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         Hungarian Mythology:     more books (18)
  1. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1954
  2. Hungarian Folktales: The Art of Zsuzsanna Palk- (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) by Linda Degh, 1995-10-01
  3. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology (American Ethnological Society Monographs, No 23) by Geza Roheim, 1988-12
  4. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1966
  5. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology by Geza Roheim, 1959
  6. Hungarian and Vogul Mythology.
  7. Hungarian Folk-Tales (Oxford Myths and Legends) by Val Biro, 1992-05-14
  8. Hungarian Ballads and the European Ballad Tradition
  9. Old Hungarian Fairy Tales by Emmuska Orczy, Baroness Orczy, 2004-06-30
  10. One-Time Dog Market at Buda and Other Hungarian Folktales by Irma Molnar, 2001-12
  11. Tobias and the Dragon: A Hungarian Folk Tale (Folk Tales of the World) by Val Biro, 1989-01
  12. Folktales and Society: Story-Telling in a Hungarian Peasant Community (A Midland Book) by Linda Degh, 1989-09
  13. The Miraculous Hind: A Hungarian Legend by Elizabeth Cleaver, 1976-07
  14. Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian by Various, 2003-06

81. George Bush Presidential Library And Museum
During our visit to Budapest, we saw the hungarian love of excellence in carefulcraftsmanship, in fact, forms part of the hungarian historic mythology.
http://bushlibrary.tamu.edu/research/papers/1990/90101800.html
Remarks at the Welcoming Ceremony for Prime Minister Jozsef Antall of Hungary
October 18, 1990 The President. Mr. Prime Minister, it's a tremendous pleasure to welcome you and your wife, Klara, to the White House today. Seven years ago, I became the highest ranking American official to visit Hungary and, last year, the first American President to journey there. Even though it was pouring rain when we arrived in Kossuth Square, the people of Hungary gave us a very warm welcome. Barbara and I have seen few cities more lovely than Budapest; and we've seldom seen a city more alive alive with commerce, change, and above all, hope; alive with a people who believe that, like a lamp lighting the darkest night, liberty can light the globe. The arrival at the White House of the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Hungary in over 40 years is, indeed, sir, an historic event; and it brings to mind the arrival 138 years ago of another Hungarian patriot at another house which embodies freedom, the Congress of the United States. That man was Lajos Kossuth. His statue stood behind us that day in the rain in Budapest, in the square that bears his name. And in today's historic meeting, his memory lifts us and teaches us. For his life was a celebration of bravery and of dreams. He knew that a courageous people would not bow to bayonets and barbed wire, and he knew that the light of liberty would shine forever.

82. Hungarian Electronic Library / CULTURE, ARTS, LITERATURE
hungarian Folklore and mythology Classical hungarian Literature hungarianLiterature in Foreign Languages Folklore and mythology
http://mek.oszk.hu/html/humaneng.phtml
RECOMMENDED SOURCES IN THIS CATEGORY: History of
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Folklore and Mythology Ancient Greek and Roman literature Arabian and Persian Literature Literature of Far East Classical Literature Contemporary Literature Young Adult and Children's Book Fiction, Science Fiction and Fantasy
Other sources: Irodalom.lap Vizsla Katalógus Neumann-ház Fine arts, visual arts Fine Arts (general) Ethnic Arts Painting and Drawing Sculpture, Plastic Arts Architectural Art Photography and Photographs Art of Books Applied Arts, Fashion Computer Graphics Other Visual Arts Art Trade, Galeries History of Art Other sources: Képzõmûvészet.lap Vizsla Katalógus Movie, theatre, performing arts Performing Arts (general) Theatre Film Video, DVD

83. Books About Dragon Mythology
In a vast synthesis of art, mythology, history, and anthropology, Jones findsthat the dragon is in 9) hungarian Folktales The Art of Zsuzsanna Palko
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/toppicks/tp/aatp-dr.htm
var zLb=5; var zIoa1 = new Array('Related Guide Picks','Don Quixote','http://classiclit.about.com/library/weekly/aatp-dq.htm','Huckleberry Finn','http://classiclit.about.com/library/weekly/aatp-hf.htm','Captivity Narratives','http://classiclit.about.com/cs/toppicks/tp/aatp-cn.htm','Greek Mythology Books','http://classiclit.about.com/library/weekly/aatp-grm.htm','Irish Mythology','http://classiclit.about.com/library/weekly/aatp-irmy.htm'); var zIoa2 = new Array('Suggested Reading','American Sea Writing: An Anthology','http://classiclit.about.com/library/week','Pirate Hunter','http://classiclit.about.com/library/weekly/aafpr080102a.htm','Sea Literature','http://classiclit.about.com/cs/sealiterature/index.htm','Robert Louis Stevenson','http://classiclit.about.com/cs/stevensonrl/index.htm'); zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Literature: Classic A-to-Z Characters ... Dragons Books About Dragon Mythology Homework Help Literature: Classic Essentials Book Reviews ... Help w(' ');zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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84. Eng 363/Mythology And Folklore
Germanic, Greek, Guam, Haitian, hungarian, Incan/AndeanIndian, Indonesian, Bulfinch s mythology The Age of Fable or Stories of Gods and Heroes
http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_wpf/eng363.html
Mythology
and
Folklore
Online Sources for Mythology

85. Study Of Religion IDP
Baltic and Slavic Folklore and mythology. M128. hungarian Folklore andmythology. M129. Folklore and mythology of the Ugric Peoples. 130.
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/religion/IDP.HTM
Gradutate Study INTERDEPARTMENTAL PROGRAM IN THE STUDY OF RELIGION Major Requirements Faculty Advisor: Scott Bartchy
5343 Bunche Hall
Student Affairs Officer: Arlecia Powell-Halley
329 Dodd Hall
Counseling Drop-in Hours: by appointment
PREPARATION: Required - Four lower division courses :
  • History 4 Philosophy 2 Two courses selected from: Anthropology 9, East Asian Languages and Cultures 60, History 1A, lB, lC, 9A, 9C, 9D, 10A, 10B, 11A, 11B.
TOTAL 16 UNITS MAJOR Required - Fourteen upper division courses selected from the course list Group I - 4 courses :
  • Philosophy 175 and Religion 100 and Two other courses from the Group I list
Group II - 2 courses from the Group II list Group III - 3 courses from the Group III list :
  • One course in Christianity and One course in Islam and One course in Judaism
Group IV - 2 courses from the Group IV list Any Group - 3 more courses: any upper division courses from the course list TOTAL 56 UNITS
  • No course intended to satisfy the major or preparation for the major may be taken on a pass/not pass basis.

86. BCLS - Mythology
hungarian MYTHS AND LEGENDS a listing of hungarian myths, including the Legendof the Stagg and the Legend of the Turul Eagle.
http://www.baycountylibrary.org/TeenPage/mythology.htm

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HOMEWORK CENTER ~ MYTHOLOGY
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GREEK NORSE ROMAN ...

BULFINCH'S MYTHOLOGY
-annotated, hyperlinked and illustrated
on-line text of Thomas Bulfinch's classic work on Greek and Roman
mythology. ENCYCLOPEDIA MYTHICA -search over 4200 articles, 175 illustrations, maps, geneology tables and more. GARETH LONG'S ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MONSTERS, MYTHICAL CREATURES AND FABULOUS BEASTS -information on unicorns, Harpy, Typhon and Siren. GODS, GODDESSES AND MYTHS -information on dragons and unicorns in myth and literature and the origins of the days of the week. THE LABYRINTH - information on King Arthur and French, Iberian, Italian, Latin, Middle English and Old English mythology. MYTHICAL PLANTS OF THE MIDDLE AGES -information on the Barnacle Tree, the Tree of Knowledge, the Tree of Life and more. MYTHOGRAPHY - explore Greek, Roman and Celtic myth and art. MYTHOLOGY -learn more about the gods and goddesses of different cultures around the world. MYTHOLOGY -information on gods, monsters, heroes, women and the Trojan War.

87. Myth*ing Links: Central & Eastern Europe / Balkans: Romania
This page looks at Romania s cultural traditions, myth and lore (including hungarian historians claim that Transylvania was almost uninhabited when the
http://www.mythinglinks.org/euro~east~Balkans~Romania.html
MYTH*ING LINKS
by Kathleen Jenks, Ph.D. GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
ROMANIA [Also see my page on Hungary / Transylvania , since many issues I raise here initially began on that page.
Further, see the
it has significant links to the whole region, especially two that explore the historical reasons
behind the West's tragic dismembering of this region.]
From Dracula Tour 26 August 2000
Author's Note: I have been working most of the past week on my Hungary / Transylvania page, but the deeper I dug, the more I realized how interwoven these two countries are, especially when it comes to Transylvania, which both claim. Thus, I must continue with a page for Romania.... Unlike the Hungarians, as far as we can tell, the peoples who would later be known as Romanians, arrived in Europe as shepherds, not warriors. They were a peaceful nomadic people, caring for their own flocks as well as the herds of others. To the many rulers of the lands in which they lived, they were simply serfs, easily overlooked. As one musicologist has noted: Hungarians dance in boots, Romanians dance in sandals. Romanians are a quiet, earthy, smiling people who have suffered much but have never been broken. As with so many peoples of Central and East Europe, history has not been kind to the Romanians. When they gain the upper hand, they in turn have not been kind; and when they have lost that power, they suffer all over again.

88. Myths And Legends
Fred Hamori s extensive hungarian Heritage Page has been relocated and expanded . hungarian Organic Culture ) does not contain any myths or legends in
http://www.myths.com/pub/myths/mythold.html
Last altered February 19th 2002. Aside from the General, Gothic Horror, Early Fantasy, and Medieval sections, these links are organized by region and language group, with those groups which produced written accounts of their myths and legends earlier, generally appearing closer to the beginning. Announcement: You don't mind frames and a smaller font and you'd like a spiffy contents scroll on the left? Try the Myths and Legends main page. Announcement: These pages are now being mirrored at http://www.myths.com/pub/myths/mythold.html thanks to David Murphy et al. with the original being at http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze33gpz/mythold.html I'm still looking for more of these, but we've got:
Contents

89. Myths And Legends - Frames
Fred Hamori s extensive hungarian Heritage Page has been relocated and expanded . hungarian organic culture ) does not contain any myths or legends in
http://www.myths.com/pub/myths/myth.html
Last altered February 19th, 2002. Aside from the General and Creatures of Myth and Legend sections, these links are organized by region and language group, with those groups which produced written accounts of their myths and legends earlier, generally appearing closer to the beginning. Announcement: These pages are now being mirrored at http://www.myths.com/pub/myths/myth.html thanks to David Murphy et al. with the original page being at http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze33gpz/myth.html I'm still looking for more of these, but we've got:
Contents

90. Croatia Myth Reality The Croatians Asked To Join Yugoslavia
Myth The people of Croatia asked to join Serbia in forming Yugoslavia in 1918 . As the War drew to a close, the Austrohungarian Empire began to
http://mirror.veus.hr/myth/firstyugo.html
MYTH: "THE CROATIANS ASKED TO JOIN YUGOSLAVIA"
Myth : The people of Croatia asked to join Serbia in forming Yugoslavia in 1918. Reality : The people of Croatia did not ask to join Serbia in 1918. The elected representatives of the Croatian people voted for a "Neutral and Peasant Republic of Croatia" in 1918. The Yugoslav Committee The basis of the myth that Croatia willingly joined Serbia in 1918 is to be found in the complex history of the Yugoslav Committee. The Yugoslav Committee was formed by exiles living outside the Croatian homeland during World War I. The Committee was led by Franjo Supilo and Ante Trumbic and included the famous Croatian sculptor Ivan Mestrovic. Each repudiated the Committee within a few years of the founding of Yugoslavia. "Yugoslavs" were Serbian, Croatian and Slovenian people who identified themselves with the movement toward a single Yugoslav or South Slavic state. Exiled Yugoslavs living in North America and Britain were the primary supporters of the Yugoslav Committee. Having established offices in London and Paris as early as 1915, the Yugoslav Committee became an active lobby for the cause of a united South Slav state during the First World War. The concept of a unified South Slavic state had been discussed by Croatian and Slovenian intellectuals since the mid-nineteenth century. However, the "Yugoslav Idea" did not mature from the conceptual to practical state of planning. Few of those promoting such an entity had given any serious consideration to what form the new state should take. Nevertheless, the Yugoslav Committee issued a manifesto calling for the formation of such a South Slavic state on May 12, 1915. The document, like the rhetoric of those who produced it, was vague concerning the form and system of government. It received little official recognition.

91. The Legend Of The Stag
Fred Hámori s hungarian Myth and Legend exploring many of the other traditionsof the hungarian people. Fred Hámori s hungarian Heritage Homepage brings
http://www.pinetreeweb.com/stag.htm
A Stag of Scythian Gold from the Hungarian National Museum
The Legend of the Stag
Fred Hámori
The Hungarian Legend of the Wondrous Stag is one of the oldest legends of the nation. It is so old that it is found in various forms among those nations who were the distant relatives or neighbors of the Hungarians before their settlement in Hungary. The meaning and the wording of the legends may have changed slightly but they all have much in common. Today the remaining legend is relatively short, whereas in the past it was probably much more extensive. However the Hungarian legend despite it's brevity includes in it many important points some of which can be found in most of the related legends found in other cultures. It is these points which show that once, in the remote antiquity, these people were neighbors. The symbol of the cosmos and the mother of the sun was symbolized as a stag. The great horned doe often was shown carrying the sun in her horns, in some cases the sun itself was symbolized as a stag, the son of the doe of the legend. The following Christmas song told by the Hungarian Regos (Bards) illustrates the stag as the carrier of the sun. Csángo Hungarian "Rege"

92. Mythic European Crossroads
bullet, hungarian Myths and Legends includes retellings by several authors ofcreation bullet, Myths and Legends of Hungary is a collection of stories
http://www.mythiccrossroads.com/europe.htm
Last updated on var site="s14mythiccrossroads" Baltic Belgian Finnish Frankish/French ... Slavic Baltic (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) Estonian Folklore includes journals maps of the Estonian Parishes and more. Handiscola provides a prose account of the epic Estonian poem Kalevipoeg. Latvia and it's Folklore is a good article on the subject. Latvian Mythology is the Encyclopedia Mythica section for Latvia. Latvian traditional culture and folklore provides lists of organizations, email addresses of Latvian folklorists, festivals, and recordings. Lithuanian Folklore And Folk Art briefly discusses traditional festival and holidays, folk art, and folklore festivals in Lithuania. Belgian Ville de Namur - Traditions et Folklore recounts the legend of how the people of Namur pleaded for mercy before Jean de Flandre on stilts, among other things. Finnish/Lapp Ancient Religion of the Finns by by Professor Juha Pentikäinen includes information on rock paintings and animal ceremonies; oral tradition; early literature references and mythological studies; cosmology; the ancestor cult; hunting rites; and gods and guardian spirits. Elias Lönnrot in Kainuu describes the author of the Kalevala and how he created the Finnish national epic.

93. "MYTHS" Related Terms, Short Phrases And Links (Archive 2002)
(Web site); Myths Legends of Hungary Retellings of hungarian myths and legends,as well as essays proposing a link between hungarian and Sumerian myhs.
http://www.keywen.com/Arts/Literature/Myths_and_Folktales/Myths/

Open Edition
Archive 2004
Help
MYTHS (Archive 2002)
Encyclopedia of Keywords
Arts Literature Myths and Folktales ... Michael Charnine
Categories African
Ancient Near Eastern

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Keywords (Sections) MYTH
GREEK MYTHS
FAIRY TALES NORSE MYTHS ... PERSONAL EXPLORATION Review of Short Phrases and Links This Review contains major "MYTHS"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article.
DEFINITIONS
  • At the beginning of the period with which Feldman and Richardson dealaround 1700the term "myths" still generally referred to Greek and Roman mythology. (Web site) Myths are very fluid. (Web site) Myths are interesting. (Web site) Myths are metaphorical. (Web site) Myths are thus immature science. (Web site) Myths are a critical part of humanity. (Web site) Myths are traditional stories of a people. (Web site) The myths are one source of western culture. (Web site) Myths are pretty good things, and we need them. (Web site) Myths are often concerned with right and, wrong. (Web site) Myths are powerful guides to the spiritul world.
  • 94. Myths, Stories, Poems
    Art Movies Nazca Lines, Info and pictures (in hungarian) (Hungary), 12/7/03 Myths Stories During the Middle Ages, spiders were blamed for
    http://www.arachnology.org/Arachnology/Pages/A_stories.html
    Myths, Stories, Poems, Songs, Art, and Movies
    Arachnid Cartoons Arachnids in Literature by Martin Overton (UK) Arachnids in Literature Examples of arachnids in literature and mythology. One of a number of giant Pre-Incan etchings in the Peruvian desert (USA) Info and pictures. Siriusly (USA) Pitronics. Steven Bolt (The Netherlands) Paintings by VanJohnstone, Black Hole Gallery (USA) (art made by nature) Arachnoids are large structures of unknown origin that have been found only on the surface of Venus. Arachnoids get their name from their resemblance to spiderwebs. NASA (USA) Spiders and an artist making art together (in Dutch) (The Netherlands) Some info. www.disinformazione.it (in Italian) (Italy) Nazca lines. Palamito.it (in Italian) (Italy) Mobile. Naestved Gymnasium (Denmark) Info and pictures. Mistiri (in Italian) (Italy) Info and pictures. Mondo Misterioso News (in Italian) (Italy) Calder 1940, sheet metal and steel rod, painted 7 feet 11 inches x 8 feet 3 inches x 6 feet 1 inch; in the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nasher, Dallas, TX (USA) Info and drawings. Earth Cultura e Avventura (in Italian) (Italy)

    95. Fairytales, Myths & Legends
    Old hungarian Fairy Tales English Fairy Stories Planet Oz Kids A collectionof animal myths and legends for children 8-13 years, like how the zebra
    http://www.theatrelinks.com/tales.htm
    Practitioners (A-Z by surname) Laurie Anderson Andre Antoine Adolphe Appia Antonin Artaud ... Emile Zola Coming Soon... A sister site to theatrelinks.com Justin's Music Links A Categorised Directory of Music Websites From Across The Globe Theatre History (chronological order) Greek Drama Roman Drama Medieval Drama Golden Age of Spain ... British Drama Stagecraft Acting Costume Design Directing Dramaturgy ... Theatre Terms Theatre Industry Arts Councils Arts Festivals Arts Management Broadway ... West End Scripts Christian Plays Electronic Text Archives Monologues Musicals/Movie/TV/Radio ... Stage Plays Education 2003 VCE Resources 2004 VCE Resources 2005 VCE Resources Drama Examinations ... VCE Exams Reference Encyclopedias Search Engines Australian Search Engines Meta Search Engines Picture Search Engines Search Engine Guide Communication Theatre Forum Contact Justin Justin Cash
    Web Theatrelinks.com
    Home HCA.Gilead.org.il A long list of Hans Christian Andersen fairytales on the Web (with illustrations). Arthur's Classic Novels A selection of children's fairy tales suitable for use in the Drama classroom K-8: The Violet Fairy Book The Crimson Fairy Book The Lilac Fairy Book The Orange Fairy Book ... More Fairy Tales...

    96. CER | Book Review | Tales From Slavic Myths By Ivan Hudec
    Ivan Hudec s Tales from Slavic Myths provides the first collaborative narrativeabout Slavic myths in hungarian Oil Scandal. Sam Vaknin After the Rain
    http://www.ce-review.org/01/17/books17_kopanic.html
    Vol 3, No 17
    14 May 2001 CER INFO
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    ... search MORE ebookstore pbookshop music shop video store ... links Tales from Slavic Myths Ivan Hudec Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 2001 ISBN 0865164517 (hardback) ISBN 0865165033 (paperback) Michael J Kopanic Jr Mythology looms large in understanding the origins of a culture. Myths and legends reveal a people's innermost character, feelings, fears and desires. Thus, to understand the nature of Slavic peoples in its totality, one needs to look to Slavic mythology as it existed before the advent of Christianity. Most scholars in the English-speaking world have paid scant attention to Slavic mythology, and hitherto, just a handful of journal articles have touched on the subject. As a result, we have lacked a real understanding of the character of pre-Christian Slavic culture. This book marks an attempt to fill this gap. It represents the first collaborative narrative about Slavic mythology in the English language. Piecing together myths Unfortunately, unlike the Greeks, the pagan Slavs had no Homer who recorded early Slavic myths in epic literature. What we know about Slavic mythology is based upon oral traditions and scattered references in ancient texts. Artifacts from archaeological excavations have provided researchers with solid evidence that mythology played an integral role in early Slavic culture.

    97. Tamás Koltai
    The play cannot really be translated, so closely is it linked to current Hungarianmythology, crowded with distorted literary quotations and street idiom.
    http://www.hungarianquarterly.com/no143/p155.html
    Millecentenary Escapades
    Gergely Csiky: A nagymama (The Grandmother) * Albert Szirmai: Hermelin (Lilac Acacias) * To Be or Not To Be (As We Do It) * Lajos Parti Nagy: (Super Glue) With Hitler's appearance doled out a bit music-hall-like, a bit prolet-cult-like and a bit Brecht-like. Everyday reality This could develop into anything - a comedy, a crime story, a burlesque, a thriller, a farce, naturalist horror. However, what it develops into is a piteously guffawing socio-poetic-metaphoric grotesque about the world under our feet. It is a lyrical absurdity about sub-existence existence. Because the tenants, as the play puts it, are "all nervous wrecks" - lumpen elements, of course. "Cases of multiple deprivation." Small wonder if "there are as many nervous wrecks as stars in the sky". The play cannot really be translated, so closely is it linked to current Hungarian mythology, crowded with distorted literary quotations and street idiom. As language it is lacerated and reduced but not at all denaturated. It is a retouched literary version of a deterioration of the language. The protozoans of the outside corridor use the bizarrely colloquial, hodgepodge phrases of the street with the resourcefulness of asphalt poetry: a slang farrago, subcultural grammatical flotsam condensed into metaphor. The dramatic tension in Mausoleum springs from the contrast between a carefully described reality and the off key situation. There is nowhere to go from the courtyard with its outside corridor, although by the end it turns out that the door was not even locked. By dawn it becomes clear that "we all are each other's hostages", as the confectioner prince of the slum has said, a conclusion the audience may rest content with.

    98. Hungary: Music At CdRoots
    starting with the various references to the magical stag from ancient Hungarianmythology, and making a sweeping arc from East to West with examples of
    http://www.cdroots.com/hungary.shtml
    Search for music
    Shipping and Other Questions?
    The music of Hungary
    Our worlds beyond - Elemér Balázs Group with Charlie Mariano

    The Hungarian percussionist and drummer is joined by his jazz ensemble and the American saxophonist Mariano.
    Tango Passion - Trio Yengibarjan
    An unexpected angle on the tango from this Hungarian trio of David Yengibarjan - accordion; József Barcza Horváth - bass and Gábor Judhasz - guitar. Three works by Piazzolla, the rest original compositions by Yengibarjan provide a unique view of the musical genre and some steps beyond it.
    Straight Music - Mihaly Dresch Quartet
    The Hungarian composer/saxophonist says: 'I realised that music requires the whole person, including who they are and where they are from – that's what sounds through the instrument. I realised I would never be able to make music from the same impulse as Coltrane, Griffin, and the other masters. That's how I came to need to play out my own experience. When I was practising, I noticed that while my first small pieces were taking shape, I was thinking of my grandparents. Ever since, this has been important: my loved ones should be present in my spirit.' Mihály Dresch - tenor and soprano, saxophones, traditional recorder; Ferenc Kovács - violin; Mátyás Szandai - double bass; István Baló - drums; with Kálmán Balogh - cimbalom; Mátyás Bólya - koboz (Hungarian lute); Anna Dresch - vocals
    Pandoukht - David Yengibarjan and Frank London
    David Yengibarjan - accordion; Frank London - trumpet; József Barcza Horváth - bass; András Dés - percussion; with guest guitarist Gábor Gadó.

    99. Croatia Myth Reality Borders Were Drawn To Benefit Croatia
    The purpose of the myth is to stress to the world that the borders of the former In the north Croatia gained two small territories from Hungary,
    http://mirror.veus.hr/myth/borders.html
    MYTH: "BORDERS WERE DRAWN TO BENEFIT CROATIA"
    MYTH : The Serbian-Croatian border was drawn up secretly by Tito, a Croatian, in 1943 benefiting Croatia at the expense of Serbia. REALITY : Croatia's border with Serbia is essentially the same as in 1848 and 1918 with the exception of those lands taken from Croatia and given to Serbia and Montenegro under both Yugoslav regimes. This mythology is a recent creation of the Serbian government and has been given wide circulation by Serbian apologists Nora Beloff and David Martin. The purpose of the myth is to stress to the world that the borders of the former Yugoslav republics are simply administrative boundaries with no historical significance. Once this myth is taken as fact the argument follows that such meaningless borders are subject to negotiation and change, in favor of Serbia. The reality is that Croatia today has roughly the same borders as in 1848. Serbia has increased its borders after every one of its many wars since 1813. Today Serbia controls more territory than it has in its entire history. In the north it has annexed the lands of the Hungarians and Croatians. In the south two hundred thousand Serbs rule over two million ethnic Albanians in the absolute police state of Kosova. Montenegro has become nothing more than a Serbian province. The myth that Serbian lands are held by Croatia was used by the Serbian government to launch a war of aggression to seize valuable gas and oil fields, rail and shipping corridors and port facilities. Eastern Slavonia, where Serbian aggression resulted in the total devastation of the ancient city of Vukovar, had a Serbian population of 16.4% according to 1991 census. Dubrovnik, which underwent months of siege by Serbian forces, had a Serbian population of only 6.2% in 1991. Neither region has ever been a part of Serbia.

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