Treaty of Trianon

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Image:Trianon1.jpg The Treaty of Trianon was an agreement that regulated the situation of the new Hungarian state that replaced the Kingdom of Hungary, part of the former dual Austro-Hungarian monarchy, after World War I. It was signed on June 4, 1920, at the Petit Trianon Palace at Versailles, France.

The main parties to the Treaty were the winning powers, their allied countries, and the losing side. The winning powers included the United States, Britain, France and Italy; their allies were Romania, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (renamed to Yugoslavia in 1929) and Czechoslovakia; and the losing side was the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy, represented by Hungary.

Contents

Frontiers of Hungary

Image:Österreich-Ungarns Ende.png Hungary proclaimed its independence from Austria on November 16, 1918. Previously, on October 31, the Banat Republic was proclaimed in Timisoara, and the government of Hungary, already in place at that time, recognized its independence. Temporary borders of independent Hungary were defined in November–December 1918. Compared with the former Kingdom of Hungary (part of Austria-Hungary), these borders did not include:

The final borders of Hungary were defined by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920. Compared with the borders set eighteen months previously, the Trianon borders of Hungary did not include:

By the Treaty of Trianon, the cities of Pécs, Mohács, Baja and Szigetvár, which were under Yugoslav administration after November 1918, were restored to Hungary.

Compared with the former Kingdom of Hungary, the population of post-Trianon Hungary was reduced from 20.8 million to 7 million and its land area reduced by 72%.

After 1918, Hungary did not have access to the sea, which the former Kingdom had through Croatia for over 800 years.

With the help of Nazi Germany and Italy, Hungary expanded its borders towards neighbouring countries at the outset of World War II, under the Munich Agreement (1938), the two Vienna Awards (1938 and 1940), following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia (occupation of northern Carpathian Ruthenia and eastern Slovakia) and following German aggression against Yugoslavia. This territorial expansion was short-lived, since the post-war boundaries agreed on at the Treaty of Paris in 1947 were nearly identical with those of 1920.

Consequences of the treaty

Demographic consequences

Image:Austria hungary 1911.jpg According to the census of 1910, the largest ethnic group in the Kingdom of Hungary were the Magyars (usually called "Hungarians" in English), who were approximately 48% of the entire population (and 54% of the population of the so called "proper Hungary" excluding Croatia-Slavonia). The Kingdom of Hungary was not a nation-state as were many Western European nations. Some demographers, however, believe that the 1910 census overstated the percentage of the Magyar population, arguing that there were different results in previous censuses of the Kingdom and subsequent censuses in the new states. Another problem with interpreting the census results is that the 1910 census did not record the respondents' ethnicity, but only the "most frequently spoken" language and the religion, thus the numbers of ethnic groups in the Kingdom of Hungary are actually the numbers of speakers of various languages, which may not correspond fully with the ethnic composition.

The provinces Hungary lost in the treaty had a majority population of non-Magyars, but also a significant Magyar minority.

The number of Hungarians in the different areas based on census data of 1910:

Population of territories in question based on census data of 1910:

  • In Slovakia (Czechoslovakia): 1,687,977 Slovaks and 1,233,454 others (mostly Hungarians - 886,044, Germans, Ruthenians and Roma) [according to the 1921 census, however, there were 1,941,942 Slovaks and 1,058,928 others]
  • In Carpathian Ruthenia (Czechoslovakia): 330,010 Ruthenians and 275,932 others (mostly Hungarians, Germans, Romanians, and Slovaks)
  • In Transylvania (Romania): 2,829,454 Romanians and 2,428,013 others (mostly Hungarians and Germans)
  • In Vojvodina and Croatia-Slavonia (Yugoslavia): 2,756,000 Serbo-Croatians and 1,366,000 others (mostly Hungarians and Germans)
  • In Burgenland (Austria): 232,000 Germans and 126,000 others

On the other hand, a considerable number of other nationalities remained within the frontiers of the new Hungary, e.g. some 450,000 Slovaks (399,170 according to Hungarian sources, 450,000–550,000 according to Czechoslovak sources), some 800,000–900,000 Germans, some 82,000 Serbs and Croats (for lack of other information, the last figure is the official figure of 1930) and 23,000 Romanians (in 1920). The percentage of all non-Magyar nationalities very quickly decreased in the new Hungary, i.e. there are only some 17,000 Slovaks in Hungary today, compared with the previous number of 450,000 (some 65 000 Slovaks having left Hungary within a post-WWII population exchange betwen Czechoslovakia and Hungary)

Political consequences

Officially, the treaty was intended to be a confirmation of the concept of the right for self-determination of nations and of the concept of nation-states replacing old structures of power. From one point of view after a centuries of foreign rule, most of the peoples of former Austria-Hungary (often called a 'dungeon of nations' by them), would finally achieve a right for self-determination and independence and be united with other members of their nation. On the other hand, many argue that after centuries of ethnic co-existence and relative prosperity, the territories of the former Austria-Hungary have become for the most part monoethnic mini-states. Some claim that the real motive of the treaty as an attempt to dismantle a major power in Central Europe. Compared with the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary, post-Trianon Hungary had 60% population less and its role in the region significantly weakened.

Many cities and regions that were ethnically diverse in the 19th century became for the most part monoglot (unilingual), or dominated by a single language and culture.

The main controversy Template:Fact about the Treaty of Trianon are the borders of Hungary. While the majority of the areas that had been part of the Kingdom of Hungary but were not part of independent Hungary after the Treaty were inhabited by non-Hungarian nationalities, there were also a lot of areas, inhabited mainly by Hungarians, which were not located within the borders of Hungary after the Treaty. These Hungarian-inhabited areas include north-eastern parts of Transylvania (see: Székelyföld), southern parts of Slovakia (see: Komárno), northern parts of Vojvodina (see: Ethnic groups of Vojvodina), etc. No plebiscites were held in the Hungarian majority areas with the exception of the city of Sopron. Most of the Hungarians consider the treaty a national tragedy still today.

Other consequences

Economically, 61.4% of the arable land, 88% of the timber, 62.2% of the railroads, 64.5% of the hard surface roads, 83.1% of the pig iron output, 55.7% of the industrial plants and 67% of the credit and banking institutions of the former Kingdom of Hungary became part of other countries. Romania, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia had to assume part of the financial obligations of the former Kingdom of Hungary on account of the territory placed under their sovereignty.

Military considerations diverted the Treaty from the Wilson principles, making centuries old economic cooperation within the Carpathian Basin more difficult. The borders severed old transport links as in the Kingdom of Hungary the road and railway network had a radial structure, with Budapest in the centre. Roads and railways running along the new borders and interlinking radial transport lines got into the territory of Hungary's neighbours.

The military conditions were similar to those imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles; the Hungarian army was to be restricted to 35,000 men and there was to be no conscription. Further provisions stated that in Hungary, no railway would be built with more than one track.

Hungary also renounced all privileges in territory outside Europe that belonged to the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy.

Articles 54–60 of the Treaty required Hungary to recognize various rights of national minorities within its borders.

See also

External links

de:Vertrag von Trianon es:Tratado de Trianon fr:Traité de Trianon it:Trattato di Trianon he:חוזה טריאנון lt:Trianono sutartis hu:Trianoni békeszerződés nl:Verdrag van Trianon ja:トリアノン条約 no:Fredsavtalen i Trianon pl:Traktat w Trianon pt:Tratado de Trianon sl:Trianonska mirovna pogodba sv:Trianonfördraget