Kingdom of Hungary went out of existence after 1804. It did however became one of the countries that came together in an institution that replaced the more informal union that the Habsburg Monarchy was. That institution was the new Imperial State. The perspective of “the orstzág” remained, but there was a change in that perspective as well. | |||
*"Emperors addressed their possession with the name of "Kingdom of Hungary" where is source ? | |||
I hope that you have noticed that your original text (with which I had some trouble as well) from this article was butchered and stuffed by users Balkony and Prudoncty for use on other articles ] and ]. The original text from this article at least made sense internally, although I have issues with it and with the way it reflected the Laszlo source. The “Status of Hungary” text that Balkony and Prudoncty made for the other articles is internally contradictive and contradicts the sources i.m.o. I hope we can make a good text here. ] (]) 01:16, 15 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
*"took an oath on the constitution of the Kingdom of Hungary at the coronation". Source please ?--] (]) 11:37, 22 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Type "Royal Hungary" in google and click on Britannica link. Habsburgs were always crowned as kings of Hungary and sometimes as Kings of Bohemia. | |||
:::Btw, there wasn't democracy at that time to elect a king as if to elect a government.--] (]) 20:02, 22 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Hebel, you think you can distract us? You repeat and copy-paste the same with the totally one-sided and twisted interpretation, so suspicious what is your real goal with this. What is sure, the article will be never good or valid as it would remain as you like, no way! So let's see weher you argumentation fails (again and again): | |||
I miss here the important information on how the Habsburgs became hereditiary kings of Hungary (the compact concluded by old Vladislav Jagiello with the Habsburgs) and the refusal of Zapolya to respect this treaty. And that the death of Vladislav's only son Luis II virtually and legally transferred the country to the hands of the Habsburgs. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 09:06, 21 May 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
1. "This goes against all historiographical notions you can think of." -> This is your POW an also other's POW, who are not real experts, anyway showing the forever wish of the Austrian Emperor - and nowadays also some anti-Hungarian nationalists - that he never could achive in any legal terms | |||
==Time-frame== | |||
According to my sources (Istorija Mađara, Beograd, 2002), term "Royal Hungary" was used from 1538 to 1699. Which source claim that it was used from 1699 to 1867? ] 11:44, 30 June 2011 (UTC) | |||
2. Was ever changed or ceased "Article X of 1790" ? The dual nature is thing I proposed to mention in the section you want to hide, so the reader can also have this information, but if a country is Regnum Independes, it is Regnum Independens - as the Hungarian Crown was always so precious because it was not a vassal crown unlike in other crownlands | |||
== Kingdom of Hungary (1538-1867) == | |||
3. "Informal" state union??? Impossible, union, personal union are very different, and also the lazy interpretation of this lead many conflicts in Misplaced Pages regarding i.e. Romanian and Croatian history - I know because I was involved in this, I even won an ANI incident and since the the factual and correct interpretation is on Misplaced Pages, one of the biggest victory ever "any secondary source (without proof or factuality)" vs. "historical fact with contemporary documentary evidence". In this case the majority of sources were even against the facts, all of them were secondary and one-sided POW's of some late authors, but it so much spread into the library and the reference contents that the falsified information also by quantity overcome on the reality. Hungary never united with Austria in history. I hope I don't have to explain the "formal" and "informal" notions clearly meaning "not legal". | |||
We should expand this article to 1867 because Royal Hungary was only the first part for the era of Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary, the second part of the Habsburg era lasted from 1699 to 1867. This expanded article is the missing link between Royal Hungary and Austria-Hungary.] (]) 20:08, 3 September 2011 (UTC) | |||
:I moved this page because, I had seen an admin(Dbachmann) tried to do something with this page and the aim was the same like mine.] (]) 20:48, 3 September 2011 (UTC) | |||
==File:Hungary 1550.png Nominated for Deletion== | |||
{| | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| An image used in this article, ], has been nominated for deletion at ] in the following category: ''Deletion requests September 2011'' | |||
;What should I do? | |||
''Don't panic''; a discussion will now take place over on Commons about whether to remove the file. This gives you an opportunity to contest the deletion, although please review Commons guidelines before doing so. | |||
* If the image is ] then you may need to upload it to Misplaced Pages (Commons does not allow fair use) | |||
* If the image isn't freely licensed and there is no ] then it cannot be uploaded or used. | |||
4. "Court side of this equation was institutionalised in a more formal way than it had been before." -> "more formal" what is that, sorry? Again LEGAL or NOT LEGAL, this is what counts! You repeat again the same quotation I think we all know from our head, but your propagated secondary source are telling us "assumptions" and "formalities" from a certain POW. Nothing legal. As I told, about such assumptions, views, evaluations we accept to write in the Status of the Kingdom of Hungary section just to make more colorful the article, next to the raw facts. | |||
''This notification is provided by a Bot'' --] (]) 16:35, 29 September 2011 (UTC) | |||
|} | |||
5. again, "formalised"....?? So what? “the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary” -> then what was affected? The separate country status was also not affected...so what we are speaking of? | |||
== Merger proposal == | |||
6. "After 1804 it wasn’t just “largely through the monarch” anymore (although “just” is a euphemism, the monarch carried great power before and after 1804) but also through a new institution." -> So what? Did this change Hungary's separate country status? No. | |||
I think page of History of Hungary (1700-1919) belongs to this article. We could read the entire interval from 1538 to 1867 in one article. I also suggested a 'split' there because of the period of 1867-1919.] (]) 13:38, 7 October 2011 (UTC) | |||
:I am going to do the merging, however I am going to put the period of 1867-1919 to the page of Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen, instead of page of Austria-Hungary (my earlier split proposal), because the text is specifically Hungarian theme.] (]) 17:40, 16 October 2011 (UTC) | |||
::In this period, especialy till 1699 was not term "Kingdom of Hungary" in offcially usage. Territory of older "Kingdom of Hungary" was divided to Royal Hungary and Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (later Principality of Transylvania). And it exists article about "History of Hungary during Ottoman administration". So I think it would be better to make separate article about Royal Hungary and rename this article to: "History of Hungary during Habsburg administration" or "Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary".. --] (]) 10:05, 11 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::The Habsburg Hungarian kings were elected and crowned by the Hungarian nobles from 1526 to 1916. Royal Hungary was ruled by Habsburg Hungarian kings. Royal Hungary was an "official" kingdom and was not part of the ] (nor Kingdom of Hungary in the 18th century). For instance, Royal Hungary or Kingdom of Hungary was ruled by ] from 1655 until 1705. Leopold's title was also King of Hungary. There was no other kingdom before or after 1699 just only one (Kingdom of Hungary). ] (]) 10:47, 11 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::I agree with you and I think that Royal Hungary deserves own article. This article is about history of Hungary during Habsburg administration. Royal Hungary has special administration (Captaincies), special capital town, diet and so on. Its one from the sucessor entities to which the Medieval kingdom was divided (eastern HU kingdom, transylvania, royal hungary, budin eyalet, egri eyalet, principality of upper hungary and so on..). Almost each of these entities has an own article. --] (]) 11:50, 11 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Sorry, Fakirbakir, I do not understand well your proposal. Do you suggest moving/merging some sections of the ] article here? What would happen to that article then? Should we replace the text with some brief summaries? And what do you mean by also suggesting a "split" there. In the History of Hungary article? Why should we split it? That article already has a section on the period 1867–1918. Apologies if I am a bit slow. :-) ] ] 10:13, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::Dear Koertefa, This was an old proposal. The merge was done in last October. There was a page "History of Hungary (1700-1919)" and I did split that. Its first part -until 1867- merged into this article (and I also expanded the period of this page to 1867 , because previously the page covered only the term of "Royal Hungary", 1526 (1538) - 1699)) and its second part -from 1867 to 1919- merged into the page of ] because I think it was more logical. | |||
::::::Recently, I have only responded to User:Samofi's new suggestion, because he wants a separate article about Royal Hungary again. I think there was only one Habsburg Hungarian Kingdom from 1538 (1526) to 1867 (1918). | |||
::::::] was my first idea before the merge. ] (]) 11:25, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Ohh, I see, thanks. It seems that I am not just slow, but blind, as well. I did not notice that it was an old proposal, sorry. ] ] 12:10, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
Fakirbakir told: ''"I think there was only one Habsburg Hungarian Kingdom from 1538 (1526) to 1867 (1918)"'' any source about this? I agree with term '''Habsburg Hungarian Kingdom''' like a term covering history from 1538 (1526) to 1867 (1918). But I see the name of the article: "Kingdom of Hungary (1538–1867)" As I know medieval Kingdom of Hungary was divided to Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (later Translyvania) and to Royal Hungary. Eastern Hungarian Kingdom was not a Kingdom of Hungary? According to Erwin Fahlsbusch: realm was trippled to Ottoman region controlled by Turks, Habsburg region (so called Royal Hungary) and Eastern Hungary with Transylvania .--] (]) 13:31, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:I agree with Samofi. The period 1538-1570 is problematic, because the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary was competed by the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom. I thing we should create an article named ] or ] that would cover a period including those years ] (]) 07:45, 13 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::I see the problem with the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom, still I think that the title and the covered period of this article are fine, since Royal Hungary can be seen as the continuation of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary . This article should, of course, mention and link the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom article, as well, and talk about the partitioning of the medieval kingdom (e.g., Battle of Mohács, Treaty of Nagyvárad). ] ] 08:49, 13 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::] pls can you cite, what exactly is written in that book? I can cite books which talks about partition of medieval Kingdom of Hungary: Vera Zimányi calls this region "historical Hungary" what means region of "medieval Kingdom of Hungary after partition between Ottoman, Habsburg and Transylvanian rulers" ; Carina L. Johnson (Cambridge) "Hungary was further divided to Habsburg Hungary, Ottoman Hungary and Transylvania" . Sources about loss of continuity: Levente Tattay "KoH was slowly restored only after reoccupation of Buda" ; or that Transylvania has continuity with KoH . Hungary as "Habsburg region" and so on. ] is well established term for "kingdom" and this article covers "History of Hungary during Habsburg administration", there is no direct continuity with Medieval Kingdom. --] (]) 17:55, 16 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::Sorry, I did not find any claim in your sources that would deny the continuity of Royal Hungary with respect to the medieval Kingdom of Hungary (KoH). None of us argued against the fact that the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (and later Transylvania) also had some continuity with KoH. Nobody denied that KoH was under Habsburg control in the period covered in the current article. The article that you cited about the "restoration" of the KoH only talks about the restoration of its state structure. And, of course, "Royal Hungary" is a well-established term. So what's the point of your references? Anyway, we can come back to the point of having a separate "Royal Hungary" article if someone (preferably without topic ban ), comes with strong arguments. So long and thanks for all the fish, ] ] 05:43, 17 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::If sources says that Kingdom was divided and only Transylvania retained a something like continuity? We have a lot of sources which says that Transylvania has continuity with KoH. So why its not mentioned in this article? Or why its not mentioned here Eastern Hungarian Kingdom? Kingdom was divided. Vera Zimányi calls this region "historical Hungary" not Kingdom of Hungary (1538-1867), its synthesis. Its no google.book search for this: . I am topic banned from Slovak/Hungarian national and ethnic disputes. This is about terminology. Its 5 880 hits for "Royal Hungary" and term "Kingdom of Hungary" is used very rarely this period. Find a 5 sources which says that Royal Hungary has continuity with medieval Kingdom of Hungary. --] (]) 06:32, 17 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
7. "in an institution that replaced the more informal union that the Habsburg Monarchy was. That institution was the new Imperial State." -> and if Hungary's laws, connstitution, etc, Regnum Independens status is still valid, how could Hungary be member of a "new state"? | |||
== Successor(s) == | |||
8. I don't see, and also other's did not see any contradictions on the former content, and already Fakirbakir rendered them just to comply more with your demands. You continously pinpointing own two prespective, that is anyway contradictive, regarding Austrian-Hungarian relations in history it is not surprising. I don't see any reason to hinder one "perspective" on the other based on a source with any clear legal statement. At least you acknowledge Hungary did not disappeared, but other's ignorantly finish the case like "it was part of the Austrian Empire" and off, like a disabled entity confused with a real crownland that was really a forever-hereditary incorporated land in the Austrian Empire. Anyway, just for curiosity, I checked other Wikipedias on the subject (i.e. German/Hungarian obviously) and your supported POW is completely lacking. Two important quotations I would present: | |||
Why are both of ] and ] mentioned as successor entities in the infobox? It is kind of redundant, because the ] were a part of ] ] (]) 11:30, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:In my oppinion ] were successor of the Habsburg realm ], in the same time these ] made a dual monarchy with Austrian empire so they became equal with ] in newly formed ].--] (]) 13:42, 12 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
- "...wurde das Königreich Ungarn, das de jure nie verschwunden war.." (..so Kingdom of Hungary that de jure never disappeared..." | |||
== Synthesis, problems with continuity of medieval Kingdom == | |||
Article deals with "History of Hungary under Habsburg administration". Official name of "historical Hungary" (Vera Zimányi) in 1538-1699 was Royal Hungary and not Kingdom of Hungary. Its continiuity COULD preserve or continuity was "SYMBOLIC" as sources says. De facto it was domain of Habsburgs p. 66. and real name almost for a whole period was ] with capital city ]. --] (]) 08:22, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:Were there Habsburgs kings in Royal Hungary? Answer, Yes. Were there legal continuity? Answer yes. '''It COULD preserve its legal continuity.''' So, What is the problem with continuity?? There were elected and crowned kings. Were there coronation ceremonies? Answer, yes. Maybe it was symbolic, however the country was not part of the Holy Roman Empire! It was a separate kingdom under the control of the Habsburg kings.] (]) 09:24, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:There was no difference between Royal Hungary and Kingdom of Hungary after or before 1699. The legal system and the government were the same. The territory of Hungary got bigger, the Kingdom of Hungary ruled by the Habsburg kings got bigger. That is all. Pressburg was the capital from 1536 to 1783.] (]) 09:47, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:The Habsburg Kingdom alias Royal Hungary was one of the successor states of the medieval Kingdom the same as Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (the latter Principality of Transylvania).] (]) 10:11, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:See page of ], it is very similar to this article in connection with the period. ] (]) 10:52, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::So why the official name was Royal Hungary? Answer: because Kingom of Hungary was divided to Eastern Hungarian kingdom, Ottoman empire and Royal Hungary (Habsburg empire). Find academical sources wich call this era (1538-1867) with term "Kingdom of Hungary (1538-1867)". The name of the article is misleading. Do you know what COULD means? COULD is "used with hypothetical or conditional force" . So maybe ''"hypoteticaly"'' there was continuity and maybe not. Maybe it was only ''symbolic'' continuity and maybe no. But its POV. Fact is, that regular name was Royal Hungary. "Königliches Ungarn" is Hungary belonging to king (Royal Hungary). "Königreich Ungarn" means Hungarian kingdom or Kingdom of Hungary. About Croatia, official name was "Königreich Kroatien" - Kingdom of Croatia. Continuity was broken. So we can make 2 articles about Royal Hungary (1538-1699) and about Kingdom of Hungary (1699-1867). --] (]) 12:08, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::I have just found a source what states that the title "kingdom of Hungary" was also used in that era. I inserted that into the article. ] (]) 12:20, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::The sentence "It could preserve its legal continuity" is not conditional in this case. It refers to past tense...... (Past tense of can).....] (]) 12:45, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::: Okay but source says: "The Royal Hungary could preserve its legal continuity only on a small area." Its legal continuity of Royal Hungary and not continuity with Hungarian medieval kingdom. Past tense of "can" change nothing. If there would be written "The Royal Hungary ''preserved'' its legal continuity only on a small area." It will be fact. But word "can" make an assumption from this. Also its different to say "Royal Hungary" = "King´s Hungary" (territory belonging to king ) and "Kingdom of Hungary" (political unit - Kingdom). Royal power is symbolized by the crown but it does not necessary have to be a kingdom. It was territory under the royal power symbolized by crown (crown of saint stephen). --] (]) 13:55, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Sorry but I can not follow you. "It could preserve" means "It was able to preserve". It is not assumption. They (the Hungarian nobles) defended the Hungarian interests (laws, legal system etc). When the Habsburgs started to disregard them (the laws, legal system etc) they usually met with serious resistance (Thököly Uprising, Kuruc Wars, Bocskay uprising, 1848 etc..) thus, the Habsburgs always had to withdraw their antagonistic regulations. ] (]) 14:03, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::Yes and they (nobles) were Transylvanian princes - Transylvanian nobility. Btw 1848 has nothing to do with Royal Hungary. Royal Hungary was Habsburg province with no continuity to medieval KoH. --] (]) 16:45, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::This is getting weird. Please, do not waste our time if you do not know what you are talking about. Can you provide at least one scholarly source which claims that there was ''no continuity'' between the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and the Kingdom of Hungary under Habsburg control? We already provided sources which claim that there was an obvious continuity, since one of them explicitly states: "''It could preserve its legal continuity''" . Please, come back after you have read some history books and have a strong argument backed up by sources. Otherwise, I do not see the point of this discussion. ] ] 05:16, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::This was ad hominem personal attack and it was reported. Source say: "''Royal Hungary could preserve its legal continuity''" ROYAL HUNGARY. There is nothing about continuity with medieval KoH. Its about symbolic legal continuity of ''Royal Hungary'' and I agree with this. On the other hand we have a sources which says that "Transylvania has a direct continuity with medieval KoH". You have no arguments so you are attacking, its scruffiness.. --] (]) 06:57, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I totally agree with Koertefa. You should be ashamed for that report. ] (]) 07:09, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Thanks, ], much appreciated. ] ] 07:38, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
- "A Habsburg Birodalom így két nagy egységre redukálódott: az Osztrák Császárságra és a Magyar Királyságra." (The Habsburg Empire has been reducated to two large entities: The Kaisertum Österreich and the Kingdom of Hungary) Please note, this is stated after 1804, and the "Habsburg Empire" is an unofficial apellation, and Osztrák-Császárság/Kaisertum Österreich is meaning Austrian Empire | |||
== 1538 vs 1540 == | |||
So you cannot make acknowledged something that is not valid, or legal, or just one side of the "dual perspective", because you simply reduce and propagate one unofficial and illegal perspective - as an introduced highlight -, on the other hand you want almost completely ignore the other perpective, that is fully legal. Please accept the most fair and objective proposition: | |||
According to this source, there was only one country ruled by 2 crowned kings until John I's death (1540). We know about the secret agreement of Nagyvárad in 1538 where they divided the country and Zápolya was recognized as King of Hungary, while Ferdinand was recognized as heir to the Hungarian throne. "Officially" there was only one kingdom until 1540? Shall we re-name the article as "Kingdom of Hungary (1540-1867)"? Whether it means that the medieval kingdom was ceased in 1540 "officially"? In this case we should rename and correct pages of medieval Hungarian Kingdom and Eastern Hungarian Kingdom as well. ] (]) 12:18, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
a:- We obviously modify the current lead you introduced: | |||
:If I understand correctly, it was something similar to the ]. The conflict was interrupted for 2 years (1538-1540), from the Nagyvarad / Grosswardein accord to the election of John II as King, but was resumed (1540-1570). | |||
"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor." | |||
:PS Is this article: ] useful or it should be merged / deleted? ] (]) 19:13, 18 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::: I think that we can indeed draw a parallel between the Koeran War (and the two Koreas) and the conflict between the two kings of Hungary (and later the two Hungarian kingdoms) in the 16th century. This latter was also a ''civil war'' that resulted in splitting a country. Tough the two resulting countries both had continuity with the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, but after the ''Treaty of Speyer'' , only the Habsburg king was acknowledged as the king of Hungary. Because of this and since the Habsburg part of the Kingdom of Hungary could keep its original legal traditions, it is justified that this article focuses on the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary. As for the "Hungarian campaign of 1527–1528" article, in my opinion, it should be merged to the "Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages" article. It should simply be a section of that article. It can be briefly summarized in this article, as well, in the history section. ] ] 03:57, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
b:- after we restore the former content revised by Fakirbakir | |||
:::Shouldn't we retitle the article to ]? ] redirects here, and the Habsburg rule over Royal Hungary started in 1526. The kingship dispute started in 1526 when ] was proclaimed king too ] (]) <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added 05:42, 19 April 2012 (UTC).</span><!--Template:Undated--> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
::::The current starting period is 1538 because of the ''Treaty of Nagyvárad'' , but you have a valid point that Ferdinand was already elected as the king of Hungary by (some of) the nobles in 1526 . ] ] 06:16, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
c:- after we can add both quotations from the "dual perspective": | |||
:::::I know that the year refers to the T. of Varad. However I don't know very clearly which was the status of Royal Hungary according to that treaty. Was it considered an integral part of the unitary KoHu and only under the administration of Ferdinand until the death of Zapolya? If so, there was no EHK between 1538 and 1540, but only a single Kingdom with the western part administrated by the Habsburgs. ] (]) 06:27, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
::::::It is an interesting question indeed and I admit that I do not know the precise answer. As I understand, Habsburg Ferdinand did not abdicate from the title "''king of Hungary''" (any reference that he did?) in 1538, but he and Zápolya agreed about the succession and "''the two kings formally recognized their territorial rights''" . This would also mean that 1538 should be given as the establishment date of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom. ] ] 07:38, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
“In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary. From the perspective of the "ország" (= Kingdom of Hungary), Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch." | |||
:::::::There were two rival rulers, two coronations, however nobody questioned the integrity of the medieval kingdom and its rightful boundaries until 1538. The treaty of Nagyvárad was the first treaty where the rivals determinded new boundaries. We can not talk about 2 kingdoms "legally" before 1538 in my opinion. (And actually Zápolya had bigger support among the nobles, the Habsburgs were lucky enough to keep the western counties)] (]) 09:17, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Another thing. Habsburg kingdom of Hungary continued the Hungarian legal traditions, however Hungarian historiography assumes that the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom and the latter Principality of Transylvania also preserved the legal continuity. ''All traditional Hungarian law continued to be followed scrupulously within the principality's borders'', moreover Zápolya's state was protestant!] (]) 09:24, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
I think it would resolve all claims, think about it! The similar is proposed - as I offered - in the Austrian Empire article | |||
::If the split and the creation of two kingdoms was ratified in 1538, which was the designation of the western Kingdom? Sources say Ferdinand recognized John , not "as king of Eastern Hungary". Which was the title by which Ferdinand ruled his part? I doubt that the was called King of Hungary too and that they agreed that both are Kings of Hungary ] (]) 09:48, 19 April 2012 (UTC) | |||
- we change the same way the initial of the Foundation section (a:) | |||
- we restore the Status of the Kingdom of Hungary section revised by me (thus your additional content at the end of the Creation period section bugfixed (= d:) is attached in a chronological order | |||
- we insert c: before d: | |||
(] (]) 02:18, 16 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:1. If something is formally X, it implies clearly that it is also legally X | |||
:2. The problems concerning the two articles, though related, are different and should be addressed separately. | |||
:3. Taking snippets from the Laszlo text and pasting them in reverse order is, for several reasons, not a viable solution. | |||
:4. Discourse about the situation before 1804, should not be applied to a description of the situation after 1804, unless that is clearly appropriate. This has been one of the main problems concerning this issue from when it started back in 2009. | |||
:5. About: "...wurde das Königreich Ungarn, das de jure nie verschwunden war.."… Nobody ever said it was “verschwunden”. Beside the point. | |||
:6. About: “The Habsburg Empire has been reducated to two large entities: The Kaisertum Österreich and the Kingdom of Hungary”. This is obviously a description of the post 1867 situation and not within the scope of the article. | |||
:7. Please be more specific. Indicate what text you want and where you want it and what text where should be removed. I can make head nor tails of this. ] (]) 03:49, 16 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:: | |||
1. False. If something was X and after an event still remained X, it cannot be overriden or ceased with any formality, since the meaning of the word implies it is just a formality, not legalty - a self-definitive imply. Croatia was never part of Hungary. They had a personal union for a long time. Non-experts and non-professional still thinking the opposite, similarly this case. | |||
2. I addressed a clear separate solution, but just for "formal reasons" from now on I will only post solution offers directly to the Austrian Empire article's corresponding talk page, not here. | |||
3. Ok I will work it out. | |||
4. It is clearly appropriate, since the laws regarding Kingdom of Hungary were not affected, they remained in action. | |||
5. Yes, you did not, but the way as you pasted and shortened the article and the corresponding pharagraph, hides this information from the average, non-expert reader. They finish it with "Hungary became part of Austria", and from "...the laws were unaffected.." they do not know anything what it means. You even hide the "formal" word, that was indicated on the pharagraph you removed. | |||
6. It is obviously NOT. How do you think I would commit such mistake?? Sorry, I am an expert, do not regard me as a stupid! It is CLEARLY referring to the post 1804 situation. The pre 1867 and even the post 1867 situation is with much more pharapraph later: | |||
"1867-ben a kiegyezés keretében intézményesítették a két birodalomfél perszonáluniónál szorosabb kapcsolatát: megszületett az Osztrák–Magyar Monarchia." -> (By the Ausgleich, in 1867 the two subject's closer relation than personal union was institutionalized: Austria-Hungary came to birth." | |||
7. OK. | |||
8. The consensus proposal for Kingdom of Hungary 1526-1867 (now I ignore the obvious sources just for easier connotation, but reflecting on old and new material): | |||
"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated, thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary." | |||
Please note - and I refer back to your 4. point: "Discourse about the situation before 1804, should not be applied to a description of the situation after 1804, unless that is clearly appropriate." -> HERE IS CATCH! You could now say after the is coming is in the source earlier mentioned that is indicated in the proposal before...BUT, did you noticed LASZLO SOURCE current pharapraph - unlike your assumption - is telling us ONLY after the 1804 situation, as it is started: "THE EMPIRE was not a unified state...." This proves my point and the historical truth! The Empire was only created after 1804! All the pharagraph is telling us about the situation and perspectives from each sides after this event, mentioning in the end "THE ASSUMPTION OF THE MONARCH'S NEW TITLE DID NOT IN ANY SENSE AFFECT THE LAWS AND THE CONSTITUTION OF HUNGARY" -> Article X 1790 remained unharmed, Hungary remained Regnum Independens, etc.! -> If it would not be like so, there would NOT occur any dual/contradictive perpective! | |||
This was the problem that you mixed. Anyway there is no contradiction legally. The monarch title is The Emperor of Austria, but the Emperor of Austria is also the King of Hungary. So FORMALLY he is ruling both lands, his ASSUMPTION may be a consequence of his new title, but LEGALLY Hungary as before - since now laws or constitution or status were NOT affected - remained a separate country. | |||
This is also in this and other sources that was presented, and this is the historical fact, like also the mentioned Wikipedias. Nothing more than a personal union. | |||
You should accept the form proposed, since it is logically and consequently accurate, with a proper grammar and sequence telling us about the non-conventonal situation, with all the necesary deatils, so the average reader will not have the chance to be mislead! At the same time, all perspectives are included next to the legal terms.(] (]) 01:25, 17 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:This can be shorter, basically without losing information. I'm still not in agreement with the "largely through the monarch" description when it comes to the period after 1804. I made this proposal: | |||
:“When the ] was created in 1804, it included al lands ruled by the Habsburg primogeniture within and outside of the ] but these did not lose their status and existence. This included Hungary which became part of the Empire, although it did not affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary, which in Art. X declared that Hungary was a separate land, ruled by it's own Constitution.<ref name="Péter">László Péter, , BRILL, 2012, p. 6</ref> <ref>". In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary {{Citation|last=Laszlo|first=Péter|title=Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions |publisher= Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, the Netherlands |year=2011|page=6}}</ref>,<ref>József Zachar, , In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557</ref>" | |||
:Additional info is in the references. Perhaps it is better read in the "edit source" mode. ] (]) 09:15, 17 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::The proposal you presented has these problems: | |||
::- in the first sentence you state "included all lands" that is false, since Hungary was not included | |||
::- in the second sentence you spared the most important info, that only by the Emperor's ASSUMPTION became Hungary FORMALLY part of the Empire, but not legally | |||
::- I feel you are playing with words, it seems you don't want to accept something that should be accepted, and I do not agree with such serious shortening, since you shorten mostly the most relevant information | |||
::If this is your wish to spare the sentence with the "monarch", we may work it out, but better we should remain by the original quotations since it does not have the controversy. So I would propose this: | |||
::"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary."(] (]) 23:34, 17 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:::Listen, if you write to me: “in the first sentence you state "included all lands" that is false, since Hungary was not included”, and then propose to put: “Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria” in the text of the article, I don’t know in what universe you’re living. I could go on, but I’m done here. Thank you. ] (]) 00:32, 18 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::Hebel, I wrote to you this, since if all land is included (if you don't eplicit formally) it means legally, but it if would be done legally, than the second part would be contradicted that no laws were changed, etc., although for a legal incorporation of Hungary the Regnum Independens had to be abolished! | |||
::::What you proposed it is already included in my proposal, watch: | |||
::::"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. '''Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria.''' After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary." | |||
::::Hebel I am "living in a world" where I met to many inaccuaricies, and turning out de jure things not just the articles releated to Hungary. I do no suggest you have a necessary bad aim, but I can also imagine you really believe it is fair as you are trying to interpret the case. Decide if the version showed now and highlighted what you told now you agree or not! Thanks(] (]) 01:16, 18 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:::::I know this isn't the way it's supposed to go, but I'm now referring you to the text I just posted on the talkpage of "Austrian Empire". ] (]) 02:07, 18 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
In hindsight I paste what I said about ]'s comments on the "Austrian Empire" talkpage here as well. It's better to do that: | |||
On Misplaced Pages we follow what the sources say, but we don’t get to add interpretations about what that means or doesn’t mean if the source doesn’t clearly and literally lead us there. Now, the texts you have been proposing are mostly verbatim out of the source. Which is also a problem, because I don’t think we’re supposed to do that for reasons that pertain to copyright and stuff like that. I had included in my proposal, text about Art. X pertaining to the situation after 1804, since it was clearly still on the books. We do not get to decide what that text means however. Not versus the Anglo-Saxon or whatever other models, since Laszlo doesn’t speak about it clearly and literally. We get to read the text and get to conclude that Laszlo clearly and literally includes the Kingdom of Hungary in the Austrian Imperial State. He also clearly and literally states that this didn’t affect the Hungarian constitution and laws. He described what’s in there in an earlier paragraph and that’s added as well and then we as editors are done! Especially in somewhat ambiguous situations. Also this article is not about the Constitution. We don’t need language about the reserve rights of the King. And we don’t need language about the HRE. They’re beside the point (unless it’s somehow a point we’re not supposed to make, but I really have no idea why you would want that in there) Your remarks about Formally and Assumption are honestly beyond my grasp. Also beyond my grasp is how a sentence like "formal inclusion never meant legal/lawful inclusion" makes any sense whatsoever. How can something be formal if it's not legal? And in that light, again, we don't get to interpret what the wider consequences of Art. X's contents are. We're editors, not lawyers. We just get to describe what actually happened if the sources lead us there, but we are not judges about the question whether what actually happened is against some law or not. Further I object to adding “formally” to the article text for other reasons, because (as the recent history of this article has shown) it’s ambiguous even in Laszlo’s text. According to you (if I interpret you right) it means that the whole thing was 'just' a formality. (And I say it again, even then a formality cannot be formal unless it's legal). I think he could very well have meant that the already existing facts on the ground (Habsburg Monarchy as it was until 1804) was now also formalized by the erection of new institutions, but he doesn't say one way or the other, so we don't get to judge that. Remember how someone made that "only formally"? Better left out then. ] (]) 05:09, 18 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::OK, then I will ract here and also the other page, since the root cause is related, but we could easier finish this article's problem since it is much more easier and it could conclude other solutions to the other article as well. | |||
::::I think, in Misplaced Pages we cannot be robots and just copy-pasting from a source, we are more than machines, we have to interpret, summarize, deduct and have coherence. You were told pretty much good examples when if you'd just copy paste from the sources, INVALID information would be presented in the page, but here you even want to spare the most important word that is in the original source, "FORMALLY" that is the key! | |||
::::You tell in one sentence what is "clearly still on the books". We do not get to decide what that text means however.", a bit later you make your conclusion from the written text....Don't you feel you are contradicting yourself? Laszlo clearly tell's us about the situation! | |||
::::Your conclusion is wrong since Laszlo clearly and literally tell us the Austrian Imperial State DOES NOT and CAN NOT include Kingdom of Hungary LEGALLY, since no laws changed and the Regnum Independes - separate country article also remained in action, moreover it is stated by the Diet nothing changed, just the monarch/King remained the same of both countries, thus he used the world "FORMALLY" = IN A SYMBOLIC WAY, because this is the appearance, there is one boss he rules what he has....but still he has two different titles, if it would be as you conclude, the King of Hungary title would not exist anymore, because the Emperor of Austria would be enough! Anyway, with a jurisdictional and mathematical precisity I proved you wrong, more times, with an undebatable right logic that you not any case want to accept and this is very disturbing, since Misplaced Pages cannot be a false propaganda site. And every exprienced, well-educated person knows clearly what means "formally" in any context, regarding which language you use. It NEVER meant legal or lawful in such context, where the LEGAL TERMS ARE REASSURED OFFICIALLY TO REMAIN IN ACTION THE SAME SOURCE YOU ARE REFERRING, THUS FORMALLY IN THIS CONTEXT CAN NEVER MEAN LEGALLY BECAUSE IF IT WOULD BE LIKE SO LASZLO WOULD NOT NEED TO USE THIS EXPRESSION THAT IS REALLY AN "EUPHEMISM". Laszlo is not stupid, clearly refers on the Austrian desires that never came to reality! There is not any serious event or historical things were "formally" would mean something legal or lawful. Facts are facts. When in 1944 German occupied Hungary, you could say the Germans ruled formally, but legally not, since admiral Horthy's signature and the government official operation was needed i.e. to appoint Szálasi, Hungary officially/legally still remamined a separate, sovereign country. Not any historical context such thing can be misunderstood, since always that counts that is official! It is such an evidential thing, like in Misplaced Pages you do no reference that "the sun is shining". What is legal or lawful, that is the fact, the official, and that's that. Formailites are other concepts, but interesting additions to discuss. | |||
::::So not any means I can agree about leaving out "formally" and I explained and proved so many times, as also in this recent asnwer. That is the catch, and if any legal inclusion would occur, neither the Austrian, nor the Hungarian history writing would silence about it, and we would have also a contemporary originals source. I do not explain again why formally cannot mean legally, since I proved it in this case regarding all facts, variables, etc. Similar to a conrete mathematics equation-solution, that uses that clear and fair logic every intelligent person understand, regardless they are lawyers or not. I think you also understand for sure, but for a reason it is very important for you incorporate Hungary into Austria thas was never the case, you want to hinder even the most important word and all other sources that prove the same. If no laws or any change were affected - CLEARLY WRITTEN THEN Regnum Independens - separate country is still valid - AND it is CLEARLY WRITTEN the new title did not change the relation THEN the common monarch (that you also don't like and treat like an "euphemism") is the relation between them AS IT WAS. -> HUNGARY LAWFULLY/LEGALLY remained a separate state as it was! CLEAR, like the sun is shining. Moreover, since 2011, when Laszlo wrote his book or before even Misplaced Pages came to exist, we know the Habsburgs/Austrian could never legally incporporate Hungary to their empire, since all original and contemporary documents are researchable! We also know, the average, not-expert public knowledge or opinion is SUPERFICIAL, so the primitive conclusion also for earlier times the "Habsburg Lands" or similar would be a super-state or a common country where the King/Emperor is the boss...they do not care on legalties, and that's why such clear mistakes arisen in Misplaced Pages even from learned persons that "Austro-Hungarian citizenship" -> NEVER EXISTED, Michael the Brave united the the three principalities -> NEVER EXISTED, but the latter is so much mistaken that the majority of sources contain this information and in spread all over the world in the secondary sources by a nationalistic view's by production in the 19th-20th century. Although there are original documents, even more other sources/evidence it cannot be true, even we have original native sources by high level historians who clearly tell us the truth, despite this mistake happened. That's why we are more than robot-editors, and we idetify such infromation that is VALID, TRUTHFUL and COHERENT. The GOOD FAITH behavior by editing is an essential expectation in Misplaced Pages. Thus "formally" cannot be ignored, because then a clearly false and fake information would be highlighted, and there is a great responsibility since Misplaced Pages is the 5th(?) more viewed site by the humanity! We are responsible for valid and truthful content, if this is not the goal, then everything is lost! | |||
::::Please mind this, since our debate will be never ending, since I proved the point by all manners (logic,validity,legalty,lawfullness,Misplaced Pages goals and good faith over simple rules), but still try to debate those things that cannot be debated. Please decide for now - regarding this article, that the proposal I made yesterday is acceptable for you or not. Thanks (] (]) 01:18, 19 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:::::Again, if a source clearly states something to be the case, we don’t get to rationalise, with legalistic arguments and opinions or otherwise, about how it wouldn’t be. If Laszlo says the K. of Hungary was included in the structure of the Empire of Austria, which is clearly his conclusion, then that’s it. Of course Misplaced Pages isn’t written by robots, but in matters that are particularly contentious we tread with extreme care and follow the guidelines that are laid out. We don’t get to judge what Laszlo means when he uses the term “formal”. You talk about the “primitive conclusion also for earlier times the "Habsburg Lands" or similar would be a super-state or a common country where the King/Emperor is the boss...they do not care on legalties.” Well, facts on the ground are that in the pre and post 1804 situation the King Emperor for the most part was the boss, and had very different feelings about the consequences of the legalities than some of his subjects had. You yourself mentioned an “Anglo-Saxon model” of interpreting what’s going on in this situation, thereby implying that different thought about the consequences of the legalities is at least possible. That you or I may not agree with this or that interpretation is another matter altogether, but then we tread into the murky realm of OR, so that’s better left at home. Especially in a case like this. Laszlo speaks of art. X but he doesn’t anywhere clearly and literally conclude that therefore Hungary wasn’t included in the Imperial state of 1804. Any rationalisations from our part about how that must be so, doesn’t make it so and doesn’t stand up to scrutiny if we would argue that Laszlo clearly and literally does. To answer your final question; No I don’t agree with your text. If you want you’re welcome to try again and I will read it and comment but quite frankly I don’t think we’re getting anywhere. ] (]) 02:18, 19 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::::One more thing. About the word formal(ly) and it’s meaning in this context. I have been looking for a bit and found equivalents pertaining to law situations like : accepted, affected, approved, ceremonial, confirmed, fixed, and some other. I also found that “while formally X, in practice other stuff also happens” is a way to use that word. I didn’t find any meaning of the word that meant “not really so”, which is basically what ] seems to want it to mean. I’ve already explained why I don’t like the term in this context, but I also think we’re not at power to use the word “formally” in the Hungarian situation and leave it out in, let’s say, the Bohemian one. I also wonder how art. X prevented Hungary from being a participant in the Imperial State, while it was apparently no impediment to becoming a part of a Real Union (]) with Austria. ] (]) 15:43, 19 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::::No, you turn everything from your viewpoint, it is obvious what means formally, but as I see since 2009 your goal is coup these articles with your claim. You are the only one who sees formally different as it is obvius I proved also why. Also in Hungarian, or a Hungarian author written in English there is no doubt of the meaning of the word. It's not about liking or not liking, for this I already agreed to leave "through the common monarch", you want to corrupt the original source and distort it! Jesus Christ, Bohemia was incorporated as a cronwland in the Austrian Empire, legally! How to mix this case here? Seems you read but you do not want to get, that is obvious for everybody, how many times I explained, it's impossible still not understanding the case! I explained also more times Austria-Hungary, but you still do not get that also by Austria-Hungary Hungary still remained a separate state as before always! As also Austria was a separate state, with his own citizenship, Diet, laws, constitution, etc. Nothing common between them! Only the Kaiser und König are the same, there are some joint ministries, but that's all, officially they are Austria-Hungary, a union of two states by the Emperor brought on more ties as before, but still remaining separate states. The difference was the Austrians allegedly regarded Hungarians as equal part with lawful joint personal union where the two countries remained separate. So article X was not harmed. The only plus was some joint ministries for international affairs. That's why there was never an Austro-Hungarian citizenship, and never even a dual citizenship between the two countries. It was not a union like West-Germany or East-Germany to join in in one country, but the two countries formed an union where they act together for international affairs but they remain separate. Croatia or Hungary had also never common citizenship, two separate countries on personal union! It is useless to continue since everything is crystal clear, but for a reason you pretend not to understand, andI am very much sorry for that. Let's wait for what ] has to say, as you said a few days earlier, and after we will go on!(] (]) 01:40, 20 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
::::::::We should use and cite our sources properly. We must show all substantial views even if they are different. I think we must emphasize that the Austrian emperors ruled Hungary as "kings" not as emperors, it is very important. ] (]) 09:10, 20 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I must mention that the Grand Principality of Transylvania which used to be an integral part of the medieval Hungarian kingdom and after the Ottoman era was controlled by imperial governors, was still part of the Lands of the Hungarian Crown. The Habsburgs acknowledged that it was part of the Hungarian kingdom, although, it wasn't incorporated into Hungary proper (but were promised). According to the Art. 1741 XVIII, 1.§, "She,, her heirs will possess and rule Transylvania -which belongs to the Holy Crown of Hungary- as Kings of Hungary." ] (]) 09:12, 20 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
Fakirbakir, you write: "I think we must emphasize that the Austrian emperors ruled Hungary as "kings" not as emperors, it is very important." When it comes to the rule over Hungary as such, I fully agree (the Emperors obviously ruled over the whole Empire but could not act as such in matters pertaining to Hungary), and I think language to the effect that Hungarian matters were ruled by its king, can and should be added to the article. For the moment I suggest awaiting further developments because at the moment I don't feel at privilege to add any earlier proposals made in this discussion. ] (]) 15:24, 20 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
What's the difference between the pre-1867 and the post-1867 status of the K. of Hungary? | |||
I found an interesting material referring to the status of Hungary in that times. I recomend you to read these chapters: | |||
* | |||
* | |||
The material above was published in the 19th century.] (]) 12:38, 21 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
], where did "Article X of 1790 belong? Was it an article from a law, or an article from a diploma? How do we know that it was in effect after 1804? Please give more details ] (]) 23:33, 28 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:It was a special Act, the 10th of 1790. The Diet passed it. So if we have to choose between your "offers", it is a law. We know it was in effect, becase there was not any Act/law/Diploma/etc. that would repeal or nullify it, moreover the new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript.(] (]) 01:23, 29 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
::], according to your view, what's the difference between the pre-1867 and the post-1867 status of the K. of Hungary? According to the ] article: | |||
::"The Compromise re-established partially the sovereignty of the ], separate from, and no longer subject to the ]. Under the Compromise, the lands of the ] were reorganized as a ] between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary. The ]n (Austrian) and ]n (Hungarian) regions of the state were governed by separate parliaments and prime ministers. Unity was maintained through rule of a single head of state, reigning as both the Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, and common monarchy-wide ministries of foreign affairs, defence and finance under his direct authority. The armed forces were combined with the Emperor-King as commander-in-chief." ] (]) 07:57, 29 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::It re-established the sovereignty of the KOH, of course, because after 1849 the Hungarian kingdom lost all its privileges.The differences between pre-(prior to 1848) and post- KOH (after 1867) are represented well by the 12 points of 1848 ]. The points were mostly granted after 1867. ] (]) 18:43, 29 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::Don't misunderstand the points. For example, even before 1848 there was a kind of "national army". The KUK (Kaiserlich-königliche Armee) "Imperial and Royal Army", was born in the 18th century and consisted of separate Hungarian units. The word "konig" referred to the Hungarian kingdom, however the army was controlled almost entirely by the Habsburgs. ] (]) 21:11, 29 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::123Steller, | |||
::::I know the text from the article, it is considered fair. The difference is, before the Austrian Empire and Kingdom of Hungary had the same ruler, this was the main connection, after 1867 the Austrians allegedly recognized all rights of the Hungary, and the personal union was developed to a more tight union, i.e. joint-institutions and appearance to the external affairs as Austria-Hungary meanwhile the two countries remain separate inside.(] (]) 01:06, 30 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:::::I'm proposing to add this text to the body article somewhere and then make one reference to it in the lead. I've not added the references yet, but it is language that is not ] and also not overtly legalistic. It reflects what the secondary sources say anyway without relying on interpretation from our side: | |||
:::::"In 1804 the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II, who was also the King of Hungary and ruler of the other dynastic lands of the Habsburg dynasty, founded the Empire of Austria in which Hungary and all his other dynastic lands were included. In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy, that had functioned as a composite monarchy for about three hundred years before. The workings of the overarching structure and the status of the new “Kaiserthum’s” component lands at first stayed much as they had been under the composite monarchy that existed before 1804. This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary, whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm. In the new situation there were therefore no Imperial institutions involved in it’s internal government.” | |||
:::::] (]) 11:30, 31 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
::::::I think your text proposal is good and would not mind adding it to the article. ] (]) 17:46, 31 December 2015 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Just because of ], I would accept ]'s proposal, if: | |||
:::::::1. The following addition (bold) would be in this sentence: "This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary '''that was a regnum Independens''', whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm." | |||
:::::::2. The proposition should replace this in the lead -> "In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (including Hungary), largely without changing the status quo that existed between them before 1804." and the article's body should remain unchanged.(] (]) 09:12, 1 January 2016 (UTC)) | |||
::::::::Well, we can't go on about this forever. I'm against point 1. It's 18th century primary source legal language of which the meaning is (apparently) unclear or under some contention and which therefore invites OR interpretation. We should follow the secondary sources. The secondary source involved, (Laszlo) makes it "seperate realm". So should we. | |||
::::::::I'm afraid that for technical reasons, I'm also against point two. If something is not in the body article, it has no place in the lead as well. The lead is supposed to summarize what's in the body article. I'm willing however to make new suggestions (or listen to other suggestions) for the summarisation in the lead. Having read my own text back it says "they" where it should have been "it" at some points. And of course the references still need to be added as well. I realise that the part where Laszlo quotes "Regnum Independens" should be added to the verbatim quote that is in one of the references. Simply because it's in there on the same page and because we refer to it in the text. ] (]) 15:52, 1 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
I'll do some additional work on this tonight and / or tomorrow. Happy New Year everybody! ] (]) 16:05, 1 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
:Come to think of it....What about this at the end of the text I proposed earlier: ".....as it had been under the composite monarchy, in which it had always been considered a separate Realm. '''Article X of 1790, that was added to Hungary's constitution during the phase of the composite monarchy uses the Latin phrase "Regnum Independens".''' In the new situation therefore, no Imperial institutions were involved in it’s internal government.” Without the bolding of course. That would be fine with me, as it mentions the term but does not describe or interprets it and makes no suggestions of what it would or would not mean in 21st century language. ] (]) 16:23, 1 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
Is it necessary to use the German term ''Kaiserthum''? As far as I know, it has the same meaning as the English word ''Empire''. ] (]) 23:02, 1 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
:], | |||
:"In 1804 the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II, who was also the King of Hungary and ruler of the other dynastic lands of the Habsburg dynasty, founded the Empire of Austria in which Hungary and all his other dynastic lands were included. In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy, that had functioned as a composite monarchy for about three hundred years before. The workings of the overarching structure and the status of the new “Kaiserthum’s” component lands at first stayed much as they had been under the composite monarchy that existed before 1804. This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary, whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm. Article X of 1790, that was added to Hungary's constitution during the phase of the composite monarchy uses the Latin phrase "Regnum Independens". In the new situation there were therefore no Imperial institutions involved in it’s internal government.” -> If this you proposed, it is accepted. | |||
: Point 2. -> Since it is an article about Hungary, and the body - thank's God - were undebated and unaltered, not any chance of further "flame" should be provoked, since anyway more articles should be fixed. The lead gives a short overview of the timeline, and this is totally fitting in it, no further mention or details are necesarry here, better the Austrian Empire article needs more special details about this. | |||
:Many times the Anglo-Saxon terminology used is not the proper translation because such term did not even existed or interpreted there, or the distinction was not (historically) apparent to have a more detailed trace in sources. I.e. Kaiserthum = Császárság, Empire = Birodalom in Hungarian, and not necessarily used as an identical designation, although they are very similar. It has also a historical ground in older sources which term was used or interpreted. I.e. the evolution is caeasar = császár = Kaiser császárság -> "entity ruled by the császár". An Empire is also can be identical, since one person is ruling all over. I.e. regarding the Holy Roman Empire, both Hungarian names are accepted or used: Német-Római Császárság / Német-Római Birodalom. But regarding some other entities, only one term is used - Római Birodalom / Roman Empire although Caesar is deriving from it - / - Német Birodalom (Deutsches Kaiserreich) better than Német Császárság. Anyway, I have no opposition to Kaiserthum, since the original German expression is the most unambigous designation. Schönes neues Jahr für Alle!(] (]) 07:59, 2 January 2016 (UTC)) | |||
::Good, thanks all. Basically English has the same problem with the wordt Empire. It can denote an Imperial State (Empire of Austria, Empire of Russia), but also a political territory with a vast domain (Portuguese Empire or British Empire). Although I don't think Birodalom and "Kaiserthum" are in any way equivalent. I'm still in favour of putting the text proposed (with references) in the body article). If it proves to difficult to put text in the lead, we don't have to mention it there at all. ] (]) 09:48, 2 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
:::I left only this in the lead, slightly reworded: "The ''']''' between 1526 and 1867 was, while outside the ], part of the lands of the ], that became the ] in 1804." The second part has gone from the lead. The other text with references I put on a (hopefully appropriate spot) in the article). ] (]) 10:25, 2 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
::::OK, shall it be, this issue has been resolved! The article will be added to the watchlist with a top importance to avoid such escalation in the future!(] (]) 07:26, 3 January 2016 (UTC)) | |||
I created the red link ]. If it is a distinct concept, it should be defined in its own article. ] (]) 23:10, 3 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
:Thanks ]. I created a very short article on the concept. So the link isn't red anymore. I don't think it's different from Empire (in the sense of a state ruled by an Emperor) and I personally wouldn't mind changing it to Empire or Imperial State. But that might prove difficult. ] (]) 23:21, 3 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
{{reflist-talk}} | |||
== False classification of the article == | |||
Hungary is/was in Central-Europe, not Eastern-Europe, Jesus, what a mistake! thus the "B-Class Eastern Europe articles", "Mid-importance Eastern Europe articles", "WikiProject Eastern Europe articles" categories should be removed! Even Wikiproject Eastern-Europe has the same mistake and falsely containing Hungary along with more Central-European countries, they will be notified also!(] (]) 02:53, 27 December 2015 (UTC)) | |||
:During the soviet era, central europe effectively disappeared and the east/west split is probably the most useful classification. Of course, this article relates to earlier history. There is no agreed definition of what central-europe is/was and, indeed, parts of the Kingdom of Hungary during this period are now often regarded as being in eastern europe while other, like modern Hungary, are often put in central-europe. ] (]) 10:35, 2 January 2016 (UTC) | |||
::], Misplaced Pages or any party should not support the communist division in Europe with full of illegalities! The definiton of Central-Europe is geographically totally agreed and undebated. Becuase the iron curtain the false classification became widespreadly distributed and are still heavily under cristicism and it became the symbol of ignorance, although even the Unites States knows that Hungary is a Central-European country, although we know the Americans are traditionally not the experts of geographical situation of little countries on different continents. The borders have been changed, that's why the confusion is you are speaking about, but also Kingdom of Hungary belonged in all manners to Central-Europe, since Transylvania delimited with the Carpathian mountains is also historical part of the region. Since today's Romania's bigger part of her territory - as the historical Romania - belongs/belonged to already Eastern-Europe, that's why today it is also classified there despite of the Transylvanian+other regions part of Central Europe. Anyway, modern border's cannot rewrite geographical borders. So we will never accept a false classification as we heavily oppose to commemorate in such a way the communist occupation!(] (]) 07:40, 3 January 2016 (UTC)) | |||
== Motto == | |||
It should be ''Regnum Mariae Patrona'''e''' Hungariae''. The current phrase means "Mary's realm, patroness of Hungary", as if the realm was the patroness, not Mary. ] (]) 16:20, 24 April 2017 (UTC) |
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Requested move 2013
- The following discussion is an archived discussion of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the proposal was moved. --BDD (talk) 23:35, 6 August 2013 (UTC)
Kingdom of Hungary (1538–1867) → Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867) – 1538 as a starting date cannot be substantiated by reliable sources. Please also comment on Talk:Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1538) Borsoka (talk) 04:07, 29 July 2013 (UTC)
- Support. As we discussed it here Talk:Kingdom_of_Hungary_(1000–1538)#Why_1538?. Fakirbakir (talk) 07:49, 29 July 2013 (UTC)
- Support, Hungarian historiography markes the year of 1526 as a dividing line. --Norden1990 (talk) 17:38, 29 July 2013 (UTC)
- The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.
Austrian Empire 1804-1867
The article states that "The kingdom was only formally part of Empire of Austria. It was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript, thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch.". The source quoted (Laszlo) however is grossly misinterpreted. Take in mind that there was no Empire of Austria before 1804. Laszlo actually writes on page six of the quoted source: "From the perspective of the Court, since 1723 regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty’s three main branches on both Lines. From the perspective of the orstzág, Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch. The Imperial matters- foreign policy, defence and state finance- were handled by the monarch as a reservata exercized by him as the king of Hungary. In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of of the Empire of Austria. The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary." It seems that statements by Laszlo that are in the article have nothing to say about the period 1804-1867, but pertain mostly to the situation as it existed before 1804. I will attempt a rewrite of the fragment in the article. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 20:30, 19 May 2015 (UTC)
- Laszlo clearly says that after 1804 the Hungarian kingdom was joined to Austria "largely" through the monarch. "After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript, thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch." Fakirbakir (talk) 13:27, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- Laszlo doesn't say that. Try reading the fragment better. Laszlo talks about the pre 1804 situation. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 13:29, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- What? No, Laszlo talks about the situation around 1804. It was me who inserted Laszlo's opinion into the article. I know well what he wrote. The Francis I proclaimed the rescript after the announcement of Empire of Austria because he wanted to calm down the Hungarian diet. Fakirbakir (talk) 13:35, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- When Laszlo says that the Hungarian kingdom was joined to Austria "largely" through the monarch" he is in a discourse about the pre 1804 situation. He then goes on to say that after 1804, Hungary formally became part of the Empire, which is a step further. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 13:43, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- user:Fakirbakir, You do realize I hope that the text you tried to restore here, differs quite substantially from the text you and Keingir tried to restore at Austrian Empire? Gerard von Hebel (talk) 14:02, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- Please take a look at the paragraph (in the book). Laszlo says in the first sentence that "the empire wasn't a unified state but a monarchic union of Lands". Laszlo analyses the legal framework of the kingdom from the perspective of 1804. If my understanding is correct the rescript of 1804 reaffirmed the stipulation of Article X of 1790, therefore according to Laszlo during the period (before and after 1804) the kingdom was connected to the empire largely through the monarch.... Fakirbakir (talk) 14:17, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- That's not entirely the way I read it. The moment he mentions 1804 seems like a transfer to a new situation to me, in which "largely through the monarch" must get a different meaning. Also the "monarchic union of Lands" seems to pertain to the Habsburg Monarchy more than the Empire of Austria. As in "just a personal union <1804" versus "more than just a personal union >1804", although other pre 1804 notions remain largely unchanged afterwards. The present text in the article does not deny that. Empire is a word with more than one meaning. It's not just pertaining to an Imperial state. I feel Laszlo is using it to describe the Habsburg Monarchy rather than the Imperial state. Here's what. I wrote something. For THIS article mind you. If you can live with that I can as well:
- Please take a look at the paragraph (in the book). Laszlo says in the first sentence that "the empire wasn't a unified state but a monarchic union of Lands". Laszlo analyses the legal framework of the kingdom from the perspective of 1804. If my understanding is correct the rescript of 1804 reaffirmed the stipulation of Article X of 1790, therefore according to Laszlo during the period (before and after 1804) the kingdom was connected to the empire largely through the monarch.... Fakirbakir (talk) 14:17, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- user:Fakirbakir, You do realize I hope that the text you tried to restore here, differs quite substantially from the text you and Keingir tried to restore at Austrian Empire? Gerard von Hebel (talk) 14:02, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
"As article X of ……….. (whatever it was, I forgot) of 1790 stipulated, Hungary was a regnum independens, a separate Land . After the proclamation of the Empire of Austria in 1804, which came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (including Hungary) this did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript .,"
And then there's the quotes of course.... You should read it in the editing mode. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 14:43, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- user:fakirbakir, I'm also trying to write something to better explain myself and what I'm on about (and not on about) in the light of what is and was in the article and in Laszlo's book. That won't be before tomorrow so please bare with me. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 15:33, 14 December 2015 (UTC)
- I read the complete section and Fakirbakir has right, as you read, it is totally wrong! But even if would accept you way of interpreting, it also does not have a sense, because any "assumption" and "formal" thing has no connection with the corresponding legal laws, articles and agreements. I can assume anything, it does not matter, until it is not written or justified legally. You should introduce a contemporary legal document to prove your claims, but such did not exist. Yes, Misplaced Pages referenced sources can be cited, but the good sense also needed to add only such material that is supporting the facts. Your dubios and far-fetched interpretation anyway fails, assumptions and formality has nothing to do with any legalty! (KIENGIR (talk) 00:07, 15 December 2015 (UTC))
Hello user:Fakirbakir. For some time now I’ve taken issue with the pov of some editors that somehow, the Kingdom of Hungary was not included in the Empire of Austria as it existed from 1804-1848 and from 1849-1867. This goes against all historiographical notions you can think of. Even if much can be said (and it can) to see another perspective as well. Laszlo writes: “From the perspective of the Court, since 1723 regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty’s three main branches on both Lines. From the perspective of the orstzág, Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch.” I think that’s a very important sentence because it highlights the dual nature of the situation as it existed in the 18th century. Not just a personal union between separate states, but also (because of the big clout the monarch had) part of an informal state union. What changed in 1804 was that the Court side of this equation was institutionalised in a more formal way than it had been before. An overarching Imperial state was erected. As Laszlo says: “In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria”. That is what I want to be acknowledged clearly in this article and some others. And ‘formally’ here doesn’t mean ‘just formally’ . It means that a situation on the ground in which the mutual monarch already had substantial overarching power, was formalised. That however doesn’t take away that, and I quote Laszlo: “the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary”, which should be clearly reflected as well. After 1804 it wasn’t just “largely through the monarch” anymore (although “just” is a euphemism, the monarch carried great power before and after 1804) but also through a new institution. Nobody says that the Kingdom of Hungary went out of existence after 1804. It did however became one of the countries that came together in an institution that replaced the more informal union that the Habsburg Monarchy was. That institution was the new Imperial State. The perspective of “the orstzág” remained, but there was a change in that perspective as well. I hope that you have noticed that your original text (with which I had some trouble as well) from this article was butchered and stuffed by users Balkony and Prudoncty for use on other articles Austrian Empire and Ausgleich. The original text from this article at least made sense internally, although I have issues with it and with the way it reflected the Laszlo source. The “Status of Hungary” text that Balkony and Prudoncty made for the other articles is internally contradictive and contradicts the sources i.m.o. I hope we can make a good text here. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 01:16, 15 December 2015 (UTC)
- Hebel, you think you can distract us? You repeat and copy-paste the same with the totally one-sided and twisted interpretation, so suspicious what is your real goal with this. What is sure, the article will be never good or valid as it would remain as you like, no way! So let's see weher you argumentation fails (again and again):
1. "This goes against all historiographical notions you can think of." -> This is your POW an also other's POW, who are not real experts, anyway showing the forever wish of the Austrian Emperor - and nowadays also some anti-Hungarian nationalists - that he never could achive in any legal terms
2. Was ever changed or ceased "Article X of 1790" ? The dual nature is thing I proposed to mention in the section you want to hide, so the reader can also have this information, but if a country is Regnum Independes, it is Regnum Independens - as the Hungarian Crown was always so precious because it was not a vassal crown unlike in other crownlands
3. "Informal" state union??? Impossible, union, personal union are very different, and also the lazy interpretation of this lead many conflicts in Misplaced Pages regarding i.e. Romanian and Croatian history - I know because I was involved in this, I even won an ANI incident and since the the factual and correct interpretation is on Misplaced Pages, one of the biggest victory ever "any secondary source (without proof or factuality)" vs. "historical fact with contemporary documentary evidence". In this case the majority of sources were even against the facts, all of them were secondary and one-sided POW's of some late authors, but it so much spread into the library and the reference contents that the falsified information also by quantity overcome on the reality. Hungary never united with Austria in history. I hope I don't have to explain the "formal" and "informal" notions clearly meaning "not legal".
4. "Court side of this equation was institutionalised in a more formal way than it had been before." -> "more formal" what is that, sorry? Again LEGAL or NOT LEGAL, this is what counts! You repeat again the same quotation I think we all know from our head, but your propagated secondary source are telling us "assumptions" and "formalities" from a certain POW. Nothing legal. As I told, about such assumptions, views, evaluations we accept to write in the Status of the Kingdom of Hungary section just to make more colorful the article, next to the raw facts.
5. again, "formalised"....?? So what? “the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary” -> then what was affected? The separate country status was also not affected...so what we are speaking of?
6. "After 1804 it wasn’t just “largely through the monarch” anymore (although “just” is a euphemism, the monarch carried great power before and after 1804) but also through a new institution." -> So what? Did this change Hungary's separate country status? No.
7. "in an institution that replaced the more informal union that the Habsburg Monarchy was. That institution was the new Imperial State." -> and if Hungary's laws, connstitution, etc, Regnum Independens status is still valid, how could Hungary be member of a "new state"?
8. I don't see, and also other's did not see any contradictions on the former content, and already Fakirbakir rendered them just to comply more with your demands. You continously pinpointing own two prespective, that is anyway contradictive, regarding Austrian-Hungarian relations in history it is not surprising. I don't see any reason to hinder one "perspective" on the other based on a source with any clear legal statement. At least you acknowledge Hungary did not disappeared, but other's ignorantly finish the case like "it was part of the Austrian Empire" and off, like a disabled entity confused with a real crownland that was really a forever-hereditary incorporated land in the Austrian Empire. Anyway, just for curiosity, I checked other Wikipedias on the subject (i.e. German/Hungarian obviously) and your supported POW is completely lacking. Two important quotations I would present:
- "...wurde das Königreich Ungarn, das de jure nie verschwunden war.." (..so Kingdom of Hungary that de jure never disappeared..."
- "A Habsburg Birodalom így két nagy egységre redukálódott: az Osztrák Császárságra és a Magyar Királyságra." (The Habsburg Empire has been reducated to two large entities: The Kaisertum Österreich and the Kingdom of Hungary) Please note, this is stated after 1804, and the "Habsburg Empire" is an unofficial apellation, and Osztrák-Császárság/Kaisertum Österreich is meaning Austrian Empire
So you cannot make acknowledged something that is not valid, or legal, or just one side of the "dual perspective", because you simply reduce and propagate one unofficial and illegal perspective - as an introduced highlight -, on the other hand you want almost completely ignore the other perpective, that is fully legal. Please accept the most fair and objective proposition:
a:- We obviously modify the current lead you introduced:
"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor."
b:- after we restore the former content revised by Fakirbakir
c:- after we can add both quotations from the "dual perspective":
“In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary. From the perspective of the "ország" (= Kingdom of Hungary), Hungary was a regnum independens, a seperate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. Hungary was connected to the other lands of the Empire largely through the monarch."
I think it would resolve all claims, think about it! The similar is proposed - as I offered - in the Austrian Empire article
- we change the same way the initial of the Foundation section (a:)
- we restore the Status of the Kingdom of Hungary section revised by me (thus your additional content at the end of the Creation period section bugfixed (= d:) is attached in a chronological order
- we insert c: before d:
(KIENGIR (talk) 02:18, 16 December 2015 (UTC))
- 1. If something is formally X, it implies clearly that it is also legally X
- 2. The problems concerning the two articles, though related, are different and should be addressed separately.
- 3. Taking snippets from the Laszlo text and pasting them in reverse order is, for several reasons, not a viable solution.
- 4. Discourse about the situation before 1804, should not be applied to a description of the situation after 1804, unless that is clearly appropriate. This has been one of the main problems concerning this issue from when it started back in 2009.
- 5. About: "...wurde das Königreich Ungarn, das de jure nie verschwunden war.."… Nobody ever said it was “verschwunden”. Beside the point.
- 6. About: “The Habsburg Empire has been reducated to two large entities: The Kaisertum Österreich and the Kingdom of Hungary”. This is obviously a description of the post 1867 situation and not within the scope of the article.
- 7. Please be more specific. Indicate what text you want and where you want it and what text where should be removed. I can make head nor tails of this. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 03:49, 16 December 2015 (UTC)
1. False. If something was X and after an event still remained X, it cannot be overriden or ceased with any formality, since the meaning of the word implies it is just a formality, not legalty - a self-definitive imply. Croatia was never part of Hungary. They had a personal union for a long time. Non-experts and non-professional still thinking the opposite, similarly this case.
2. I addressed a clear separate solution, but just for "formal reasons" from now on I will only post solution offers directly to the Austrian Empire article's corresponding talk page, not here.
3. Ok I will work it out.
4. It is clearly appropriate, since the laws regarding Kingdom of Hungary were not affected, they remained in action.
5. Yes, you did not, but the way as you pasted and shortened the article and the corresponding pharagraph, hides this information from the average, non-expert reader. They finish it with "Hungary became part of Austria", and from "...the laws were unaffected.." they do not know anything what it means. You even hide the "formal" word, that was indicated on the pharagraph you removed.
6. It is obviously NOT. How do you think I would commit such mistake?? Sorry, I am an expert, do not regard me as a stupid! It is CLEARLY referring to the post 1804 situation. The pre 1867 and even the post 1867 situation is with much more pharapraph later:
"1867-ben a kiegyezés keretében intézményesítették a két birodalomfél perszonáluniónál szorosabb kapcsolatát: megszületett az Osztrák–Magyar Monarchia." -> (By the Ausgleich, in 1867 the two subject's closer relation than personal union was institutionalized: Austria-Hungary came to birth."
7. OK.
8. The consensus proposal for Kingdom of Hungary 1526-1867 (now I ignore the obvious sources just for easier connotation, but reflecting on old and new material):
"In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated, thus the country was part of the other Lands of the empire largely through the monarch. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary."
Please note - and I refer back to your 4. point: "Discourse about the situation before 1804, should not be applied to a description of the situation after 1804, unless that is clearly appropriate." -> HERE IS CATCH! You could now say after the is coming is in the source earlier mentioned that is indicated in the proposal before...BUT, did you noticed LASZLO SOURCE current pharapraph - unlike your assumption - is telling us ONLY after the 1804 situation, as it is started: "THE EMPIRE was not a unified state...." This proves my point and the historical truth! The Empire was only created after 1804! All the pharagraph is telling us about the situation and perspectives from each sides after this event, mentioning in the end "THE ASSUMPTION OF THE MONARCH'S NEW TITLE DID NOT IN ANY SENSE AFFECT THE LAWS AND THE CONSTITUTION OF HUNGARY" -> Article X 1790 remained unharmed, Hungary remained Regnum Independens, etc.! -> If it would not be like so, there would NOT occur any dual/contradictive perpective!
This was the problem that you mixed. Anyway there is no contradiction legally. The monarch title is The Emperor of Austria, but the Emperor of Austria is also the King of Hungary. So FORMALLY he is ruling both lands, his ASSUMPTION may be a consequence of his new title, but LEGALLY Hungary as before - since now laws or constitution or status were NOT affected - remained a separate country.
This is also in this and other sources that was presented, and this is the historical fact, like also the mentioned Wikipedias. Nothing more than a personal union.
You should accept the form proposed, since it is logically and consequently accurate, with a proper grammar and sequence telling us about the non-conventonal situation, with all the necesary deatils, so the average reader will not have the chance to be mislead! At the same time, all perspectives are included next to the legal terms.(KIENGIR (talk) 01:25, 17 December 2015 (UTC))
- This can be shorter, basically without losing information. I'm still not in agreement with the "largely through the monarch" description when it comes to the period after 1804. I made this proposal:
- “When the Empire of Austria was created in 1804, it included al lands ruled by the Habsburg primogeniture within and outside of the Holy Roman Empire but these did not lose their status and existence. This included Hungary which became part of the Empire, although it did not affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary, which in Art. X declared that Hungary was a separate land, ruled by it's own Constitution. ,"
- Additional info is in the references. Perhaps it is better read in the "edit source" mode. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 09:15, 17 December 2015 (UTC)
- The proposal you presented has these problems:
- - in the first sentence you state "included all lands" that is false, since Hungary was not included
- - in the second sentence you spared the most important info, that only by the Emperor's ASSUMPTION became Hungary FORMALLY part of the Empire, but not legally
- - I feel you are playing with words, it seems you don't want to accept something that should be accepted, and I do not agree with such serious shortening, since you shorten mostly the most relevant information
- If this is your wish to spare the sentence with the "monarch", we may work it out, but better we should remain by the original quotations since it does not have the controversy. So I would propose this:
- "In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary."(KIENGIR (talk) 23:34, 17 December 2015 (UTC))
- Listen, if you write to me: “in the first sentence you state "included all lands" that is false, since Hungary was not included”, and then propose to put: “Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria” in the text of the article, I don’t know in what universe you’re living. I could go on, but I’m done here. Thank you. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 00:32, 18 December 2015 (UTC)
- Hebel, I wrote to you this, since if all land is included (if you don't eplicit formally) it means legally, but it if would be done legally, than the second part would be contradicted that no laws were changed, etc., although for a legal incorporation of Hungary the Regnum Independens had to be abolished!
- What you proposed it is already included in my proposal, watch:
- "In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. After the cessation of the Holy Roman Empire (Kingdom of Hungary was not part of it) the new title of the Habsburg rulers (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. The Imperial matters - foreign policy, defense and state finance - were handled by the monarch as reservata exercised him as the King of Hungary."
- Hebel I am "living in a world" where I met to many inaccuaricies, and turning out de jure things not just the articles releated to Hungary. I do no suggest you have a necessary bad aim, but I can also imagine you really believe it is fair as you are trying to interpret the case. Decide if the version showed now and highlighted what you told now you agree or not! Thanks(KIENGIR (talk) 01:16, 18 December 2015 (UTC))
- I know this isn't the way it's supposed to go, but I'm now referring you to the text I just posted on the talkpage of "Austrian Empire". Gerard von Hebel (talk) 02:07, 18 December 2015 (UTC)
- Hebel I am "living in a world" where I met to many inaccuaricies, and turning out de jure things not just the articles releated to Hungary. I do no suggest you have a necessary bad aim, but I can also imagine you really believe it is fair as you are trying to interpret the case. Decide if the version showed now and highlighted what you told now you agree or not! Thanks(KIENGIR (talk) 01:16, 18 December 2015 (UTC))
In hindsight I paste what I said about User:KIENGIR's comments on the "Austrian Empire" talkpage here as well. It's better to do that:
On Misplaced Pages we follow what the sources say, but we don’t get to add interpretations about what that means or doesn’t mean if the source doesn’t clearly and literally lead us there. Now, the texts you have been proposing are mostly verbatim out of the source. Which is also a problem, because I don’t think we’re supposed to do that for reasons that pertain to copyright and stuff like that. I had included in my proposal, text about Art. X pertaining to the situation after 1804, since it was clearly still on the books. We do not get to decide what that text means however. Not versus the Anglo-Saxon or whatever other models, since Laszlo doesn’t speak about it clearly and literally. We get to read the text and get to conclude that Laszlo clearly and literally includes the Kingdom of Hungary in the Austrian Imperial State. He also clearly and literally states that this didn’t affect the Hungarian constitution and laws. He described what’s in there in an earlier paragraph and that’s added as well and then we as editors are done! Especially in somewhat ambiguous situations. Also this article is not about the Constitution. We don’t need language about the reserve rights of the King. And we don’t need language about the HRE. They’re beside the point (unless it’s somehow a point we’re not supposed to make, but I really have no idea why you would want that in there) Your remarks about Formally and Assumption are honestly beyond my grasp. Also beyond my grasp is how a sentence like "formal inclusion never meant legal/lawful inclusion" makes any sense whatsoever. How can something be formal if it's not legal? And in that light, again, we don't get to interpret what the wider consequences of Art. X's contents are. We're editors, not lawyers. We just get to describe what actually happened if the sources lead us there, but we are not judges about the question whether what actually happened is against some law or not. Further I object to adding “formally” to the article text for other reasons, because (as the recent history of this article has shown) it’s ambiguous even in Laszlo’s text. According to you (if I interpret you right) it means that the whole thing was 'just' a formality. (And I say it again, even then a formality cannot be formal unless it's legal). I think he could very well have meant that the already existing facts on the ground (Habsburg Monarchy as it was until 1804) was now also formalized by the erection of new institutions, but he doesn't say one way or the other, so we don't get to judge that. Remember how someone made that "only formally"? Better left out then. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 05:09, 18 December 2015 (UTC)
- OK, then I will ract here and also the other page, since the root cause is related, but we could easier finish this article's problem since it is much more easier and it could conclude other solutions to the other article as well.
- I think, in Misplaced Pages we cannot be robots and just copy-pasting from a source, we are more than machines, we have to interpret, summarize, deduct and have coherence. You were told pretty much good examples when if you'd just copy paste from the sources, INVALID information would be presented in the page, but here you even want to spare the most important word that is in the original source, "FORMALLY" that is the key!
- You tell in one sentence what is "clearly still on the books". We do not get to decide what that text means however.", a bit later you make your conclusion from the written text....Don't you feel you are contradicting yourself? Laszlo clearly tell's us about the situation!
- Your conclusion is wrong since Laszlo clearly and literally tell us the Austrian Imperial State DOES NOT and CAN NOT include Kingdom of Hungary LEGALLY, since no laws changed and the Regnum Independes - separate country article also remained in action, moreover it is stated by the Diet nothing changed, just the monarch/King remained the same of both countries, thus he used the world "FORMALLY" = IN A SYMBOLIC WAY, because this is the appearance, there is one boss he rules what he has....but still he has two different titles, if it would be as you conclude, the King of Hungary title would not exist anymore, because the Emperor of Austria would be enough! Anyway, with a jurisdictional and mathematical precisity I proved you wrong, more times, with an undebatable right logic that you not any case want to accept and this is very disturbing, since Misplaced Pages cannot be a false propaganda site. And every exprienced, well-educated person knows clearly what means "formally" in any context, regarding which language you use. It NEVER meant legal or lawful in such context, where the LEGAL TERMS ARE REASSURED OFFICIALLY TO REMAIN IN ACTION THE SAME SOURCE YOU ARE REFERRING, THUS FORMALLY IN THIS CONTEXT CAN NEVER MEAN LEGALLY BECAUSE IF IT WOULD BE LIKE SO LASZLO WOULD NOT NEED TO USE THIS EXPRESSION THAT IS REALLY AN "EUPHEMISM". Laszlo is not stupid, clearly refers on the Austrian desires that never came to reality! There is not any serious event or historical things were "formally" would mean something legal or lawful. Facts are facts. When in 1944 German occupied Hungary, you could say the Germans ruled formally, but legally not, since admiral Horthy's signature and the government official operation was needed i.e. to appoint Szálasi, Hungary officially/legally still remamined a separate, sovereign country. Not any historical context such thing can be misunderstood, since always that counts that is official! It is such an evidential thing, like in Misplaced Pages you do no reference that "the sun is shining". What is legal or lawful, that is the fact, the official, and that's that. Formailites are other concepts, but interesting additions to discuss.
- So not any means I can agree about leaving out "formally" and I explained and proved so many times, as also in this recent asnwer. That is the catch, and if any legal inclusion would occur, neither the Austrian, nor the Hungarian history writing would silence about it, and we would have also a contemporary originals source. I do not explain again why formally cannot mean legally, since I proved it in this case regarding all facts, variables, etc. Similar to a conrete mathematics equation-solution, that uses that clear and fair logic every intelligent person understand, regardless they are lawyers or not. I think you also understand for sure, but for a reason it is very important for you incorporate Hungary into Austria thas was never the case, you want to hinder even the most important word and all other sources that prove the same. If no laws or any change were affected - CLEARLY WRITTEN THEN Regnum Independens - separate country is still valid - AND it is CLEARLY WRITTEN the new title did not change the relation THEN the common monarch (that you also don't like and treat like an "euphemism") is the relation between them AS IT WAS. -> HUNGARY LAWFULLY/LEGALLY remained a separate state as it was! CLEAR, like the sun is shining. Moreover, since 2011, when Laszlo wrote his book or before even Misplaced Pages came to exist, we know the Habsburgs/Austrian could never legally incporporate Hungary to their empire, since all original and contemporary documents are researchable! We also know, the average, not-expert public knowledge or opinion is SUPERFICIAL, so the primitive conclusion also for earlier times the "Habsburg Lands" or similar would be a super-state or a common country where the King/Emperor is the boss...they do not care on legalties, and that's why such clear mistakes arisen in Misplaced Pages even from learned persons that "Austro-Hungarian citizenship" -> NEVER EXISTED, Michael the Brave united the the three principalities -> NEVER EXISTED, but the latter is so much mistaken that the majority of sources contain this information and in spread all over the world in the secondary sources by a nationalistic view's by production in the 19th-20th century. Although there are original documents, even more other sources/evidence it cannot be true, even we have original native sources by high level historians who clearly tell us the truth, despite this mistake happened. That's why we are more than robot-editors, and we idetify such infromation that is VALID, TRUTHFUL and COHERENT. The GOOD FAITH behavior by editing is an essential expectation in Misplaced Pages. Thus "formally" cannot be ignored, because then a clearly false and fake information would be highlighted, and there is a great responsibility since Misplaced Pages is the 5th(?) more viewed site by the humanity! We are responsible for valid and truthful content, if this is not the goal, then everything is lost!
- Please mind this, since our debate will be never ending, since I proved the point by all manners (logic,validity,legalty,lawfullness,Misplaced Pages goals and good faith over simple rules), but still try to debate those things that cannot be debated. Please decide for now - regarding this article, that the proposal I made yesterday is acceptable for you or not. Thanks (KIENGIR (talk) 01:18, 19 December 2015 (UTC))
- Again, if a source clearly states something to be the case, we don’t get to rationalise, with legalistic arguments and opinions or otherwise, about how it wouldn’t be. If Laszlo says the K. of Hungary was included in the structure of the Empire of Austria, which is clearly his conclusion, then that’s it. Of course Misplaced Pages isn’t written by robots, but in matters that are particularly contentious we tread with extreme care and follow the guidelines that are laid out. We don’t get to judge what Laszlo means when he uses the term “formal”. You talk about the “primitive conclusion also for earlier times the "Habsburg Lands" or similar would be a super-state or a common country where the King/Emperor is the boss...they do not care on legalties.” Well, facts on the ground are that in the pre and post 1804 situation the King Emperor for the most part was the boss, and had very different feelings about the consequences of the legalities than some of his subjects had. You yourself mentioned an “Anglo-Saxon model” of interpreting what’s going on in this situation, thereby implying that different thought about the consequences of the legalities is at least possible. That you or I may not agree with this or that interpretation is another matter altogether, but then we tread into the murky realm of OR, so that’s better left at home. Especially in a case like this. Laszlo speaks of art. X but he doesn’t anywhere clearly and literally conclude that therefore Hungary wasn’t included in the Imperial state of 1804. Any rationalisations from our part about how that must be so, doesn’t make it so and doesn’t stand up to scrutiny if we would argue that Laszlo clearly and literally does. To answer your final question; No I don’t agree with your text. If you want you’re welcome to try again and I will read it and comment but quite frankly I don’t think we’re getting anywhere. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 02:18, 19 December 2015 (UTC)
- One more thing. About the word formal(ly) and it’s meaning in this context. I have been looking for a bit and found equivalents pertaining to law situations like : accepted, affected, approved, ceremonial, confirmed, fixed, and some other. I also found that “while formally X, in practice other stuff also happens” is a way to use that word. I didn’t find any meaning of the word that meant “not really so”, which is basically what KIENGIR seems to want it to mean. I’ve already explained why I don’t like the term in this context, but I also think we’re not at power to use the word “formally” in the Hungarian situation and leave it out in, let’s say, the Bohemian one. I also wonder how art. X prevented Hungary from being a participant in the Imperial State, while it was apparently no impediment to becoming a part of a Real Union (Austro-Hungarian Monarchy) with Austria. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 15:43, 19 December 2015 (UTC)
- No, you turn everything from your viewpoint, it is obvious what means formally, but as I see since 2009 your goal is coup these articles with your claim. You are the only one who sees formally different as it is obvius I proved also why. Also in Hungarian, or a Hungarian author written in English there is no doubt of the meaning of the word. It's not about liking or not liking, for this I already agreed to leave "through the common monarch", you want to corrupt the original source and distort it! Jesus Christ, Bohemia was incorporated as a cronwland in the Austrian Empire, legally! How to mix this case here? Seems you read but you do not want to get, that is obvious for everybody, how many times I explained, it's impossible still not understanding the case! I explained also more times Austria-Hungary, but you still do not get that also by Austria-Hungary Hungary still remained a separate state as before always! As also Austria was a separate state, with his own citizenship, Diet, laws, constitution, etc. Nothing common between them! Only the Kaiser und König are the same, there are some joint ministries, but that's all, officially they are Austria-Hungary, a union of two states by the Emperor brought on more ties as before, but still remaining separate states. The difference was the Austrians allegedly regarded Hungarians as equal part with lawful joint personal union where the two countries remained separate. So article X was not harmed. The only plus was some joint ministries for international affairs. That's why there was never an Austro-Hungarian citizenship, and never even a dual citizenship between the two countries. It was not a union like West-Germany or East-Germany to join in in one country, but the two countries formed an union where they act together for international affairs but they remain separate. Croatia or Hungary had also never common citizenship, two separate countries on personal union! It is useless to continue since everything is crystal clear, but for a reason you pretend not to understand, andI am very much sorry for that. Let's wait for what user:Fakirbakir has to say, as you said a few days earlier, and after we will go on!(KIENGIR (talk) 01:40, 20 December 2015 (UTC))
- We should use and cite our sources properly. We must show all substantial views even if they are different. I think we must emphasize that the Austrian emperors ruled Hungary as "kings" not as emperors, it is very important. Fakirbakir (talk) 09:10, 20 December 2015 (UTC)
- I must mention that the Grand Principality of Transylvania which used to be an integral part of the medieval Hungarian kingdom and after the Ottoman era was controlled by imperial governors, was still part of the Lands of the Hungarian Crown. The Habsburgs acknowledged that it was part of the Hungarian kingdom, although, it wasn't incorporated into Hungary proper (but were promised). According to the Art. 1741 XVIII, 1.§, "She,, her heirs will possess and rule Transylvania -which belongs to the Holy Crown of Hungary- as Kings of Hungary." Fakirbakir (talk) 09:12, 20 December 2015 (UTC)
- No, you turn everything from your viewpoint, it is obvious what means formally, but as I see since 2009 your goal is coup these articles with your claim. You are the only one who sees formally different as it is obvius I proved also why. Also in Hungarian, or a Hungarian author written in English there is no doubt of the meaning of the word. It's not about liking or not liking, for this I already agreed to leave "through the common monarch", you want to corrupt the original source and distort it! Jesus Christ, Bohemia was incorporated as a cronwland in the Austrian Empire, legally! How to mix this case here? Seems you read but you do not want to get, that is obvious for everybody, how many times I explained, it's impossible still not understanding the case! I explained also more times Austria-Hungary, but you still do not get that also by Austria-Hungary Hungary still remained a separate state as before always! As also Austria was a separate state, with his own citizenship, Diet, laws, constitution, etc. Nothing common between them! Only the Kaiser und König are the same, there are some joint ministries, but that's all, officially they are Austria-Hungary, a union of two states by the Emperor brought on more ties as before, but still remaining separate states. The difference was the Austrians allegedly regarded Hungarians as equal part with lawful joint personal union where the two countries remained separate. So article X was not harmed. The only plus was some joint ministries for international affairs. That's why there was never an Austro-Hungarian citizenship, and never even a dual citizenship between the two countries. It was not a union like West-Germany or East-Germany to join in in one country, but the two countries formed an union where they act together for international affairs but they remain separate. Croatia or Hungary had also never common citizenship, two separate countries on personal union! It is useless to continue since everything is crystal clear, but for a reason you pretend not to understand, andI am very much sorry for that. Let's wait for what user:Fakirbakir has to say, as you said a few days earlier, and after we will go on!(KIENGIR (talk) 01:40, 20 December 2015 (UTC))
Fakirbakir, you write: "I think we must emphasize that the Austrian emperors ruled Hungary as "kings" not as emperors, it is very important." When it comes to the rule over Hungary as such, I fully agree (the Emperors obviously ruled over the whole Empire but could not act as such in matters pertaining to Hungary), and I think language to the effect that Hungarian matters were ruled by its king, can and should be added to the article. For the moment I suggest awaiting further developments because at the moment I don't feel at privilege to add any earlier proposals made in this discussion. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 15:24, 20 December 2015 (UTC)
What's the difference between the pre-1867 and the post-1867 status of the K. of Hungary?
I found an interesting material referring to the status of Hungary in that times. I recomend you to read these chapters:
- THE FIRST ADDRESS OF THE DIET OF HUNGARY", TO H. L M. THE EMPEROR FRANCIS JOSEPH DURING THE SESSION OF 1861
- THE RESCRIPT OF H. I. M. THE EMPEROR OF AUSTRIA TO THE FIRST ADDRESS OF THE DIET OF HUNGARY OF 1861.
The material above was published in the 19th century.95.141.32.160 (talk) 12:38, 21 December 2015 (UTC)
User:KIENGIR, where did "Article X of 1790 belong? Was it an article from a law, or an article from a diploma? How do we know that it was in effect after 1804? Please give more details 123Steller (talk) 23:33, 28 December 2015 (UTC)
- It was a special Act, the 10th of 1790. The Diet passed it. So if we have to choose between your "offers", it is a law. We know it was in effect, becase there was not any Act/law/Diploma/etc. that would repeal or nullify it, moreover the new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary according to the Hungarian Diet and the proclamation of Francis I in a rescript.(KIENGIR (talk) 01:23, 29 December 2015 (UTC))
- User:KIENGIR, according to your view, what's the difference between the pre-1867 and the post-1867 status of the K. of Hungary? According to the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 article:
- "The Compromise re-established partially the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Hungary, separate from, and no longer subject to the Austrian Empire. Under the Compromise, the lands of the House of Habsburg were reorganized as a real union between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary. The Cisleithanian (Austrian) and Transleithanian (Hungarian) regions of the state were governed by separate parliaments and prime ministers. Unity was maintained through rule of a single head of state, reigning as both the Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, and common monarchy-wide ministries of foreign affairs, defence and finance under his direct authority. The armed forces were combined with the Emperor-King as commander-in-chief." 123Steller (talk) 07:57, 29 December 2015 (UTC)
- It re-established the sovereignty of the KOH, of course, because after 1849 the Hungarian kingdom lost all its privileges.The differences between pre-(prior to 1848) and post- KOH (after 1867) are represented well by the 12 points of 1848 12_points_of_the_Hungarian_Revolutionaries_of_1848. The points were mostly granted after 1867. Fakirbakir (talk) 18:43, 29 December 2015 (UTC)
- Don't misunderstand the points. For example, even before 1848 there was a kind of "national army". The KUK (Kaiserlich-königliche Armee) "Imperial and Royal Army", was born in the 18th century and consisted of separate Hungarian units. The word "konig" referred to the Hungarian kingdom, however the army was controlled almost entirely by the Habsburgs. Fakirbakir (talk) 21:11, 29 December 2015 (UTC)
- 123Steller,
- I know the text from the article, it is considered fair. The difference is, before the Austrian Empire and Kingdom of Hungary had the same ruler, this was the main connection, after 1867 the Austrians allegedly recognized all rights of the Hungary, and the personal union was developed to a more tight union, i.e. joint-institutions and appearance to the external affairs as Austria-Hungary meanwhile the two countries remain separate inside.(KIENGIR (talk) 01:06, 30 December 2015 (UTC))
- I'm proposing to add this text to the body article somewhere and then make one reference to it in the lead. I've not added the references yet, but it is language that is not WP:COPYVIO and also not overtly legalistic. It reflects what the secondary sources say anyway without relying on interpretation from our side:
- "In 1804 the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II, who was also the King of Hungary and ruler of the other dynastic lands of the Habsburg dynasty, founded the Empire of Austria in which Hungary and all his other dynastic lands were included. In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy, that had functioned as a composite monarchy for about three hundred years before. The workings of the overarching structure and the status of the new “Kaiserthum’s” component lands at first stayed much as they had been under the composite monarchy that existed before 1804. This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary, whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm. In the new situation there were therefore no Imperial institutions involved in it’s internal government.”
- Gerard von Hebel (talk) 11:30, 31 December 2015 (UTC)
- I think your text proposal is good and would not mind adding it to the article. Fakirbakir (talk) 17:46, 31 December 2015 (UTC)
- Just because of Fakirbakir, I would accept Gerard von Hebel's proposal, if:
- I think your text proposal is good and would not mind adding it to the article. Fakirbakir (talk) 17:46, 31 December 2015 (UTC)
- 1. The following addition (bold) would be in this sentence: "This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary that was a regnum Independens, whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm."
- 2. The proposition should replace this in the lead -> "In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (including Hungary), largely without changing the status quo that existed between them before 1804." and the article's body should remain unchanged.(KIENGIR (talk) 09:12, 1 January 2016 (UTC))
- Well, we can't go on about this forever. I'm against point 1. It's 18th century primary source legal language of which the meaning is (apparently) unclear or under some contention and which therefore invites OR interpretation. We should follow the secondary sources. The secondary source involved, (Laszlo) makes it "seperate realm". So should we.
- I'm afraid that for technical reasons, I'm also against point two. If something is not in the body article, it has no place in the lead as well. The lead is supposed to summarize what's in the body article. I'm willing however to make new suggestions (or listen to other suggestions) for the summarisation in the lead. Having read my own text back it says "they" where it should have been "it" at some points. And of course the references still need to be added as well. I realise that the part where Laszlo quotes "Regnum Independens" should be added to the verbatim quote that is in one of the references. Simply because it's in there on the same page and because we refer to it in the text. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 15:52, 1 January 2016 (UTC)
- 2. The proposition should replace this in the lead -> "In 1804 the Austrian Empire was created. This Empire came to comprise all Habsburg lands ruled by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (including Hungary), largely without changing the status quo that existed between them before 1804." and the article's body should remain unchanged.(KIENGIR (talk) 09:12, 1 January 2016 (UTC))
I'll do some additional work on this tonight and / or tomorrow. Happy New Year everybody! Gerard von Hebel (talk) 16:05, 1 January 2016 (UTC)
- Come to think of it....What about this at the end of the text I proposed earlier: ".....as it had been under the composite monarchy, in which it had always been considered a separate Realm. Article X of 1790, that was added to Hungary's constitution during the phase of the composite monarchy uses the Latin phrase "Regnum Independens". In the new situation therefore, no Imperial institutions were involved in it’s internal government.” Without the bolding of course. That would be fine with me, as it mentions the term but does not describe or interprets it and makes no suggestions of what it would or would not mean in 21st century language. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 16:23, 1 January 2016 (UTC)
Is it necessary to use the German term Kaiserthum? As far as I know, it has the same meaning as the English word Empire. 123Steller (talk) 23:02, 1 January 2016 (UTC)
- Gerard von Hebel,
- "In 1804 the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II, who was also the King of Hungary and ruler of the other dynastic lands of the Habsburg dynasty, founded the Empire of Austria in which Hungary and all his other dynastic lands were included. In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy, that had functioned as a composite monarchy for about three hundred years before. The workings of the overarching structure and the status of the new “Kaiserthum’s” component lands at first stayed much as they had been under the composite monarchy that existed before 1804. This was especially demonstrated by the status of the Kingdom of Hungary, whose affairs remained to be administered by it’s own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been under the composite monarchy, in which they had always been considered a separate Realm. Article X of 1790, that was added to Hungary's constitution during the phase of the composite monarchy uses the Latin phrase "Regnum Independens". In the new situation there were therefore no Imperial institutions involved in it’s internal government.” -> If this you proposed, it is accepted.
- Point 2. -> Since it is an article about Hungary, and the body - thank's God - were undebated and unaltered, not any chance of further "flame" should be provoked, since anyway more articles should be fixed. The lead gives a short overview of the timeline, and this is totally fitting in it, no further mention or details are necesarry here, better the Austrian Empire article needs more special details about this.
- Many times the Anglo-Saxon terminology used is not the proper translation because such term did not even existed or interpreted there, or the distinction was not (historically) apparent to have a more detailed trace in sources. I.e. Kaiserthum = Császárság, Empire = Birodalom in Hungarian, and not necessarily used as an identical designation, although they are very similar. It has also a historical ground in older sources which term was used or interpreted. I.e. the evolution is caeasar = császár = Kaiser császárság -> "entity ruled by the császár". An Empire is also can be identical, since one person is ruling all over. I.e. regarding the Holy Roman Empire, both Hungarian names are accepted or used: Német-Római Császárság / Német-Római Birodalom. But regarding some other entities, only one term is used - Római Birodalom / Roman Empire although Caesar is deriving from it - / - Német Birodalom (Deutsches Kaiserreich) better than Német Császárság. Anyway, I have no opposition to Kaiserthum, since the original German expression is the most unambigous designation. Schönes neues Jahr für Alle!(KIENGIR (talk) 07:59, 2 January 2016 (UTC))
- Good, thanks all. Basically English has the same problem with the wordt Empire. It can denote an Imperial State (Empire of Austria, Empire of Russia), but also a political territory with a vast domain (Portuguese Empire or British Empire). Although I don't think Birodalom and "Kaiserthum" are in any way equivalent. I'm still in favour of putting the text proposed (with references) in the body article). If it proves to difficult to put text in the lead, we don't have to mention it there at all. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 09:48, 2 January 2016 (UTC)
- I left only this in the lead, slightly reworded: "The Kingdom of Hungary between 1526 and 1867 was, while outside the Holy Roman Empire, part of the lands of the Habsburg Monarchy, that became the Empire of Austria in 1804." The second part has gone from the lead. The other text with references I put on a (hopefully appropriate spot) in the article). Gerard von Hebel (talk) 10:25, 2 January 2016 (UTC)
- OK, shall it be, this issue has been resolved! The article will be added to the watchlist with a top importance to avoid such escalation in the future!(KIENGIR (talk) 07:26, 3 January 2016 (UTC))
- I left only this in the lead, slightly reworded: "The Kingdom of Hungary between 1526 and 1867 was, while outside the Holy Roman Empire, part of the lands of the Habsburg Monarchy, that became the Empire of Austria in 1804." The second part has gone from the lead. The other text with references I put on a (hopefully appropriate spot) in the article). Gerard von Hebel (talk) 10:25, 2 January 2016 (UTC)
- Good, thanks all. Basically English has the same problem with the wordt Empire. It can denote an Imperial State (Empire of Austria, Empire of Russia), but also a political territory with a vast domain (Portuguese Empire or British Empire). Although I don't think Birodalom and "Kaiserthum" are in any way equivalent. I'm still in favour of putting the text proposed (with references) in the body article). If it proves to difficult to put text in the lead, we don't have to mention it there at all. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 09:48, 2 January 2016 (UTC)
I created the red link Kaiserthum. If it is a distinct concept, it should be defined in its own article. 123Steller (talk) 23:10, 3 January 2016 (UTC)
- Thanks 123Steller. I created a very short article on the concept. So the link isn't red anymore. I don't think it's different from Empire (in the sense of a state ruled by an Emperor) and I personally wouldn't mind changing it to Empire or Imperial State. But that might prove difficult. Gerard von Hebel (talk) 23:21, 3 January 2016 (UTC)
References
- ^ László Péter, Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions in a European Perspective, BRILL, 2012, p. 6
- József Zachar, Austerlitz, 1805. december 2. A három császár csatája – magyar szemmel, In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557
- ". In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary Laszlo, Péter (2011), Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions, Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, the Netherlands, p. 6
- József Zachar, Austerlitz, 1805. december 2. A három császár csatája – magyar szemmel, In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557
- ". In 1804 Emperor Franz assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The Court reassured the diet , however, that the assumption of the monarch’s new title did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution of Hungary Laszlo, Péter (2011), Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions, Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, the Netherlands, p. 6
- József Zachar, Austerlitz, 1805. december 2. A három császár csatája – magyar szemmel, In: Eszmék, forradalmak, háborúk. Vadász Sándor 80 éves, ELTE, Budapest, 2010 p. 557
False classification of the article
Hungary is/was in Central-Europe, not Eastern-Europe, Jesus, what a mistake! thus the "B-Class Eastern Europe articles", "Mid-importance Eastern Europe articles", "WikiProject Eastern Europe articles" categories should be removed! Even Wikiproject Eastern-Europe has the same mistake and falsely containing Hungary along with more Central-European countries, they will be notified also!(KIENGIR (talk) 02:53, 27 December 2015 (UTC))
- During the soviet era, central europe effectively disappeared and the east/west split is probably the most useful classification. Of course, this article relates to earlier history. There is no agreed definition of what central-europe is/was and, indeed, parts of the Kingdom of Hungary during this period are now often regarded as being in eastern europe while other, like modern Hungary, are often put in central-europe. Nigej (talk) 10:35, 2 January 2016 (UTC)
- Nigej, Misplaced Pages or any party should not support the communist division in Europe with full of illegalities! The definiton of Central-Europe is geographically totally agreed and undebated. Becuase the iron curtain the false classification became widespreadly distributed and are still heavily under cristicism and it became the symbol of ignorance, although even the Unites States knows that Hungary is a Central-European country, although we know the Americans are traditionally not the experts of geographical situation of little countries on different continents. The borders have been changed, that's why the confusion is you are speaking about, but also Kingdom of Hungary belonged in all manners to Central-Europe, since Transylvania delimited with the Carpathian mountains is also historical part of the region. Since today's Romania's bigger part of her territory - as the historical Romania - belongs/belonged to already Eastern-Europe, that's why today it is also classified there despite of the Transylvanian+other regions part of Central Europe. Anyway, modern border's cannot rewrite geographical borders. So we will never accept a false classification as we heavily oppose to commemorate in such a way the communist occupation!(KIENGIR (talk) 07:40, 3 January 2016 (UTC))
Motto
It should be Regnum Mariae Patronae Hungariae. The current phrase means "Mary's realm, patroness of Hungary", as if the realm was the patroness, not Mary. 195.187.108.4 (talk) 16:20, 24 April 2017 (UTC)
Categories:- B-Class European history articles
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