From our current issue:
• CURRENT: John O’Sullivan: Hungary: The Day After
• HISTORY: Adam LeBor: Klára Andrássy and the British–Hungarian Polish Wartime Resistance Operation – Part I
• ESSAYS: Artúr Köő:‘Without memories, the renown of a people is but a shadow’ – The Past and Present of Házsongárd Cemetery
• ARTS AND LETTERS: Melinda Sebők: Changes in Mihály Babits’s Career from the First World War Until Trianon (1914–1920)
The Hungarian Review aims to bring the world’s historical, current political and international events to our attention
from a Central European perspective. As a result, the debate on the shape and future of Europe is a recurring
feature of the publication’s issues. The Hungarian Review’s quarterly issues regularly feature prominent figures
from the worlds of politics and business, as well as from the national and international academic world.



