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Academic Journals
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- 1From:Hungarian Studies: A Journal of the International Association for Hungarian Studies and Balassi Institute (Vol. 34, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedDer österreichische Dichter Ludwig Foglar lebte von 1845 bis 1850 in Pest-Buda. Er schrieb Gedichte und Kurzgeschichten in deutschsprachigen Organen von Pest, im Taschenbuch Iris, in der Zeitschrift Der Ungar und in der...
- 2From:Acta Historiae Artium: Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae (Vol. 55, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Corvinus in Buda: Roman names in the playground of Art. The Hungarian king Hunyadi Matyas is known as Matthias Corvinus today. The name 'Corvinus' was created for him by the Italian Humanists, along with a...
- 3From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedAs a graduating ATC student I carried out a survey among students who had specialized in Air Traffic Control at the Institute of Aviation Officers at the Miklos Zrinyi National Defense University. The 27 respondents...
- 4From:The English Historical Review (Vol. 109, Issue 431) Peer-ReviewedMary of Hungary was the daughter of Philip of Burgundy and Juana of Castile. Born as Marie de Hongrie in Belgium, Brussels, she was married to Louis II of Bohemia at the age of 19. Her reputation of being a staunch...
- 5From:Revista de Stiinte Politice (Vol. 65) Peer-ReviewedAs a result of society evolution, monetary policy, as well as the objectives of central banks, have suffered and continue to suffer several changes. The case of Central and East European countries is no different, and...
- 6From:Suffolk Transnational Law Review (Vol. 41, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedINTERNATIONAL LAW--Expropriation Exception Allows Jewish Family to Bring Action to Recover Ari Stolen During the Holocaust--De Csepel v. Republic of Hung., 859 F.3d 1094 (D.C. Cir. 2017). The Foreign Sovereign...
- 7From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 131, Issue 2)FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW--FOREIGN SOVEREIGN IMMUNITIES ACT --D.C. CIRCUIT INTERPRETS EXPROPRIATION EXCEPTION TO ALLOW GENOCIDE VICTIMS TO SUE THEIR OWN GOVERNMENT.--de Csepel v. Republic of Hungary, 859 F.3d 1094 (D.C....
- 8From:Urban History Review (Vol. 27, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedNew York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1994. Pp. xiv, 400. This collection of fourteen essays is an exercise in double comparison. It illustrates five themes in the histories of New York and Budapest: the relationships...
- 9From:Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae (Vol. 69, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe author of this article examines the gradual accumulation of information in the Hungarian Kingdom about the Mongol Western Campaign and the corresponding propagation of this information in Western Europe. The primary...
- 10From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 16, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn this article we investigate how the public communication of the Hungarian Central Bank's Monetary Council (MC) affects Hungarian sovereign bond yields. This research ties into the advances made in the financial and...
- 11From:Georgetown Journal of International Law (Vol. 35, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI. INTRODUCTION In the summer of 2001, the Hungarian Parliament adopted a law that granted a number of privileges and other preferential treatment to certain persons who are not Hungarian citizens but consider...
- 12From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 16, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAncient human remains exhibiting bony changes consistent with osteoarticular tuberculosis (OATB) indicate that the disease has afflicted mankind for millennia. Nonetheless, not many pediatric OATB cases have been...
- 13From:Austrian History Yearbook (Vol. 35) Peer-ReviewedWHAT IS A MYTH? This question cannot be easily answered; the notions and concepts used in various scientific disciplines are too divergent and, as with many other terms, they possess different meanings in different...
- 14From:American Journal of International Law (Vol. 111, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedDECISION 22/2016. (XII. 5.) AB ON THE INTERPRETATION OF ARTICLE E)(2) OF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW. At http://hunconcourt.hu. Constitutional Court of Hungary, December 5, 2016. In a case of first impression, the...
- 15From:Hoover Digest (Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSaint Stephen, first king of medieval Hungary, exerts an outsize influence on that nation's history and symbolism. Crowned in the year 1001, Stephen I (c. 975-1038) consolidated the monarchy and adopted Christianity as...
- 16From:Hungarian Studies: A Journal of the International Association for Hungarian Studies and Balassi Institute (Vol. 32, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis study deals with Celtis' practice of rewriting and recontextualizing his own poetry. His poem To the literary odality of Hungarians (Ad sodalitatem litterariam Ungarorum, Odes II.2), addressed to a Hungarian...
- 17From:Global Jurist Topics (Vol. 4, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract In 1959, three years after Russian troops suppressed an armed revolt against the Hungarian state, the Communist government of Hungary adopted a Civil Code that recognized private property rights. This paper...
- 18From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 126, Issue 8)Scholars and jurists have long debated the interaction between national and international legal systems: some endorse a monist view that international law is directly incorporated into a state's domestic legal order,...
- 19From:Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter (Vol. 46, Issue 1)LUCIO If the Duke, with the other Dukes, come not to composition with the King of Hungary, why then all the dukes fall upon the King. FIRST GENTLEMAN Heaven grant us its peace, but not the King of Hungary's....
- 20From:Acta Botanica Croatica (Vol. 71, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedReferences ACS E., SZABO K., KISS K. T., 2002: Nature conservation oriented algal biodiversity monitoring investigations in the main arm and some dead arms of the River Tisza I. Benthic diatoms. Limnological Reports...