Gabor Batonyi is a Hungarian historian who has published numerous historical articles.
Education
He earned a degree in history at the Faculty of Teacher Training of Eötvös Loránd University.
Career
Since the late 1990s, he has been a lecturer in the Department of Peace Studies and International Development at the University of Bradford where he teaches History. He served as the Foreign Affairs Editor for the Hungarian Television Company (MTV) in 1989âÂÂ1992. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society and one of the editors of the journal Central and Eastern European Review.
His principal research topics are recent Central European history, focusing on the history of Hungary 1918âÂÂ1989, British foreign policy in Central Europe, including interwar diplomatic history, British intelligence and special operations during the Second World War, and the relationship between Britain and Hungary from 1918.
Publications
- âÂÂMission to survive: Hungarian historian Gyula Szekfÿ as agent and diplomatâÂÂ, Slavonic and East European Review,90/4 (2012), 705âÂÂ34.
- âÂÂHungarian opposition and resistance to Stalinism in the early 1950sâÂÂ, in L. Péter and M. Rady (eds), Resistance, Rebellion and Revolution in Hungary and Central Europe: Commemorating 1956 (UCL, London, 2009), 159âÂÂ70.
- âÂÂAnglo-Austrian relations between the warsâÂÂ, in K. Koch and A. Suppan (eds), Von Saint Germain zum Belvedere: ÃÂsterreich und Europa 1919âÂÂ1955,AuÃÂenpolitische Dokumente der Republik ÃÂsterreich 1918âÂÂ1938 (ADÃÂ), Special Issue (Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, Munich and Vienna, 2007), 115âÂÂ28.
- âÂÂMagyarország világháborús részvétele brit szemszögbolâÂÂ, in Gy. Markó (ed.), Háború, Hadsereg, ÃÂsszeomlás: Magyarpolitika, katonapolitika a második világháborúban (ZrÃÂnyi Kiadó, Budapest, 2005), 61âÂÂ9.
- âÂÂBritish foreign policy and the problem of Hungarian revisionism in the 1930sâÂÂ, in L. Péter and M. Rady (eds), British-Hungarian Relations since 1848 (UCL, London, 2004), 205âÂÂ16.
- Britain and Central Europe, 1918âÂÂ1932 (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1999).
Conferences
- âÂÂBritish diplomacy and the âÂÂlingering traceâ of Anglophilia in post-war HungaryâÂÂ, Anglophilia and the British Constitution in Central Europe 1700âÂÂ2000, University of Notre Dame, London, October 2013.
- âÂÂEgy elkésett brit kÃÂsérlet a magyar kommunisták megfékezésére és a megtorlásâÂÂ,International Symposium on the Crimes of Communism, Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, Budapest, November 2011.
- âÂÂHungarian opposition and resistance to StalinismâÂÂ, Resistance, Rebellion and Revolution in Central Europe: Commemorating 1956, UCL, London, September 2006.
- âÂÂMagyarország világháborús részvétele az angolszász hatalmak szemszögébÿlâÂÂ, International Conference on HungaryâÂÂs Participation in the Second World War, Institute of Military History, Budapest, May 2005.
- âÂÂBritish foreign policy and the problem of Hungarian revisionism in the 1930sâÂÂ, BritishâÂÂHungarian Relations since 1848, UCL, London, May 2004.
- âÂÂThe myth of disinterest: Britain and ethnic conflict in interwar Central EuropeâÂÂ, Forum of British, Czech and Slovak Historians, University of Dundee, March 2002.
- âÂÂNationalism and communism in Hungary in the early 1950sâÂÂ, German History Society Annual Regional Conference, University of Swansea, June 2001.
- âÂÂBritish intelligence and HorthyâÂÂs peace initiativesâÂÂ, Albion Conference, University of Debrecen, May 2001.
References