Title | A Monumental Debate in Budapest : The Hentzi Statue and the Limits of Austro-Hungarian Reconciliation, 1852–1918 |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Authors | Miller, M. |
Journal title | Austrian History Yearbook |
Year | 2009 |
Pages | 215 - 237 |
Volume | 40 |
Issue | 1 |
Abstract | Two of the most iconic photosof the 1956 Hungarian revolution involve a colossal statue of Stalin, erected in 1951 and toppled on the first day of the anti-Soviet uprising. One of these pictures shows Stalin's decapitated head, abandoned in the street as curious pedestrians amble by. The other shows a tall stone pedestal with nothing on it but a lonely pair of bronze boots. Situated near Heroes' Square, Hungary's national pantheon, the Stalin statue had served as a symbol of Hungary's subjugation to the Soviet Union; and its ceremonious and deliberate destruction provided a poignant symbol for the fall of Stalinism. |
Language | eng |
Notes | exported from refbase (http://www.bibliography.ceu.hu/show.php?record=4974), last updated on Mon, 27 Jul 2009 16:33:56 +0200 |
Unit:
Department of History