Category: VOLUME VI, No. 1

DANCING ‘HUNGARIAN’ IN THE US – ON THE KÁRPÁTOK FOLK ENSEMBLE

Like thousands of others, my family left the homeland in 1956 after the Hungárián Revolution when I was only three years old. Although Hungarian was the spoken language in our new home, years of immersion into the American lifestyle must have concerned my parents enough to decide that I needed

LIFTING THE CURSE ON THE SEVSO TREASURE – PART II

One could ask how such extraordinarily large family treasures could emerge here during the Late Antiquity. The western part of Hungary belonged to Pannonia province during Roman times, with the Danube forming its borders in the north and the east. Rivers are excellent borderlines, since they are visible for all,