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by aries1980
3455 days ago
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This is an oversimplification. Trianon set the borders with neither the interest on ethnicity, nor the wishes of their inhabitants. Cities were cut in half (e.g Komarom and Komarno), families became separated, there are people who had 5 different citizenship without leaving their villages.
After the WW1, there were only two census (Balassagyarmat and Sopron, both had to fight for this right, with weapons), both voted to stay in Hungary. For the diversity of the key positions, you can check the list of barons and counts: https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magyar_b%C3%A1r%C3%B3i_csal%C3...
https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magyar_gr%C3%B3fi_csal%C3%A1do...
List of Jewish nobles: http://mek.oszk.hu/04000/04093/html/szocikk/13568.htm One of the most powerful family was the (possibily Croatian) Grassalkovich which once had the duke title as well. I don't deny there was an ethnic tension which hadn't been resolved. But this was a 100 years after the Ottomans were defeated after 300 years of permanent war that drastically changed the ethnic demographic. Check the Balkans and see how big the issue was. |
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And that was for 3 million out of 20 million in the Kingdom of Hungary.
Trianon was a simple solution to a complex issue but the fact that the borders have been kept despite more wars kind of points to the fact that they were a decent compromise (and also kind of emphasizes the amplitude of the harm done by the previous "historical" borders).