Hungarian uprising Flashcards
Every aspect of life in Hungary was controlled by the Soviets. Give 4 examples of conditions that led to unrest.
1) Secret police (AVH) and Soviet troops on streets.
2) No freedom of speech.
3) Rigged elections: only 20% of votes were for the Communist party, but they won the elections.
4) Economy exploited by USSR: workers were overworked but goods went to the Soviets, leaving shortages.
Who was the Hungarian Prime Minister until 1956?
Rakosi, a Russian, Communist and Stalinist leader.
Give 2 examples of individuals who were oppressed by the Communist Hungarian government.
1) Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty
2) Laszlo Rajk
What happened to Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty?
In 1948, Mindszenty was arrested and sentenced to life, having spoken out by comparing Hungarian fascism to Nazi Germany.
When was Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty arrested?
1948.
What happened to Laszlo Rajk?
He was foreign secretary and Rakosi’s rival of power. In 1949, he was found guilty, in a show trial, of spying and plotting to restore capitalism, and was hanged.
When was Laszlo Rajk executed?
1949.
When was the Hungarian uprising (including the month)?
October 1956.
Describe what happened during the uprising.
Hungarian students, workers + soldiers protested, rioted and attacked the AVH and Soviet troops. A monument of Stalin was smashed in Budapest. Support was asked from the West, but none came.
What did Khrushchev do in response to the uprising?
He replaced Rakosi, putting Nagy in power to appease the people. Nagy’s ideology was “socialism with a human face”.
What was Nagy’s ideology?
“Socialism with a human face”.
When did Khrushchev put Nagy in power?
24th October.
What happened on the 25th of October and what followed?
Soviet tanks opened fire on crowds of protesters. Nagy asked Khrushchev to move Soviet troops out of Hungary, which he did (these had been there since the end of WW2!).
Once in power, Nagy immediately started making changes. These became known as the “5 days of freedom”. Give 4 examples of actions he took.
1) Allowed freedom of press (led to some anti-Soviet media)
2) Encouraged open discussions of economic and political reform
3) Allowed freedom of religion
4) Freed political prisoners, e.g. Mindszenty
When did Khrushchev become premier of the USSR?
1953.