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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Titel:Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století
= Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
Von: Jan Rychlík, Lukáš Holeček, Michal Pehr (eds.)
Person: Rychlík, Jan
Holeček, Lukáš
Pehr, Michal
1954-
1985-
1977-
Weitere Personen: Rychlík, Jan 1954- (HerausgeberIn), Holeček, Lukáš 1985- (HerausgeberIn), Pehr, Michal 1977- (HerausgeberIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:Tschechisch
Englisch
Slowakisch
Veröffentlicht: Praha Centrum středoevropských studií, společné pracoviště vysoké školy CEVRO Institut 2015
Praha Masarykova ústavu a archivu AV ČR 2015
Ausgabe:Vydání první
Schriftenreihe:Ediční řada Centra středoevropských studií 2
Schlagworte:
Geschichte 1850-2000
Agrarpolitik
Bauernpartei
Ostmitteleuropa
Aufsatzsammlung
Online-Zugang:http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028773337&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028773337&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028773337&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
Beschreibung:355 Seiten
ISBN:9788087782507
Internformat

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Datensatz im Suchindex

_version_ 1819372965977915392
adam_text Obsah Üvodem..............................................................7 Historiografie ceskeho a slovenskeho agrärniho politickeho hnuti: vysledky a mezery...............................14 (Josef Harna) Rodina agrärnich politickych stran vcera a dnes ...................25 (Ladislav Mrklas) Zemedelske strany a hnuti ve vlädäch stfedni a vychodni Evropy mezivälecneho a raneho povälecneho obdobi........48 (Jan Rychlik) Antonín Svehla.....................................................65 (Eva Broklovä) Kdo je tady blizni? Jepici zivot Nadace Antonina Svehly jako pfiklad iungoväni klientelistickych Struktur v agrarni strane.78 (Antonie Dolezalovä) Usili agrarni strany o ziskäni politickeho vlivu mezi pestiteli cukrovky v letech pfed prvni svetovou valkou v ceskych zemich......95 (Frantisek Capka) Närodohospodäf Cyril Horäcek st...................................107 (Ilona Bazantovä) JUDr. Karel Viskovsky (1868-1932): prezident SPÜ, ministr a publicista .............................................116 (Lukas Kopecky) Zrädci nebo zrazeni? Agrärnici ve vezenich vpovälecnem Ceskoslovensku........................................134 (Jaroslav Rokosky) Pohled Svateho stolce na osobnost Antonina Svehly v dobe prvni Ceskoslovenske republiky.............................147 (Marek Smid) Alternativa vuci Hradu? Zahranicne-politicke pfedsta y ceskych a slovenskych agrärnikü v tficätych letech minuleho stoleti........157 (Miroslav Septak) Zväz slovanskej agrärnej mlädeze (1924-1938)......................167 (Roman Holec) Ziazd mladei aerarnei generacie vo Zvolene v roku 1933 ...........184 (Robert Arpas) Rofnicka osveta: prispevok agrarnej strany k vyskumu vidieka a sireniu vzdelanosti na Slovensku..............193 (Matej Hanula) Anton Stefanek: vyznamny predstavitel agrarnej strany na Slovensku (Nacrt cinnosti A. Stefanka v rokoch 1918-1925)......207 (Eubica Kazmerova) Agrarni strana ve Svycarsku: nejvetsi lidova podpora, nejmensi zastoupeni ve vlade......................................222 (Miroslav Novak) Agrarni strany v severskych zemich: pribeh uspesne adaptace.......234 (Milos Brunclik a Vlastimil Havlik) Theoretical and political struggles between agrarian experts and the communist party in Hungary (1945-1948) ...................248 (Eva Cseszka) „To use all opportunities“: Alternative Political Strategies of Croatian Peasant Party (1918—1941).............................261 (Suzana Lecek) European integration in the International Peasants Union concepts...........................................281 (Piotr Swacha) Attitude of the International Peasant Union to Communism (1947—1989) .........................................295 (Stanislaw St^pka) The Polish Peasant Party after the departure of Stanislaw Mikolajczyk (its place on the political stage, the structures) 11.1947-11.1949 ..................................................306 (Tomasz Skrzynski) Zaver........................................................... 318 Archivni prameny..................................................326 Seznam pramenu a literatury.......................................328 Resume............................................................338 Jmenny rejstrik .............................................. 346 Seznam nazvu politickych stran zmfnenych v prispevcich............353 338 Agrarianism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th Centuries Summary The origins of the Czech agrarian movement lie in Moravia, where the Czech-Moravian Farmer s Society for Moravia and Silesia was founded in Olomouc on September 22th, 1883. Shortly thereafter, the agrarian movement spread to the Czech lands, thanks to the efforts of Alfons Stastny from Padarov. On February 8th, 1889, the Farmers Union was founded in Prague. On January 6th, 1899, the independent Czech Agrarian Party was founded. The Czech, Moravian and Silesian agrarian movements were united in 1905. In the elections to the Imperial Council (the Austrian parliament) in 1907, the party won 29 mandates and its representative, Karel Prasek, became a Czech minister — compatriot (minister without a department). The development of Czech agrarianism and the Agrarian Party is closely connected with Antonín Svehla (1873—1933), who was the head of the party s executive body since 1909. Under his leadership, agrarians transformed themselves from an interest group into the most powerful Czech political party next to the Social Democratic Party. Antonín Svehla himself was one of the five “men of October 28th who proclaimed independence in the name of the National Committee. After the founding of the Czechoslovak Republic, he was first Minister of the Interior and then, between 1922-1928, three times Primes Minister. Svehla managed to unite the Czech, Slovak and Ruthenian agrarian groups in the early days of the republic and create a unified “Republican party of the agrarian and small farming people, which was supported by Hungarian and Polish minorities. Only Germans maintained their own independent agrarian party {Bund der Landwirte) in Czechoslovakia. Agrarians wanted to “grant equal rights to the framing class as well as to other classes and ensure its due influence on the law-making power and administration of the state.”This meant advancing apolitical agenda for the protection of domestic agricultural production and support for its export. The Czechoslovak agrarians most successful political act was the land reform of 1919-1935. The land reform broke the influence of large farms at the expense of large and mid-sized farmers. But Agrarianism as an ideology never took hold in Czechoslovakia. During the economic crisis of 1929, the Agrarian Party increasingly departed from the original 339 program of agrarianism. The economic and professional interests of various members’groups (also reflecting its social differentiation) shifted from party politics to professional and interest organizations affiliated with the agrarian party, or rather its enterprises, such as collectives, associations, agricultural businesses, etc. This process can be understood as an attempt to transform the original professional-type party into a party that was trying to appeal to a broader segment of society regardless of profession. The transformation of the Agrarian Party into a party with national political aspirations occurred in the Second Republic (October 6th, 1938 — March 14th, 1939), when the agrarians formed the base of the National Unity Party in the Czech lands. In Slovakia, the Agrarian Party had to merge with the ruling Hlinka Slovak Peoples Party (HSLS). The Agrarian Party’s legal activities stopped definitively when the Germans occupied the Czech lands on March 15th, 1939, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia was established. The party participated in the activities of the Czechoslovak government-in- exile in London, but under pressure from left-wing parties, especially the Communists, it was forced to disband after 1945. The agrarian movement in interwar Bulgaria was a similarly important factor as in Czechoslovakia.There, the Bulgarian Agricultural Union (BZLS, bulharsky: E bArapcKu 3eMegeACKU napogen cbic 3 / Balgarski zemedelski naroden sajuz — BZNS) was the main political force shortly after the First World War. The BZLS was founded in 1899. During the First World War, it opposed Bulgaria’s participation in the war on the side of Germany and Austria-Hungary. In 1918, the BZLS led by Alexander Stambolijski served in government for the first time and from 1919 to 1923 it was the ruling party. It ruled the country by itself since 1920. Alexander Stambolijski s peculiar dictatorship was an attempt to practice agrarianism. The state passed a land reform bill affecting plots larger than 30 ha, guaranteed and regulated buying prices, taxed urban populations at higher rates to benefit the countryside and made work mandatory. Urban middle classes were dissatisfied with Stambolijsky s experiments. The “agricultural regime” ended on June 9th, 1923, with Alexander Cankov’s bloody coup d’etat and Stambolijski’s murder. On September 23rd the left wing of BZLS together with the Communists revolted against the Cankov’s rule but the revolt was supressed. In next three years Bulgaria faced repeated violence and political instability. When peace was restored in 1926, the BZLS gained back some of its ground. The state coup on May 19th, 1934 disbanded all political parties and ushered in the so-called non-party regime, i.e. a regime without political parties.The BZLS, split into several factions, managed to cooperate with this regime to a certain extent and continued to be popular in the countryside. During the Second World War, the BZLS was part of the legal (tolerated) 340 opposition, as well as the resistance against the germanophile regime that was established in Bulgaria in 1939. The BZLS opposed Bulgaria s involvement in the war on the side of Germany. After the revolution in Bulgaria of September 9th, 1944, the country joined the Allies and declared war against Germany. The main political power in Bulgaria became the Patriotic Front (OmenecBen (ppornn, Otecestven front) y an underground political group founded in 1942. The BZLS was a member of this group. The BZLS originally participated in the government, but soon crossed over to the opposition and became the main force that opposed the emerging communists, who tried to break up the BZLS by creating a new, left-wing BZLS out of the left-wing factions. The BZLSs second leader, Nikola Petkov, met a tragic end. He was sentenced to death in a trumped-up case and was executed on September 23rd, 1947. The BZLS was disbanded, but the left-wing BZLS that collaborated with the communists was allowed to continue its activities legally. However, it had no political influence. In the Baltics, the agrarian movement was strongest in Latvia. There, the leader of the Farmers Union ( Zemnieku savieniba), Karlis Ulmanis, was elected Prime Minister eight times and, in 1936, he established a special “agricultural regime”, which was in fact a dictatorship that leaned on the Farmer s Union. In Estonia, the Estonian Union of Farmers {Esti Maarahva Liit) participated in the government. Its leader, Konstantin Pats, ushered in an authoritative regime in 1934, but unlike in neighboring Latvia, his system was not based upon an agrarian ideology. In Lithuania, after Antanas Smetonas putsch in 1926, the agrarians were reduced to utter insignificance. The Polish agrarian movement was known as the “people s movement” (ruch ludozuy). Its roots also reached back to the period before the First World War, when it was strong in Galicia in particular, i.e. in Austria occupied Poland. The People s Party (Stronictwo ludowe — SL), founded in Rzeszow in 1895, split into several factions prior to the First World War: the original SL, Polskie stronictwo ludowe - Lewica and Polskie stronictwo ludowe - “Piast.”The “Piast” faction, led by the Galician representative in the provincial council Wincenty Witos, was the strongest. In the Russia occupied territory, various agrarian groups emerged that united into a single party during the German occupation of the Russian Polish territories (1915-1918), and since 1918 it was known as the Polskie stronictwo ludowe — “Wyzvolenie” (Liberation). In restored Poland, “Piast” was a centrist party, while “Wyzvolenie” was center-left. The Polish People s Party — “Piast” (PSL — Piast) became the ruling party. Witos was elected Prime Minister several times between 1920-1926. On May 12th, 1926, marshal Jozef Pilsudski, a hero of Poland s 341 struggle for independence, marched on Warsaw with his loyal troops and on May 15th, 1926, Wincent Witos s coalition government was forced to step down. Witos became one of the leaders of the opposition groups that were centrist and left-wing and could legally exist. In 1931, Witos was falsely accused and incarcerated. He emigrated to Czechoslovakia in 1933, where he remained until 1939. Shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, he returned to Poland, where he was amnestied. During the Second World War and the German occupation of Poland, Stronnictzuo ludovoe (SL) fully participated in the resistance.The People’s Party established its own armed squads — farmer’s battalions (Bataliony chlopskie), which in the end became part of the Polish Home Army (Armija krajovoa — AK), controlled by the government-in-exile in London. The People’s Party was also part of the Polish government-in-exile. Witos remained in Poland and died shortly after the war in 1945. The younger Stanislaw Mikolajczyk became the leader in exile. On September 3rd, 1941, he first became a Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior and then in July, 1943, Prime Minister. In this capacity, he tried to reach an agreement with the USSR about the eastern border. Although Mikolajczyk was willing to compromise with the USSR, his efforts to keep at least Lvov (Polish: Lvoovu, Ukrainian: Lviv) within the Polish border were not successful. At the time, Moscow was determined to install its own government in Warsaw led by the Soviet-founded Polish National Liberation Committee (Polski komitet voyzzoolenia narodovoego — PKWN), with whom it was negotiating the new border. Mikolajczyk’s willingness to make compromises with Moscow was criticized by Polish politicians in London and he subsequently stepped down in the fall of 1944. In the summer of 1945, Mikolajczyk took part in new negotiations in Moscow on the Polish border and, under pressure from Great Britain and the USA, he agreed to participate in the provisional Polish government of the National Unity Party based on the PKWN. Mikolajczyk became the Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of Agriculture. He founded a new Polish people’s party {Polskiestronnictvuo ludovje — PSL), while the original name of SL was used by the left-wing groups collaborating with the Polish Worker’s Party {Polska partija robotri icza — PPR), as the Polish communist party was now called. After the rigged elections of January 1947, Mikolajczyk became the leader of the anti-communist opposition. But the communists created a new party, “PSL-lewica”, out of the left-wing faction of the PSL, which was willing to collaborate with them. Thus they broke the original PSL. Mikolajczyk was threatened with arrest, and saved himself by running away to the West. PSL-lewica became the foundation of the communist-controlled satellite Unified People’s Party, which was formally created by uniting all of the groups in the agrarian movement at the end of 342 1949 (TLjednoczone stronnictwo ludowe — ZSL).This party was then part of the Polish version of the national front during socialism. The situation in interwar Yugoslavia, which until 1929 was called the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Kraljevina Srba, Hrvata i Sloveneca — SHS), was complicated because farmers tended to organize themselves according to their nationality A mass agrarian-type party was only formed in Croatia - the Croat Republican Farmer’s party {Hrvatska republikanska seljacka stranka — HRSS). The originally small party formed prior to the First World War became a massive organization under Stjepana Radies leadership at the beginning of the 1920s. The HSS demanded the federalization of Yugoslavia and Croatian autonomy. On July 20th, 1928, the Serbian radical representative Punisa Racic shot HSS representatives Pavle Radic and Djuro Basaricek in the Belgrade parliament building. He also shot the party leader, Stjepan Radic, who died two months later as a result of his wounds. King Alexandr used the bloody conflict in parliament as an excuse to dissolve parliament and disband all political parties on January 6th, 1929, and he established his personal Royal dictatorship. The HSS thus lost its legal status, but, in fact, it continued to exist. Under the new leader, Vlatko Macek, it actually gained strength. In April, 1939, Macek started negotiations with the new Prime Minister of Yugoslavia, Dragisa Cvetkovic. The negotiations resulted in the agreement to create a special Croat territory on August 26th, 1939, i.e. an autonomous Croat territory containing some parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina.The HSS became the ruling, and the only allowed, party of this territory. The fall of the HSS went hand in hand with the German attack on Yugoslavia on April 6th, 1941. On April 10th, 1941, the Independent Croatian State (Nezavisna drzava Hrvatska — NDH) under German patronage was proclaimed in Zagreb by the Croat Ustasa (Insurgent) fascist organization. The Ustasa leader (poglavnifi,), Ante Pavelic, disbanded the HSS and had Macek interned. In Greece in the 1930s there were two small agrarian parties, one ofwhich was part of the ruling, and the other of the opposition, bloc. Greece also had the left-wing Agricultural Party (AypoxiKo KOjifia EXXaboq / Agrotiko komma Elados - AKE), which gravitated towards the Communist Party of Greece. On August 4th, 1936, general Ioannis Metaxas, with the permission of King George (in Greek: Georgios) organized the state overthrow and ruled as a dictator. Parliament was dissolved; political parties as well; the political opponents of the new regime were interned. The regime tried to lean on the countryside and implemented several measures that benefitted farmers. Metaxas granted himself the title “First Farmer” (npoxoc; aypoxic; / Protos agrotis),but the dictatorship did not achieve more support for the farmers. Metaxas’s dictatorship ended with German aggression during the 343 Second World War. On October 28th, 1940, the Italian army launched an attack on Greece from Albania, but the Greeks fended it off. After half a year of fruitless battles, Mussolini had to ask Hitler for help. In April, 1941, the German army attacked Yugoslavia and Greece, and occupied both countries. Within the left-wing resistance to Germany and their Italian occupiers, the Agricultural Party (AKE) became active, and in September, 1941, it entered into the communist-controlled National Liberation Front (jEOviko aneXs(j 0BpoxiKO psxono / Ethniko apeleftherotiko metopo — EAM). After the war, AKE became a mere wing of the Communist Party of Greece and did not play a part in the civil war of 1946—1949. In interwar Romania, there was the influential Agrarian and Farmer’s Party (Partidul Taranesc), labeled as “caranists” not only in Romania, but also abroad. This party was founded in 1918 by Ion Mihalache, and Iuliu Maniu later became a long-term leader. The party leaned on a Romanian version of agrarianism. It considered the farmer and farming culture to be the foundation of the Romanian state. It was against the urban bourgeoisie and, politically, against the ruling liberals. It demanded state support for agriculture. Since the land reform in 1918 in Romania demands for land did not lessen, and caranists called for a new, more broad, reform. Caranists merged with the Transylvanian National Party, which created the National Caranist Party (.Partidul National Taranesc). It was a powerful opponent of the ruling National Liberal Party (Partidul National-Liberal), representing urban middle and upper classes. In November, 1928, the National Caranist Party became the ruling party in Romania and Iuliu Maniu became the Prime Minister. Caranists built infrastructure in the countryside and passed certain measures to protect farmers, primarily tax and debt deferral. The Caranist government also passed reforms that benefited the lower urban classes, primarily collective contracts and creating a system of social security. In 1934, it was forced back into the opposition. However, caranists maintained strong positions in the local administrations. At the end of February, 1938, King Carol II. turned Romania into a dictatorship of the monarchy in the style of Yugoslavia and Bulgaria. The new constitution of February 27th, 1938, gave him the authority to control legislative and executive power. On March 30th, 1938, all political parties were disbanded, including the National Caranist Party, by royal decree. But the party continued unofficially and Caranists remained in contact. During the Second World War, in which Romania fought alongside Germany, Maniu was in touch with dictator Ion Antonescu, as well as the anti-fascist opposition, the British and Americans. The anti-fascist overthrow of August 23rd, 1944, which swept Antonescu away and brought Romania into the Allied camp, raised Maniu and the caranist parties back up. In postwar Romania, Maniu symbolized the opposition against the coming communist regime. In June, 1947, he was arrested and one month later the National Caranist Party was disbanded. In October, 1947, Maniu was sentenced to life in prison during a trumped-up trial. He died in prison in 1953. In Hungary, a party that was focused on farmers began to form after the so-called Aster Revolution (October 23th — October 31st, 1918), which swept away the Habsburgs. The Small Holders Party (Kisgazdasagi Part) began to take shape, but its founding was interrupted by the formation of the Hungarian Republic of Councils and the Bolshevik government of Bela Kun on March 21st, 1919. Hungarian farmers, who were traditionally conservative, soon turned away from the Bolshevik government. The military defeat of the Hungarian Republic of Councils at the hands of Czechoslovak and Romanian troops led to the fall of Bela Kun within 133 days, who fled to Austria. The Small Holders party later formed itself during the “white terror” of Istvan Friedrichs government, which was created on August 6th, 1919. The party spoke out against Hungarian right-wing efforts to completely do away with the land reform and abolish universal suffrage. During the elections of January 25 th and 26th, 1920, the Small Holders Party merged with the Christian and National Unity Party, and they won, occupying 150 of the 218 seats in parliament. On January 29th, 1920, the Small Holders Party entered into the coalition cabinet of Sandor Simonyi-Semadam. Two years later, the Small Holders Party became part of the newly founded Unity Party (Egyseges Part), which Prime Minister Istvan Bethlen was leaning on. The Small Holders thus participated in the consolidation of the conservative Hungarian regime, led by the imperial administrator, admiral Miklos Horthy. The original Small Farmers Party practically fell apart in 1930. Most representatives went on to found the Independent Small Farmers Party, which ended up in opposition. In 1931, Istvan Bethlen resigned and the Small Holders did not get into Gyuly Karoly s new government. During the Second World War, the so-called legal opposition was formed from the ranks of the Independent Smallholders Party. The final blow to all political parties, and therefore to the Independent Smallholders Party, was the fascist putsch by Ferenc Szalasi s Arrow Cross Party on October 15th, 1944, which the Germans orchestrated. After the putsch all political parties except Ferenc Szalasi s Arrow Cross Party were banned. After 1945, the Small Holders Party was renamed the Independent Small Holders, Agricultural Workers and Municipal Citizens Party (Fuggetlen Kisgazda, Foldmunkas es Polgari Part — FKGP). It tried to address all of the voters who did not agree with communism. The FKGP won the election 345 of November 4th, 1945, during which it won 57% of all votes and 245 mandates out of 421. Party members Zoltán Tildy became Prime Minister and Ferenc Nagy head of parliament (in February, Tildy became president and Ferenc Nagy replaced him as Prime Minister). Although the Hungarian Communist Party lost the election, the Soviet occupation administration forced it to remain in the ruling coalition, and a communist became Minister of the Interior. Due to subsequent police harassment, communists first weakened the FKGP then divided it and in the end destroyed it. At the beginning of 1947, the leading party representatives were accused of participating in a anti-government “fascist” conspiracy. Many were arrested. Prime Minister Ferenc Nagy was spared because he was in Switzerland at the time. The party leadership was gradually taken over by the left-wing faction of Lajos Dinnyes, who was willing to collaborate with the communists. The elections of August 31st, 1947, were marred by open repressions and the FKGP lost. It finished third and gained only 68 mandates. Within the next year, the FKGP lost its political influence, although Dinnyes became the Prime Minister and on June 30th, 1948, the President, because Zoltán Tildy was forced to abdicate. If we look at the development of agrarian parties and movements in interwar Eastern Europe, we can see that, with the exception of Bulgaria, Latvia and Czechoslovakia, they were not able to push through their program, even if they sometimes participated in government (caranists in Romania, HSS in Yugoslavia, PSL in Poland). At the end of the interwar period, it was clear that conditions were no longer ideal for parties focused solely on farmers and the countryside, and that a modern party, if it wants to be successful, must try to address the urban classes and adapt their program accordingly. The development of the agrarian parties during the Second World War and shortly after it is interesting: they participated in the resistance in all countries, albeit with varying degrees of intensity. In the German satellite countries, they usually became part of various underground anti-fascist fronts that took over in 1944-1945. After the Second World War, agrarian parties in Eastern Europe became the basis of the opposition against the coming communist regimes, although they never managed to stop its establishment in any country. After the fall of the communist regimes, it seemed that agrarian parties belonged to the past, because they never managed to be considered a relevant political force. 346 Jmenny rejstrik Adamovä, Karolina 19 Alexandr L Karadjordjevic 57,262, 266,279,322,342 ‘ Alexandr Veliky 117 Antall, Jözsef 38 Antonescu, Ion 61,323,343 Arany, Bälint 251 Arata, Antonio 151,153,154 Arter, David 31 Babic, Ljubo 275 Babski, Boleslaw 173 Barankovics, Istvän 251 Bartlovä, Alena 19,204 Bartos, Rudolf 87 Basaricek, Djuro 57,322,342 Basek, Vladimir 81, 84 Benes, Edvard 11,71-73,128,131, 136,139,140,147,149-154,156, 157,159-163,196 Benko, Jan 189 Beran, Rudolf24,81,82,84-90,130, 136-142,145,161,165 Beranovä, Marie 138 Bethlen, Istvän 62,324,344 Beyme, Klaus von 25,26,42 Büy, Frantisek 217 Bläha, Inocenc Amost 171 Blaha, Pavel 22,70,195,199 Blocher, Christoph 36,46,222,224, 225,227,231,232 Böhr, Josef 73 Borgongini Duca, Francesco 152 Borten, Per 241 Botto, Jan (= pseud. Krasko, Ivan) 197,200 Bradäc, Bohumir 130-133 Bräf, Albin 108-110,115,118 Brdlik, Vladimir 141 Bujak, Francizsek 172 Caesar, Julius 117 Cablkjän 195 Cankov, Alexandr 50,319,339 Cavour, Camillo Benso 117 Cihläf, Vaclav 143 Ciriaci, Pietro 156 Coudenhove, Karl Maria 121 Cvetkovic, Dragisa 57,270,322,342 Cyzjan 173 Czech, Ludwig 73 Czettler, Jenö 250 Capek, Karel 66 Cechurovä, Jana 150 Cermak, Karl 73 Cerny, Jan 128,131 Cemyjosef 81,82,84,133,138,141 Daskalov, Rajko 50,181,182 Daszyhski, Ignacy 182 Demel, Jan Rudolf 17,99 Derer, Ivan 70,131,142,165,187 Dimitrov, Georgi Mihov 51,169, 173,291,293,296 Dinnyes, Lajos 63,324,325,345 Dobi, Istvän 253 Dobiäs, Jindfich 80 Dobrovsky, Josef 117 Dolansky, Josef 125,149,152,153 Dolezal, Josef 129,148,155 Dostäl, Vladimir 18,23 Drtina, Frantisek 211 Dürich, Josef 17 Eckhardt, Tibor 63 Ehrenfeld, Petr 9 347 Elias, Alois 142 Englis, Karel 71,129,131 Fajnor, Stefan 199 Fälldin, Thorbjörn 242 Farsky, Karel 148,148 Feierabend, Ivo K. 19 Feierabend, Ladislav K. 12,141,145 Fiedler, Frantisek 109,119 Frank, Karl Hermann 138 Frankenberger, Otakar 9,16,23,172 Friedrich, Istvan 62,324,344 Fucik, Bedrich 145 Gallagher, Michael 25,26,41,42 Gandhi, Mahatma 265 Gasparri, Pietro 151,153 Gavazzi, Artur 274 Gavrilovic, Milan 56,296 Gazik, Marek 154 Gillette, John Morris 171 Gladstone, William Ewart 117 Goga, Octavian 60 Goll, Jaroslav 72 Gomulka, Wladyslaw 299,302 Gottwald, Element 17,142,143 Grabski, Wladyslaw 52 Gruber, Josef 107 Gubec, Matija 277 Güldener, Bernard 119 Habrman, Gustav 211 Halik, Rudolf 137,142 Halla, Jan 220 Halon, Matej 22 Harminc, Milan Michal 221 Harna, Josef 20 Havlicek, Karel Borovsky 117 Herceg, Rudolf 278 Heumos, Peter 18 Heydrich, Reinhard 137 Hitler, Adolf41,59,136,142,145, 322,343 Hlinka, Andrej 12,49,152,154,192, 205,211,319,339 Hodac, Frantisek 113 Hodza, Milan 17,20-22,81,82,87, 126,128-130,142,158,161-163, 166-170,172,173,185,189,190, 194,196-199,203,204,220,282, 286,291 Holec, Roman 19 Honzik, Antonín 119 Honzikova, Ruzena 119 Honzikova, Vilemina 119 Horajan 136 Horacek, Cyril 72,107-115 Horcicka, Josef 81,82, 84,85,87-89, 93 Horthy, Miklos 62,255-257,324, 344 Houdek, Fedor 195,197,199 Hrabik, Martin 141 Hrabik-Samal, Mary 18,19 Hruban, Moric 150 Hruby, Adolf 137,145 Hus, Jan 152,153,156 Husek, Karol 198 Chirac, Jacques 230 Chlebounova, Anna 203 Chloupek, Antonín 143 Chruscov, Nikita Sergejevic 302 Chvalkovsky, Frantisek 158,161, 162,166,172 Ihrig, Karoly 250 Janda, Herman 119 Jansak, Stefan 199 Jaroch, Jaroslav 91 Jaros, Jan 98 348 Jelinek, Hanus 77 Jelinek, Karel 220 Jesensky, Jan 200 Jifi (Georgios) IL Reeky 58,59,322, 342 Johannesen, Kaj Leo 33 Jovanovic, Jovan M. 55 Jungmannjosef 117 Juriga, Ferdis 198 Jurkovic, Dusan 215 Kafka, Bruno 73 Kahanek, Ferdinand 165 Kaizl, Josef 118 Kalfus, Josef 87,88 Karel (Carol) IL Rumunsky 61,323, 343 Kârolyi, Gyula 63,324,344 Kârolyi, Mihâly 61,62 Karvas, Imrich 199 Kekkonen, Urho Kaleva 31,242,245 Kepka, Josef 145 Kiss, Elemér 257,258 Kiss, Ferenc 257,258,260 Klima, Stanislav 217 Klindera, Ferdinand 82,90,138 Klofâc, Vaclav 119 Konstantin I. Reeky 58 Kopcsak, Peter J. 252 Kordac, Frantisek 126,153,155 Kordos, Pavel 186,187,189 Korosec, Anton 55 Kovacs, Béla 251,283,296 Kovijanic, Risto 203 Krajcovicova, Natalie 19 Kramaf, Karel 71,73,125,211 Krejci, Jaroslav 137 Krofta, Kamil 166,172 Kroiher, Frantisek 149 Krousky, Otakar 72 Kren, Jan 18,65 Kfepek, Franz 73 Kfizek,Jurij 18,96 Kubicek, Josef Otakar 16,23 Kubr, Stanislav 17,98,103 Kucera, Eduard 17 Kucerova, Zdefika 17 Kuldik, Jan 22 Kun, Béla 62,323,324,344 Kunduriotis, Pavlos 58 Kurz, Vilém 119 Kutnar, Frantisek 23 La Rochefoucauld, François de 233 Landner, Andreas 229 Lang, Hynek 120 Laver, Michael 26 Lednar, Frantisek 188 Lemberg, Hans 18 Lénârd, Ödön 251 Le-Pen, Jean-Marie 230 Le-Pen, Marine 230 Lettrich, Jozef 188,198-200 Lichard, Daniel 199 Lichnerjan 142 Lipset, Seymour Martin 25,235 Loevenstein, Karel 132 Lodgman, Rudolf 73 Lukas, Filip 274 Lupu, Nicolae 60 Macek, Vladko 57,265,266,270, 277,278,296,322,342 Machar, Josef Svatopluk 150 Machnik, Frantisek 87,132,133, 137,138 Mair, Peter 26,41,235,236,247 Malypetr, Jan 81,87,129,132,137, 188 Maniu, Iuliu 60,61,283,296,323, 343,344 Marcha, Jaroslav 105 349 Marinkovic, Vojislav 55 Marmaggi, Francesco 152,153 Marx, Karel 66 Masaryk, Jan 69,130 Masaryk, Tomás Garrigue 22,66, 68,69,71,72,74-76,108,116, -118,123-126,128-131,140,147, 149-152,154,156,157,161,188, 196,219 Mastnÿ, Vojtéch 161,162 Masek, Frantisek 220 Masin, Frantisek 103 Masata, Frantisek 10 Matthey, Francis 226 Matula, Antonín 172,207 Maurer, Ueli 227 Mecif, Karel 158,161,169,172,175 Medvecky, Karol A. 215 Medvecky, Eudovit 185,186 Meissner, Alfred 71,73 Metaxas, Ioannis 59,322,342 Metzler, Ruth 225,227 Micara, Clemente 148,149,151 Michal (Mihail) I. Rumunsky 61 Mihalache, Ion 59,60,323,343 Mihalovics, Zsigmond 251 Mikolaj, Ján 204 Mikolajczyk, Stanislaw 54,281,283, 285,287,291,293,296,299,303, 306-317,321,341 Milkowski, Stanislaw 173 Miller, Daniel E. 19,23,65 Mindszenty, József251,254,256, 258,260 Minger, Rudolf 223 Mittelhauser, Eugène 125 Moravcik, Vladimir 187,192 Mudde, Cas 41 Múdry, Michal 18 Mussolini, Benito 59,322,343 Nagy, Ferenc 63,251,256,283,296, 304,324,345 Napoleon I. Bonaparte 117,125 Nazor, Vladimir 58 Nebesky Josef 142 Necas, Jaroslav 9 Nejedlÿ, Zdenëk 17 Nëmecek, Frantisek 92 Nemecek, Jan 22 Niecko, Jözef 308 Nosek, Frantisek 153 Novak, Miroslav 36 Novotny, Jiri 18 Obrtel, Frantisek 16 Okanik, Eudovit 195 Orbän, Viktor 38 Ossipow, William 232 Osusky, Stefan 162 Palacky, Frantisek 117,182 Palecek, Antonín 18,207 Pangalos,Theodoros 58 Pasic, Nikola 55,56 Päts, Konstantin 34,51,320,340 Paulova, Milada 69 Pavelic, Ante 57,322,342 Pawlak, Waldemar 40 Pechâcek, Jaroslav 18 Peidl, Gyula 62 Pekaf, Josef 69 Peknik, Miroslav 22 Perek, Vaclav 100 Perneczky, Béla 251,254,257,260 Peroutka, Ferdinand 17,66,69,136 Petkov, Nikola 51,283,296,320,340 Petr, Alois 142 Petrovic, Jan 198 Pfeiffer, Gyözö 251 Pilsudski, Jözef 11,39,53,182,320, 340 350 Pisecky, Ferdinand 220 Pilât, Rudolf 217 Placek, Stëpân 136 Plicajân 169,173 Pluhar, Bohumil 220 Pokomÿ, Bedrich 136 Pokornÿ, Jan Vladimir 100 Poniatowski, Juliusz 172 Pospisil, Jan 100 Prâsek, Karel 8,10,98,100,113,119, 120,124,318,338 Precan, Leopold 125,126 Precan, Vilém 18 Preiss, Jaroslav 113 Prokop, Josef 109 Prokûpek, Adolf 17,122 Prokupek, Vaclav 143 Pfikryl, Ondrej 100 Racic, Punisa 57,177,322, 342 Radie, Antun 277,278 Radie, Pavel 56,57,322 Radie, Stjepan 56,57,169,173,265, 266,268,277,278,321,322 Râkosi, Mâtyâs 254,255,258 Randa,Jan Streng Antonín 118 Rapant, Daniel 199,206 Rasmussen, Anders Fogh 33 Rasin, Alois 69,70,72, 111, 112 Rasticovâ, Blanka 20 Ratkovic, Stjepan 274 Rechcigl, Miloslav 141 Rezek, Antonín 118 Rieger, Lukas 37 Richter, Karel 100 Rokkan, Stein 25,28,235 Rokosky, Jaroslav 14,23,24 Rothermere, Lord 258 Rotnagl, Josef 217 Rozkosnÿ, Jan 17 Ruman, Ludovit 186-188 Rüütel, Arnold 35 Rychlik, Jan 20 Saenger, Samuel 150 Samohyl, Ladislav 100 Sander, Fritz 72 Sedlacek, Jozef 217 Sedlmayerova, Oldra 185 Seliger, Josef 73 Sharp, Gene 262,270 Schiezsl, Josef 128 Schlumpf, Leon 227 Schmid, Samuel 227,231 Sibelka-Perleberg, Artur 251 Siegfried, André 233 Simonyi-Semadam, Sândor 62,324, 344 Sipilä, Juha 47 Skopalik, Frantisek 17 Skrzyriski, Aleksander 53 Slavik, Juraj 132,188 Slezâk, Lubomir 20 Sliva, Leopold 141 Smetona, Antanas 35,51,320,340 Soini, Timo 47 Sonntag, Kunes 17,104,105,112, 124 Sorokin, Pitirim A. 172 Soukup, Frantisek 70 Spaho, Mehmed 55 Spina, Franz 131 Srdinko, Otakar 124,128,194 Stalin, Josif Vissarionovic 143,295 Stambolijski, Alexandr 11,50,169, 176,181,319,339 Stanëk, Frantisek 8,17,83,130,133 Starostik,Jan 100 Stocky, Jan 133 Stojadinovic, Milan 267 Stoupal, Viktor 82, 83,132,142 Strânsky, Adolf 99 351 Stribrny, Jin 70 Stfizek, Augustin 119 Stunda, Stefan 199 Suchy, Oldrich 143 Sulyok, Dezsö 251,258 Svoboda, Karel 88 Szälasi, Ferenc 63,256,324,344 Sämal, Premysl 71,125,129,142 Senoa, Milan 274 Simkovic, Jan 215 Skvor,Jan 133 Sousa, Jiff 18,20,116,172 Sramekjan 125,131,139,147,149, 151-153,155 Srobär, Vavro 22,70,132,194,195, 208,212-217 Stajf, Jin 20 Stastny, Alfons 8,16,17,109,120, _ 318,338 Stefänek, Anton 22, 70,131,172, 185,186,194,195,197,199,201, ^ 206-221 Stefänik, Milan Rastislav 179 Subasic, Ivan 58 Suffiay, Milan 274 Svehla, Antonín 8,9,11,13,20,22, 23,65-94, 98,100-103,120,123, 124,127-130,133,134,139,140, 158,159,167,173,181,188,197, ^ 282,286,318,338 Svehla, Antonín (otec) 98 Svehla ml., Antonín (syn) 144,145 Svehla, Stanislav (bratr) 81, 82, ^ 84—86,89,90,93,120 Svehlovä, Marie 89 Täborsky, Frantisek 217 Tajovsky, Jozef Gregor 200 Thun-Hohenstein, Frantisek 121 Tildy, Zoltán 63,324,325,345 Tiso, Jozef 155 Tito, Josip Broz 58,253 Tlusty, Vaclav 144 Tobolka, Zdenek 16 Tolstoj, Lev Nikolajevic 265 Tomek, Vaclav Vladivoj 118 Topoli, Jozef 205 Torgyan, Jozsef 38 Torn, Cenek 141 Tresky, Karol 199 Tsaldaris, Panajis 58 Tumlirova, Marie 203 Tusar, Vlastimil 73, 111 Udrzal, Frantisek 9, 99,120,121, 129-133 Uhlir, Dusan 18 Ulmanis, Karlis 34,51, 320,340 Ursiny, Jan 82, 86,142,143,169,170, 173,177,198 Uzunovic, Nikola 55, 56 Vaca,Jan 100 Vaida-Voevod, Alexandru 60 Varsik, Branislav 199 Veber, France 172,173 Venizelos, Eleftherios 7, 58 Vennamo, Veikko 242 Verbik, Antonín 18 Viestova, Darina 203 Virolainen, Johannes 240 Viskovska, Marta 119 Viskovsky, Josef 117 Viskovsky, Karel 116—133 Vlcek, Jaroslav 217 Vojnar, Josef 144 Vojtassak,Jan 151,205 Voroshilov, Kliment 249 Votruba, Frantisek 198,217 Vozenilek,Jan 126 Vrany, Josef 124,130,132,166 352 Vrhel, Frantisek 121 Vresky, Frantisek 199 Vukicevic, Velimir 56,57 Vychodil, Josef 8,99,100 Washington, George 117 Weber, Max 79 Widmer-Schlumpf, Eveline 227,231 Wilson, Woodrow 76 Witos, Andrzej 316 Witos, Wincenty 11,39,52,53,169, 173,182,320,321,340,341 Wycech, Czeslaw 308 Zadina, Josef 81,84, 87 Zahradnik, Isidor 120,123 Zal^ski, Zygmunt 169,177 Zambrowski, Roman 314 Zat’ko, Peter 179,191 Zogu, Ahmet 49 Zuberec, Vladimir 18 Zdarsky, Josef 103 Zilka, Jindfich 81,82,84,145,161, ^164—166 Zläbek, Josef 80, 81
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Pehr, Michal 1977-
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era Geschichte 1850-2000 gnd
era_facet Geschichte 1850-2000
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geographic_facet Ostmitteleuropa
id DE-604.BV043353915
illustrated Not Illustrated
indexdate 2024-12-20T17:34:20Z
institution BVB
isbn 9788087782507
language Czech
English
Slovak
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028773337
oclc_num 944015424
open_access_boolean
owner DE-12
DE-M457
owner_facet DE-12
DE-M457
physical 355 Seiten
publishDate 2015
publishDateSearch 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Centrum středoevropských studií, společné pracoviště vysoké školy CEVRO Institut
Masarykova ústavu a archivu AV ČR
record_format marc
series Ediční řada Centra středoevropských studií
series2 Ediční řada Centra středoevropských studií
spellingShingle Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
Ediční řada Centra středoevropských studií
Agrarpolitik (DE-588)4000771-6 gnd
Bauernpartei (DE-588)4237422-4 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4000771-6
(DE-588)4237422-4
(DE-588)4075753-5
(DE-588)4143413-4
title Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
title_alt Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
title_auth Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
title_exact_search Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
title_full Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries Jan Rychlík, Lukáš Holeček, Michal Pehr (eds.)
title_fullStr Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries Jan Rychlík, Lukáš Holeček, Michal Pehr (eds.)
title_full_unstemmed Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries Jan Rychlík, Lukáš Holeček, Michal Pehr (eds.)
title_short Agrarismus ve střední a východní Evropě 19. a 20. století
title_sort agrarismus ve stredni a vychodni evrope 19 a 20 stoleti agrarism in central and eastern europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
title_sub = Agrarism in Central and Eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries
topic Agrarpolitik (DE-588)4000771-6 gnd
Bauernpartei (DE-588)4237422-4 gnd
topic_facet Agrarpolitik
Bauernpartei
Ostmitteleuropa
Aufsatzsammlung
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volume_link (DE-604)BV042661435
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