Hungarian Studies Review Vol. 2., 1975

No. 1. Spring

OUR CONTRIBUTORS L. S. DOMONKOS, Professor of History at Youngstown State University, received his graduate training at the Mediaeval Institute of the University of Notre Dame. He was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Vienna and has twice received grants from IREX to do research in Hungary. He is the author of several articles on Hungarian cultural history and is currently completing a major monograph on the Age of Matthias Corvinus. PAUL BODY received his Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame. He has taught at post-secondary educational institutions in the United States and Canada and has been the recipient of a number of research grants for work in East Central Europe. He is the author of several articles on Hungarian history and his book, Joseph Eotvos and the Modernization of Hungary, 1840-1870, has been widely acclaimed in academic circles. Presently Dr. Body is working on immigration and urban history. GABOR VERMES, Assistant Professor in the Department of History, Rutgers University, received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Stan­ford University. Presently he is completing a biography of Count Istvan Tisza. PETER GOSZTONY, Director of the East European Library in Bern, Switzerland, is the author of several articles and books on recent Hungarian history. At the present he is publishing a biography of Admiral Miklos Horthy.

Next