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Mar 1, 1981 · Irving fires on nearly all of those cylinders, delivering a meticulously documented yet fast-paced account of the 1956 revolt by Hungary against Soviet domination.
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- Paperback
The Hungarian uprising of 1956 was crushed by a man who became in-stantly one of the most reviled men in his country. That same man is today one of Hungary’s most genuinely popular citizens, János Kádár. His life has sprung many contradictions, which cannot only be explained by his subservience to
Mar 4, 2010 · David Irving, described by a UK judge as the leading expert on World War II, examines the spontaneous 1956 uprising of the Hungarians against rule from Moscow against the faceless, indifferent, incompetent functionaries who had turned their country into a pit of Marxist misery in one short decade: the funkies, Irving calls them, adapting the ...
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- David Irving
Hungary 1956: One Nation’s Nightmare is as book by David Irving, described by a UK judge as the leading expert on World War II, examines the spontaneous 1956 uprising of the Hungarians against rule from Moscow – against the faceless, indifferent, incompetent functionaries who had turned their country into a pit of Marxist misery in one ...
- Books > David Irving Books
The book, which I read initially from the public library, gives a very detailed description of the 1956 hungarian uprising compared to other books that i've read on the subject. The description of what happened to the humgarian people afterwards was quite harrowing and not detailed in the other books.
- (3)
- IRVING David
The book, which I read initially from the public library, gives a very detailed description of the 1956 hungarian uprising compared to other books that i've read on the subject. The description of what happened to the humgarian people afterwards was quite harrowing and not detailed in the other books.
- David Irving
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David Irving, described by a UK judge as the leading expert on World War II, examines the spontaneous 1956 uprising of the Hungarians against rule from Moscow against the faceless, indifferent, incompetent functionaries who had turned their country into a pit of Marxist misery in one short decade: the funkies, Irving calls them, adapting the ...