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Vix Note

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fernand Vix [hu] (in the middle)

The Vix Note or Vyx Note (Hungarian: Vix-jegyzék or Vyx-jegyzék) was a communication note sent by Fernand Vix [hu] (or Vyx), a French lieutenant colonel and delegate of the Entente, to the government of Mihály Károlyi of the First Hungarian Republic of the alliance's intention to make Hungary evacuate and withdraw from more territory than agreed in the Armistice of Belgrade. The note ultimately contributed to the downfall of the First Republic and the establishment of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and it is credited with being the phenomenon that put an end to Hungarian rule over the region of Transylvania.[1][2][3][4]

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References

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  1. ^ Pastor, Peter (1970). "The Vix Mission in Hungary, 1918-1919: A re-examination". Slavic Review. 29 (3): 481–498. doi:10.2307/2493161. JSTOR 2493161.
  2. ^ Pastor, Peter (1974). "Franco-Rumanian Intervention in Russia and the Vix Ultimatum: Background to Hungary's Loss of Transylvania" (PDF). The Canadian-American Review of Hungarian Studies. 1 (1–2): 12–28.
  3. ^ Szász, Zoltán (2002). "The End of Hungarian Rule in Transylvania". History of Transylvania. Vol. 3. Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Science. pp. 1–787.
  4. ^ Szász, Zoltán (2002). "The Socialist Alternative: A Soviet Republic". History of Transylvania. Vol. 3. Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Science. pp. 1–787.