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Bread Far from My Cradle

Bread Far from My Cradle
(E-könyv)

Béla Menczer (1902–1983) was a journalist and historian. As a youth, he was radical, but never a Communist. For illegal activities, he was sentenced to jail in 1922. After his release, he left Hungary and went to Paris where he joined the Károlyi emigration, serving as a liaison secretary to the former Prime Minister. Disillusioned and increasingly critical of both bourgeois radicalism and nationalism, he turned to conservatism. He lived then in Berlin and later in London. After the defeat of France, he enlisted in de Gaulle’s army. He saw some action in Africa and was baptised a Catholic in Sierra Leone. After the war, he settled in London and published essays and papers on Hungarian and European history and literature. He was a polyglot, an amiable personality, with an unusually wide network of acquaintances, to which this autobiography, ending in 1946, testifies. Though staunchly anti-communist, he visited Hungary three times, and entrusted his legacy to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Szállítás:
Azonnal
Elérhető nálunk:
.ePub formátumban
Eredeti ár:
1 667 ,-
Árakkal kapcsolatos információk:

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Online ár: az internetes rendelésekre érvényes ár
Előrendelői ár: a megjelenéshez kapcsolódó, előrendelőknek járó kedvezményes ár
Korábbi ár: az akciót megelőző 30 nap legalacsonyabb ára ezen a weboldalon
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További információért kattints ide
Adatok
Raktári kód:
219586
ISBN:
9786156598769
EAN:
9786156598769
Gyártó kód:
33305
Megjelenés:
2024.
Oldalszám:
208
Nyelv:
angol

Béla Menczer (1902–1983) was a journalist and historian. As a youth, he was radical, but never a Communist. For illegal activities, he was sentenced to jail in 1922. After his release, he left Hungary and went to Paris where he joined the Károlyi emigration, serving as a liaison secretary to the former Prime Minister. Disillusioned and increasingly critical of both bourgeois radicalism and nationalism, he turned to conservatism. He lived then in Berlin and later in London. After the defeat of France, he enlisted in de Gaulle’s army. He saw some action in Africa and was baptised a Catholic in Sierra Leone. After the war, he settled in London and published essays and papers on Hungarian and European history and literature. He was a polyglot, an amiable personality, with an unusually wide network of acquaintances, to which this autobiography, ending in 1946, testifies. Though staunchly anti-communist, he visited Hungary three times, and entrusted his legacy to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

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