Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard
The Treaty of Trianon signed on June 4, 1920, limited not only the headcount of the Hungarian army, but also the number of weapons of war and armaments, and their import was prohibited by the peace treaty as well. The rearmament was a crucial condition of the treaty revision wanted by Hungary, so...
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Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta
2015-06-01
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doaj-799ba02df6414273b655a75007137d6c2020-11-25T00:10:57ZdeuUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaPrague Papers on the History of International Relations1803-73562336-71052015-06-01193101Italy and the Scandal of Saint GotthardPetra Hamerli0University of Pécs, Faculty of Arts, Interdisciplinary Doctoral SchoolThe Treaty of Trianon signed on June 4, 1920, limited not only the headcount of the Hungarian army, but also the number of weapons of war and armaments, and their import was prohibited by the peace treaty as well. The rearmament was a crucial condition of the treaty revision wanted by Hungary, so after signing the Italian–Hungarian Treaty of Friendship, the prime ministers of the two countries, Benito Mussolini and Bethlen István agreed that Italy would help rearming Hungary. A supply of weapons cloaked to be machinery was revealed on the Austro–Hungarian frontier of Saint Gotthard, and the States of the Little Entente — being afraid of a future Hungarian attack — decided to ask the League of Nations to examine the incident. The main question of my essay is the Italian attitude to the question: did Italy stand out for Hungary, and took responsibility for helping its rearmament? In my essay I would like to answer these questions after examning Italian documents as well.https://praguepapers.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2015/11/Petra_Hamerli_93-101.pdfScandal of Saint GotthardHungarian–Italian RelationsRearmament of HungaryItalian Attitude to the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Petra Hamerli |
spellingShingle |
Petra Hamerli Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard Prague Papers on the History of International Relations Scandal of Saint Gotthard Hungarian–Italian Relations Rearmament of Hungary Italian Attitude to the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
author_facet |
Petra Hamerli |
author_sort |
Petra Hamerli |
title |
Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
title_short |
Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
title_full |
Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
title_fullStr |
Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
title_full_unstemmed |
Italy and the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
title_sort |
italy and the scandal of saint gotthard |
publisher |
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta |
series |
Prague Papers on the History of International Relations |
issn |
1803-7356 2336-7105 |
publishDate |
2015-06-01 |
description |
The Treaty of Trianon signed on June 4, 1920, limited not only the headcount of the Hungarian army,
but also the number of weapons of war and armaments, and their import was prohibited by the peace
treaty as well. The rearmament was a crucial condition of the treaty revision wanted by Hungary, so
after signing the Italian–Hungarian Treaty of Friendship, the prime ministers of the two countries,
Benito Mussolini and Bethlen István agreed that Italy would help rearming Hungary. A supply of
weapons cloaked to be machinery was revealed on the Austro–Hungarian frontier of Saint Gotthard,
and the States of the Little Entente — being afraid of a future Hungarian attack — decided to ask the
League of Nations to examine the incident. The main question of my essay is the Italian attitude to
the question: did Italy stand out for Hungary, and took responsibility for helping its rearmament? In
my essay I would like to answer these questions after examning Italian documents as well. |
topic |
Scandal of Saint Gotthard Hungarian–Italian Relations Rearmament of Hungary Italian Attitude to the Scandal of Saint Gotthard |
url |
https://praguepapers.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2015/11/Petra_Hamerli_93-101.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT petrahamerli italyandthescandalofsaintgotthard |
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1725406009472581632 |