Academic literature on the topic 'Hungarian imprints'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hungarian imprints"

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Szmeskó, Gábor. "The History of the Poetic Mind of János Pilinszky." Hungarian Cultural Studies 13 (July 30, 2020): 98–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ahea.2020.390.

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One of the most important poets of postwar Hungarian literature, János Pilinszky’s (1921-1981) poetry represents the problems of connecting with the Other, the imprints of Second World War trauma and the struggle with God’s distance and silence. Although, unlike the case of most of his contemporaries in Eastern bloc Hungary, his poetry has been translated into several languages, he is hardly known in English-speaking countries. The metaphysically accented lyrical worldview and creator-centered aesthetics—which shows parallels with the Christian poetry of Michael Edwards—of this Hungarian poet
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Postma, Ferenc. "Ex libris Steph. S. Mányoki." Acta Neerlandica, no. 16-17 (March 1, 2021): 11–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.36392/actaneerl/2020/16-17/2.

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Some years ago, we discovered a Dutch item in the famous Klimo Library at Pécs. It is a Convolute, composed of 67 booklets, all printed in the Netherlands in the first half of the 17th century. The collection was made by a Hungarian student of theology from Debrecen, Stephanus / István S. Mányoki, during his stay as a peregrinus in the Netherlands, where he studied at the protestant universities in Groningen, Franeker, Leiden and Utrecht respectively (1646–1648). Later on, this collection of academic imprints came into the possession of Matthias / Mátyás Domsics (1691–1768), a Canon of the Cat
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Agárdi, Izabella. "Intersections of Memory and History in Rural Hungarian Women’s Life Narratives: Three Case Studies." Hungarian Cultural Studies 14 (July 16, 2021): 65–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ahea.2021.428.

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The article contextualizes the oral life stories of three Hungarian-speaking women and their connections to the national histories of East-Central Europe. Through these three life narratives, I argue that in reconstructing their own life stories, the women articulate historical change. The women – born in the 1920s in the aftermath of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and coming of age in a socialist Eastern bloc as citizens of different nation-states – make up a generation as well as a mnemonic community with divergent versions of their community’s past. They talk about childhood in the interwar er
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Hoffmann, István. "Régi helyneveink névadóinak kérdéséhez." Névtani Értesítő 27 (2005): 117–24. https://doi.org/10.29178/nevtert.2005.16.

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On people after whom old settlements of Hungary were named The present study examines the name-sociology of place-names and generic words with localizing functions preserved in the written records of the Early Old Hungarian period. The starting-point of the discussion is that many of these language items can be observed as language imprints of the charter drafters, and the rest of the names do not describe the language situation of the local population equally well either. The linguistic characteristics of the names allow us to judge about the time of occurrence and cast light only rarely on t
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Kormányos Katona, Gyöngyi. "New Challenges and Situation of an Ethnic Minority within a Local Community in the Light of Social Changes." Ethnographica et Folkloristica Carpathica, no. 25 (September 25, 2023): 151–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.47516/ethnographica/25/2023/13253.

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Our memory is largely shaped by the way we look at the peoples currently living within the Carpathian Basin. Once a well-known tobacco-growing village in Historic Hungary, Torda (also known as Torontáltorda in Hungarian) is now a dispersed settlement with a Hungarian ethnic majority located in the Banat region of Vojvodina, Serbia. The shifting of national borders, the two World Wars, the events of the Yugoslav Wars and migratory movements have collectively changed and decimated the lives of Hungarians who had found themselves outside their motherland’s borders after the 1920s. In spite of the
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Sasvári, Anna. "Személynevek és földrajzi nevek A Pál utcai fiúk fordításaiban." Névtani Értesítő 46 (October 28, 2024): 43–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.29178/nevtert.2024.4.

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This paper presents decisions taken by translators concerning names in the novel A Pál utcai fiúk [‘The Paul Street Boys’]. It examines the extent to which the target language texts retain or domesticate the Hungarian names and explores the implications of these strategies. The central question is, what translation decisions are given preference in the rendition of a Hungarian work when translated into the language of a central culture? This analysis forms part of a broader research project in which the translation choices under investigation concern textual elements (e.g., sociopragmatic elem
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Edin Kadric. "Adapting to Change:." Journal of Economics, Law, and Society 1, no. 2 (2024): 55–76. https://doi.org/10.70009/jels.2024.1.2.4.

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This article examines the establishment of modern financial institutions among Bosnian Muslims during the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878–1918). It explores how traditional Islamic financial practices were challenged and reshaped under the pressures of modern European administrative and economic systems introduced by the Austro-Hungarian authorities. Key areas of focus include the establishment of new banking institutions and the adaptation of local communities to emerging economic paradigms. By analyzing historical documents, economic policies, and cultural respons
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Kadric, Edin. "Adapting to Change: Financial Institutions Among Bosnian Muslims in the Austro-Hungarian Era (1878-1918)." Journal of Economics, Law, and Society 1, no. 2 (2024): 55–76. https://doi.org/10.70009/jels.2024.1.2.4.

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This article examines the establishment of modern financial institutions among Bosnian Muslims during the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878–1918). It explores how traditional Islamic financial practices were challenged and reshaped under the pressures of modern European administrative and economic systems introduced by the Austro-Hungarian authorities. Key areas of focus include the establishment of new banking institutions and the adaptation of local communities to emerging economic paradigms. By analyzing historical documents, economic policies, and cultural r
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Szőke, Melinda. "A latinizálás és hiánya a pécsváradi apátság alapítólevelében." Névtani Értesítő 42 (2020): 29–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.29178/nevtert.2020.2.

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The founding charter of Pécsvárad Abbey (+1015/+1158 [about 1220]/1323/1403/PR.) is a document that has only survived in a 15th-century copy of a 13th-century forgery. Thus, an analysis of toponym history and linguistic history must deal with several chronological planes when studying the document. The first section of this study examines Hungarian words (Duna ‘Danube’; the names of trees: e.g. tulfa ‘oak’, scylfa ‘elm’; geographic common nouns: e.g. aruc ‘ditch’, nogwt ‘main road’) that are used only in Latin in other documents or are characterised by mixed usages of Latin and Hungarian terms
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Orešnik, Janez. "The memory of Lucien Tesnière, European linguist." Linguistica 34, no. 1 (1994): 7–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.34.1.7-8.

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As is well known, there are two types of scholars, those who leave an eternal imprint upon their respective fields of research, and those who do not leave such an imprint. This is true of linguistics as well. And it seems that fate drew at least two linguists of the former kind into connection with the University of Ljubljana, namely Lucien Tesniere and the somewhat younger Roman Jakobson. Roman Jakobson was offered a post at the University of Ljubljana at the time when his then home country, Czechoslovakia, was threatened by German occupation. Had Roman Jakobson followed the call to come to L
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Books on the topic "Hungarian imprints"

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István, Bosnyák. Hírünk a világban: Jugoszláviai magyar exteriorika, 1945-1990 : az ország határain kivül megjelent primer közlések s a jugoszláviai magyar szellemi élet külföldi recepciója. Jugoszláviai Magyar Művelődési Társaság, 1993.

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István, Bosnyák. Hírünk a világban: Jugoszláviai magyar exteriorika, 1945-1990 : az ország határain kivül megjelent primer közlések s a jugoszláviai magyar szellemi élet külföldi recepciója. Jugoszláviai Magyar Művelődési Társaság, 1993.

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Szigethy, Rudolf. Romaníai magyar könyvkiadás, 1950-1953. Erdélyi Muzeum-Egyesület, 1995.

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Lajos, György. Az erdélyi magyar irodalom bibliográfiája, 1919-1924. A "Studium" kiadása, 1988.

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Kálmán, Tóth. Romániai magyar könyvkiadás, 1944-1949. Erdélyi Múzeum-Egyesület, 1992.

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Monoki, István. Magyar könyvtermelés Romániában 1919-1940. Országos Széchenyi Könyvtár, 1997.

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Valentiny, Antal. Az Erdélyi Múzeum-Egyesület kiadványainak bibliográfiája 1859-2008. Erdélyi Múzeum-Egyesület, 2009.

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Szentgyörgyi, István. Subotička bibliografija: 1764-1869. Društvena organizacija "Monografija", 1988.

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Siciak, Anna. Druki przemyskie 1754-1939: Bibliografia publikacji polskich, niemieckich, węgierskich, francuskich oraz żydowskich i ukraińskich wydanych alfabetem łacińskim. Południowo-Wshodni Instytut Naukowy w Przemyślu, 2002.

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Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem. Kelet-Európa Története Tanszék. Kelet-Európa története: Magyarországon 1970-1985 között megjelent művek válogatott jegyzéke. Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem Kelet-Európa Története Tanszék, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Hungarian imprints"

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Kiss, Katalin É. "Syntactic reconstruction based on linguistic fossils." In Syntactic Features and the Limits of Syntactic Change. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198832584.003.0014.

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This paper argues that the reconstruction of the featural content of functional projections is possible, and the method to be employed is a version of the comparative method, where the correspondence set consists of the features licensed by the same functional head across related languages. Linguistic fossils bearing imprints of agreement relations in earlier periods of the given language are also potential sources of reconstruction. This is illustrated by a case study reconstructing object marking in Proto-Ugric, and somewhat more tentatively, in Proto-Uralic. It is argued that the Uralic par
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Novák, Ádám. "Use of seals in the Árpád era." In Publications of the Institute of Hungarian Research. Institute of Hungarian Research; Szent István Király Museum, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53644/mki.kas.2022.277.

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Seals used to authenticate documents are reference sources in the special area between written and material sources. They were indispensable starting points for the study of Árpád-era history. The Golden Bull, our most important medieval document with legal power, was named after the golden seal it was certified with. Royal seals, combined with the results of numismatic studies, have enabled researchers to reconstruct the heraldic programme of the Hungarian kings. The seals of church figures and institutions provided sources for art historians to help examine changes in the artistic styles of
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László, Balázs. "Az 1811. évi erdélyi büntetőkódex-javaslat mint jogi kultúrtörténeti lenyomat." In Élő jogszokások: Jogi néprajzi, jogtörténeti és jogi kultúrtörténeti tanulmányok. Pécsi Tudományegyetem KPVK, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.15170/jkjnk11-kpvk-2023-15.

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The 1811 Transylvanian Penal Code Bill as an Imprint of Legal Cultural History Although the 1811 Transylvanian Penal Code Bill never became effective law, its text ela- borated apparently free of superior political pressure, in which Transylvanian - and partly Hungarian - legal traditions meet progressive heories of criminal law, must well represent the contemporary Transylvanian legal culture.
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