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A History of Hungary: Millennium in 
A History of Hungary “was originally written at the request of Atlantisz 
Publishing House (
Most of this audience contemplates 
A History of Hungary in terms of convenient stereotypes. Even if the crudest 
associations of Hungarianness (csikas, gulyas, puszta, gypsy music etc.) are 
discounted, schematic simplifications - partly inspired from Hungary itself - 
dominate the Western European and North American picture drawn of Hungary's 
place in the world. In Central and Eastern Europe, Hungary's one-time status as 
a medium range power, her subsequent reduction in size as well as international 
importance, and the resulting impulses have evoked equally simplistic and 
emotionally coloured assessments of her role in the region's history. The models 
of 'a nation making ceaseless (and perhaps laudable) efforts at emerging from 
(half-) barbarity to the fold of Europe', or 'a small nation struggling and 
surviving against the odds', or 'a nation of oppressors turned troublemakers' 
and their likes offer stereotypes which the book intends to dispel or - since 
some of them, as most distortions, contain a grain of reality - fill with sound 
content.
In order to succeed, I have attempted to combine narrative and analysis, in the 
conviction that while telling a story (and telling it well) is indispensable to 
have an appeal to any readership, the audience described above is best served if 
it is provided with an occasion to examine that story against the background of 
the growth of historical 'structures' (social hierarchy, solidarity groups, 
religious and political ideas, material and spiritual culture, legal and 
political relations and institutions, systems of production and habits of 
consumption etc.) in a comparative framework. I have proceeded from the 
(supposedly better) known to the unknown, and recalled, whenever relevant, some 
aspects of the development of the Occident from Charlemagne to the European 
Union. At the same time, for the most part I endeavoured to avoid the quite 
general practice of chopping such comprehensive histories into chapters or 
sections on politics, economic development, culture etc., and tried to 
integrate these topics or to switch from one to the other within the same breath 
at the points which seemed suitable. I hope that what emerges is not an 
incomprehensible chaos.”
From its beginnings in the Ural Mountains through the Soviet occupation and the 
subsequent inception of a democratic regime, 
A History of Hungaryis a remarkable reflection of world events. Laszlo 
Kontler adeptly steers the reader through this history, beginning with ancient 
times, and moving through the creation and troubles of a Christian monarchy that 
arose in a region wedged between Germanic and Russian lands. 
A History of Hungary also explores the factors that have put 
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