17 December 2018

BOOK: Ferenc HORCHER and Thomas LORMAN, A History of the Hungarian Constitution [International Library of Historical Studies] (London: I.B. Tauris, 2018). ISBN 9781788312639, € 94,32


(Source: Wikipedia)

I.B. Tauris is publishing a book on the constitutional history of Hungary.

ABOUT THE BOOK

The new Hungarian Basic Law, which was ratified on 1 January 2012, provoked domestic and international controversy. Of particular concern was the constitutional text's explicit claim that it was situated within a reinvigorated Hungarian legal tradition that had allegedly developed over centuries before its violent interruption during World War II, by German invaders, and later, by Soviet occupation.

To explore the context and validity of this claim, and the legal traditions which have informed the stormy centuries of Hungary's constitutional development, this book brings together a group of leading historians, political scientists and legal scholars to produce a comprehensive history of Hungarian constitutional thought. Ranging in scope from an overview of Hungarian medieval jurisprudence to an assessment of the various criticisms levelled at the new Hungarian Basis Law of 2012, contributors assess the constitutions, their impacts and their legacies, as well as the social and cultural contexts within which they were drafted. The historical analysis is accompanied by a selection of original source materials, many translated here for the first time. This is the only book in English on the subject and is essential reading for all those interested in Hungary's history, political culture and constitution.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ferenc Hoercher is Director of the Institute of Philosophy at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Professor of Aesthetics at the Pazmany Peter Catholic University in Hungary. He has published widely on philosophy, intellectual history, poetry, legal theory and politics and is a also member of the editorial board of Hungarian Review.

Thomas Lorman is a teaching fellow at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES), University College London (UCL). He is the author of Counter-Revolutionary Hungary 1920-1925 (2006) and The Path to Fascism in Slovakia (I.B.Tauris, 2018). He has also published extensively in peer-reviewed journals and is an editor of the journal Central Europe.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1 Introduction
Philip Barker - Thomas Lorman
2 Law and the Ancient Constitution in Medieval and Early Modern Hungary
Martyn Rady
3 The Birth of the Constitution in Eighteenth-Century Hungarian Political Thought
Istvan M. Szijarto
4 Resurrecting the Past, Reshaping the Future: The Rise of the `Ancient Constitution' at the Diet of 1790/91
Philip Barker
5 Reforming or Replacing the Historical Constitution: Lajos Kossuth and the April Laws of 1848
Ferenc Hoercher
6 Reform Fever and Disillusionment: Constitutional Codification Fiascos of the Hungarian Liberals after the Settlement of 1867
Andras Cieger
7 The Use and Abuse of Flexibility: Hungary's Historical Constitution, 1867-1919
Thomas Lorman
8 Law I of 1920 and the Historical Constitution
Istvan Szabo
9 Law I of 1946 and Law XX of 1949: Continuity or Discontinuity in Traditional Hungarian Constitutionalism?
Balazs Fekete
10 Is a Revival Possible? Theoretical Reflections on the Historical Constitution
Kalman Pocza
11 Epilogue: On the Future(s) of the Historical Constitution
Ferenc Hoercher - Kalman Pocza
Appendix: Primary Sources on Hungarian Constitutional History
1 The Golden Bull of 1222
2 The Rakos Declaration (1505)
3 Extracts from Stephen Werb?czy's Tripartitum (1517)
4 The Laws of 1687
5 The Laws of 1790/91
6 Robert Townson's Translation of Law XXVI of 1790/91
7 The `April Laws' of 1848
8 Law XII of 1867
9 The Declaration of the First Hungarian Republic (November 1918)
10 The Preamble to the Constitution of the Hungarian Socialist Federal Republic of Councils (1919)
11 The Preamble to Law I of 1920
12 The Preamble to Law I of 1946
13 The Constitution of the Hungarian People's Republic (1949)
14 The Fundamental Law of Hungary - National Avowal (2011)
Bibliography

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