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Encyclopedia > Hungarian Revolution, 1956
Hungarians investigate a disabled Soviet tank in
Hungarians investigate a disabled Soviet tank in Budapest

The 1956 Hungarian Revolution, also known as the Hungarian Uprising, was a popular revolt against Soviet influence and control in Hungary. The revolt was brutally suppressed by Soviet troops. About 25-50,000 Hungarian insurgents and 7,000 Soviet troops were killed, thousands more were wounded, and nearly a quarter million left the country as refugees. The revolution was a watershed event for Communists in Western countries; many who had formerly supported the Soviet Union now criticized it.

Contents

Overview

On 23 October 1956 Hungary's population rose up against their government. The population achieved control over a large number of social institutions and territory. The Hungarians began to implement their own policies. One policy on which Hungarians were divided was the status of known ÁVH informants; the workers councils and student councils sent armed bands out to arrest ÁVH operatives in preparation for criminal trials; whereas, the small ultra-nationalist right wing groups like Jozsef Dudas' infamously executed members of the ÁVH. The Hungarian Communist Party made Imre Nagy Prime Minister. After negotiating a ceasefire with Soviet forces in Hungary, Nagy was forced by public opinion to withdraw Hungary from the Warsaw Pact and declare neutrality.


The Soviet Union's army intervened on two occasions to stop this process, once on the night of October 23, resulting in a ceasefire by 1 November 1956. On the night of 4 November 1956 the Soviet army again acted to halt this process of popular reform. By January 1957 the Soviet Union had installed a new Hungarian government and halted the reforms demanded by the people. Due to the rapid change in government and social policies; the role of left-wing ideology in uniting the population; and, the use of armed force to achieve political goals this uprising is often considered a revolution.


Historical debate

The historical and political significance of the Hungarian revolution of 1956 is still actively debated. The main views on the nature of the revolution are:

Due to the variety of conflicting and irreconcilable historiographical positions on the Hungarian revolution of 1956, it is difficult to produce a summary account of revolutionary events. Similarly, because the revolution was short lived, it is impossible to speculate on what its effects might have been.


Why it happened

Economic collapse and low standards of living provoked working class discontent, which was visible during soccer riots. Peasants were unhappy with land policies. The Communist Party was unable to unite its reformist and Stalinist wings. Journalists and authors were upset with their working conditions, and took control of their trade union. Students were upset with academic conditions and University entrance criteria and established independent student unions. Nikita Khrushchev's Secret Speech caused much debate within the elite of the Hungarian communist party. As the Hungarian communist party was blinded by leadership debates, the population took action. There was political instability inside the Hungarian communist party as well.


What happened

23 October to 3 November

On 23 October 1956 students marched in the streets of Budapest, later attracting a number of workers and other Hungarians; their numbers peaked at about 100,000. Hungarian soldiers on duty in the city supported the protesters, tearing the Soviet stars off their hats and throwing them into the crowds.


The demands of the demonstrators were at first relatively mild. The turning point was when Hungarian Security Police (AVO) opened fire on the crowds and killed hundreds. Pretenses of moderation were dropped, police cars were flipped over and set on fire, and guns were distributed amongst the masses by arms factory workers.


Soon after, the popular communist politician Imre Nagy was installed as Prime Minister by the Hungarian communist party. Many of his previous supporters now denounced him as a traitor, mistakenly thinking that he, not the hardline Party Secretary Erno Gero and the former Prime Minister Andras Hegedeus, had declared a state of emergency and ordered Soviet troops into action.


While Soviet troops fought in Budapest, the rest of the country was largely quiet. Soviet commanders often negotiated local cease-fires with the revolutionaries. In some regions, the Soviet forces managed to halt revolutionary activity. In Budapest, the Soviet troops were eventually fought to a stand-still.


During the following fortnight, many workers councils and national councils were formed. The workers councils were much like the independent Russian soviets of 1905 or 1917. The national councils were like the workers councils, but governing a geographic area. Political parties from before 1945 or 1949 crackdowns were reformed, but the majority of the population only supported parties which proposed to keep socialism.


Many political prisoners were released including major Church figures.


Popular sentiment and reports of threatening Soviet troop movements forced the government of Imre Nagy to withdraw from the Warsaw Pact. Although widely believed that this action caused the renewed Soviet military intervention, the historical fact is that Khrushchev gave Marshal Koniev the order to launch the attack in the morning of October 30, before Imre Nagy announced Hungary's leaving the Warsaw pact. The Soviet Union simply could not countenance the establishment of a multiparty democracy within its sphere of influence. They were given to understand by the US that the arrangements regarding the boundries of that sphere of influence reached at Yalta and Potsdam were not being questioned by the United States. As John Foster Dulles announced it in late October, 1956 : 'The United States does not consider Hungary an ally.' Thus emboldened, in the knowledge that they had to fear no NATO intervention, Khrushchev gave in to the hawks in the Kremlin demanding firm action and reprisals.


4 November onwards

New Soviet troops invaded. Working class Hungarians played a significant role in fighting the Soviet troops, until the workers councils, students and intellectuals called for a cease-fire on 10 November.


Between 10 November and 19 December the workers councils negotiated directly with the Soviet occupation force. While they achieved some releases of political prisoners, they did not achieve their aims of a Soviet withdrawal.


János Kádár formed a new communist government, with the support of the Soviet Union, and after December 1956 steadily increased his control over Hungary.


Sporadic armed resistance and strikes continued until midway through 1957.


Imre Nagy, and many others were executed by Kádár's government. The CIA's estimates published in the 1960s approximate 1200 executions.


By 1963 most political prisoners from the Hungarian revolution of 1956 had been released by János Kádár.


What the revolutionaries wanted

  • Peasants wanted the right to own and farm individual plots of land.
  • Workers wanted self-management of workplaces through workers' councils, free trade unions and improved living conditions.
  • Nearly all Hungarians wanted to abolish the Államvédelmi Hatóság, the secret police, which operated in a similar manner to the Soviet Union's KGB

External link

  • Institute of Revolutionary History, Hungary (http://www.rev.hu/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
1956 Hungarian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (6543 words)
In June 1956, in Poznan, Poland, an anti-Communist workers' revolt was suppressed by the Polish Army with 74 deaths.
In October 1956, the remains of László Rajk, György Pálffy (former chief of staff of the Hungarian army), Tibor Szőnyi and András Szalai, all executed in 1949 by the Rákosi regime for treason, were reinterred with full honors.
Hungarian neutrality and withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact represented a threat to the Soviet defensive and ideologic buffer zone of satellite nations.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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