Hungary: Land and People
Land and People
To the east of the Danube, the Great Hungarian Plain (Hung.
Situated on a plain near the geographic center of Europe, Hungary has been the meeting place and battleground of many peoples, and its heterogeneous population was often the cause of social upheaval before 1919. However, as a result of the separation of non-Hungarian territories after World War I, the great slaughter of the Jews in World War II, and the exchange after the war of Slavic and Romanian minorities for their Magyar counterparts, Hungary is today essentially homogeneous. The Magyars constitute more than 90% of the population. There are small minorities of Romani (Gypsies), Germans, Serbs, and other groups. Hungarian is spoken by most people. Over half of the people are Roman Catholic, but there is a large Calvinist minority. Hungary still has the largest Jewish population in Central and Eastern Europe (100,000–120,000).
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- A Democratic Hungary
- Communist Rule
- Independence
- Hungary and Austria
- Foreign Domination
- Growth of a State
- Government
- Economy
- Land and People
- Bibliography
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