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  1. A revolução começou em 15 de março de 1848, com eventos sem derramamento de sangue em Pest e Buda, seguidos por várias revoltas em todo o reino, que permitiram aos reformistas húngaros declarar a independência da Hungria no seio do Império Habsburgo, sob o governo de Lajos Kossuth e tendo como primeiro-ministro Lajos Batthyány.

  2. The Hungarian Declaration of Independence declared the independence of Hungary from the Habsburg monarchy during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. It was presented to the National Assembly in closed session on 13 April 1849 by Lajos Kossuth , and in open session the following day, despite political opposition from within the Hungarian Peace Party .

  3. 49 dead, c. 117 wounded, 27 missing [5] around the same number of casualties as the enemy [6] The Battle of Pákozd (or Battle of Sukoró) was a battle in the Hungarian war of Independence of 1848–1849, fought on the 29 September 1848 in the Pákozd – Sukoró – Pátka triangle. [1] It was the first and one of the most important major ...

  4. In order to avoid tensions between monarchist and republican factions, the form of government was to be decided later. The Hungarian State ( Hungarian: Magyar Állam, archaically Magyar Álladalom) was a short-lived unrecognised state that existed for 4 months in the last phase of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848–49 .

  5. The Thirteen Martyrs of Arad ( Hungarian: aradi vértanúk) were the thirteen Hungarian rebel generals who were executed by the Austrian Empire on 6 October 1849 in the city of Arad, then part of the Kingdom of Hungary (now in Romania ), after the Hungarian Revolution (1848–1849). The execution was ordered by the Austrian general Julius Jacob ...

  6. The European Revolutions of 1848 were a series of revolts in Europe. In some places they are called Spring of Nations or the Year of Revolution . These revolutions started in January with a Palermo republican uprising. The larger French Revolution of 1848 in February was followed in March by several other revolutions amongst them the Hungarian ...

  7. 15 de mar. de 2023 · On 15 March 1848, two days after the events in Vienna, the radical youth of Pest, led by poet Sándor Petőfi, novel-writer Mór Jókai, and philosopher and historian Pál Vasvári, decided to announce their demands in the form of the ‘Twelve Points’ formulated by journalist József Irinyi. This was the beginning of Hungary’s one-and-a ...