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Vácz, István Dávid
2024-02-26T13:09:17Z
2024-02-26T13:09:17Z
2023-07-10
2786-1902hu_HU
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/25467
The period between the two world wars was a crucial one for both Hungarian and Egyptian history. While Hungary was trying to rebuild itself from the shock of the Trianon peace treaty that ended the First World War, the ‘land of the pyramids’ was fighting for its independence from the British. Although the two states had very different histories and were separated by a considerable geographical distance, their relations developed in many ways between the two world wars. This research aims to make a modest contribution to the discourse on Hungarian-Egyptian bilateral relations through the selected Hungarian academic journals. The article implements the knowledge-geography approach, aiming to show who, what and why they wrote about Egypt, thus revealing what they knew, what interested them, what problems and issues they touched upon, and what opinions they expressed about them. The present paper is the first phase of a basic study, which raises several questions and issues that require further examinationhu_HU
dc.formatPDFhu_HU
enhu_HU
Egypt in the Hungarian Scientific Journals between the Two World Warshu_HU
Open accesshu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU
Budapesthu_HU
Bánki Donát Gépész és Biztonságtechnikai Mérnöki Karhu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU
Társadalomtudományok - regionális tudományokhu_HU
colonialismhu_HU
Egypthu_HU
history of sciencehu_HU
Horthy-erahu_HU
hungarian scientific journalshu_HU
Suezhu_HU
Tudományos cikkhu_HU
Journal of Central and Eastern European African Studieshu_HU
local.tempfieldCollectionsFolyóiratcikkekhu_HU
10.59569/jceeas.2023.3.2
Kiadói változathu_HU
p. 3-29.hu_HU
2. sz.hu_HU
3. évf.hu_HU
2023hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU


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