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Hungary's Kuruc Rebellions
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235595835
- EAN9798235595835
- Date de parution04/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Hungary's Kuruc Rebellions For forty years, the Kingdom of Hungary refused to die. Squeezed between the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg dynasty, ground between powers too vast to defeat and too oppressive to endure, Hungary's nobles, Protestant congregations, disbanded soldiers, and serf communities forged one of the most sustained and consequential rebellions in early modern European history. From the Wesselényi Conspiracy of 1671 through the final defeat at the Treaty of Szatmár in 1711, the Kuruc rebellions reshaped the constitutional map of Central Europe.
Led first by the brilliant, doomed Imre Thököly, who gambled everything on an Ottoman alliance and lost, and then by Francis II Rákóczi, the Jesuit-educated prince whose eight-year war of independence came within reach of forcing genuine Hungarian sovereignty, the movement became a crucible of constitutional argument, military innovation, and social contradiction. Drawing on decades of scholarship, Hungary's Kuruc Rebellions traces the full arc of the Kuruc era: the personal tragedies and geopolitical miscalculations, the peasant soldiers promised liberation and betrayed by the settlement their blood had purchased, the diplomatic campaigns that France, Russia, and Sweden exploited without honoring, and the profound question that the rebellion posed and could not answer, what liberty actually means when those who fight for it cannot afford to share it equally.
This is the definitive narrative history of Hungary's great unfinished revolution.
Led first by the brilliant, doomed Imre Thököly, who gambled everything on an Ottoman alliance and lost, and then by Francis II Rákóczi, the Jesuit-educated prince whose eight-year war of independence came within reach of forcing genuine Hungarian sovereignty, the movement became a crucible of constitutional argument, military innovation, and social contradiction. Drawing on decades of scholarship, Hungary's Kuruc Rebellions traces the full arc of the Kuruc era: the personal tragedies and geopolitical miscalculations, the peasant soldiers promised liberation and betrayed by the settlement their blood had purchased, the diplomatic campaigns that France, Russia, and Sweden exploited without honoring, and the profound question that the rebellion posed and could not answer, what liberty actually means when those who fight for it cannot afford to share it equally.
This is the definitive narrative history of Hungary's great unfinished revolution.



