1956, October 23: Outbreak of the Hungarian Revolution. The Stalinist dictatorship collapses after mass demonstrations. But Soviet tanks enter Budapest to crush the revolt. Fighting continues until early November, leaving more than 3000 dead. Communist Party leader János Kádár is installed into power by the Soviets. 1958, June 16: Imre Nagy, prime minister during the Hungarian Revolution, is executed by the new regime. 1962, November 20-24: The Eighth Party Congress is held. In order to secure UN recognition, the Kádár regime announces an amnesty for those imprisoned for participating in the revolution.
1968, January 1: The New Economic Mechanism takes effect. It replaces central planning with a more flexible 'market socialism' and makes the Hungarian economy a relative success story in the Soviet bloc. 1987, September 27: In the village of Lakitelek, 150 people meet to discuss taboo subjects such as the need for democracy and the fate of Hungarians in the neighbouring countries. Participants establish the Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF), the first opposition organization. 1988, January 1: All restrictions on foreign travel are lifted. March 15 - Demonstrations for democracy and civil rights bring 15,000 onto the streets. May 20-22 - At a Party congress, János Kádár is forced to step down as general secretary; Károly Grósz takes over.
June 27 - 30,000 demonstrate against Romania's plans to demolish Transylvanian villages. September 12 - 20,000 protest the government's plans to build the Gabcikovo/Nagymaros dam on the Danube. November 29 - Insisting on the preservation of the party-state, Party leader Grósz warns that the democratic opposition wants a 'bourgeois restoration' that will trigger bloody anti-communist reprisals. 1989, February 11: The Communist Party's Central Committee, responding to 'public dissatisfaction', announces it will permit a multi-party system in Hungary and hold free elections. March 15 - For the first time in decades, the government declares the anniversary of the 1848 Revolution a national holiday. Opposition demonstrations fill the streets of Budapest with more than 75,000 marchers, culminating that evening in a candlelight procession across the Chain Bridge.
March 24 - Meeting Grósz in Moscow, Mikhail Gorbachev condones Hungary's moves toward a multi-party system and promises that the USSR will not interfere in Hungary's internal affairs. May 2 - Hungary begins taking down its barbed-wire fence along the Austrian border - the first tear in the Iron Curtain. May 31 - The statue of Lenin standing along Dózsa György út is hauled away 'for repairs'. It never returns. June 16 - The reburial of Prime Minister Nagy, executed after the 1956 Revolution, draws a crowd of 250,000 at Heroes' Square. The last speaker, 26-year-old Viktor Orbán, publicly calls for Soviet troops to leave Hungary. July 6 - János Kádár dies.
July 11 - US President George Bush visits Budapest. September 10 - Foreign Minister Gyula Horn announces that East German refugees in Hungary will not be repatriated but will instead be allowed to go to the West. The resulting exodus shakes East Germany and hastens the fall of the Berlin Wall. September 18 - After three months of negotiations, the government and the opposition reach agreement on legal and political reforms. October 7 - The Communist Party renounces Marxism and votes to dissolve itself.
October 23 - The communist People's Republic is terminated, and the Republic of Hungary is proclaimed. November 26 - In Hungary's first democratic referendum, voters decide by a razor-thin margin that the president should be elected by Parliament. 1990: March 10 - The Socialist government reaches an agreement with Moscow on the withdrawal of the 50,000 Soviet troops stationed in Hungary. April 8 - The first free elections since 1947 are completed.
The winning party, the MDF, assembles a centre-right coalition. Historian József Antall becomes prime minister. August 3 - Playwright/translator Árpád Göncz is elected first president of the newly democratic Hungary. 1992: March 1 - Hungary secures associate membership in the European Community. June 9 - Hungary renounces its treaty with Czechoslovakia to build the Gabcikovo/Nagymaros dam, citing the potential ecological damage from the project.
The dispute eventually reaches the International Court of Justice. 1993: January 8 - The heads of the state-run Hungarian radio and television resign, charging that the government is interfering politically in their work. December 12 - Prime Minister Antall dies. Péter Boross of the MDF officially succeeds him nine days later. 1994: May 29 - In parliamentary elections, the Socialists (the former Communists) win 33% of the vote -- a stunning comeback from their 1990 defeat.
Party leader Gyula Horn subsequently becomes prime minister. 1995: December 10 - U.S. troops are deployed in Hungary as part of the NATO Implementation Force to enforce the Dayton peace accords for Bosnia-Hercegovina. 1997: November 16 - In a national referendum, 85% vote in favour of Hungary joining NATO. 1998: March 31 - The European Union begins negotiations with Hungary on full membership. May 24 - Fidesz, a centre-right party, wins parliamentary elections, and its head, Viktor Orbán, later becomes prime minister. 1999: March 12 - Hungary joins NATO. |