Contributors


János M. Bak , a member of the advisory board of this journal, is Professor Emeritus of the University of British Columbia and Professor at the Medieval Studies Department of the Central European University, Budapest. He is editor of the series Decreta Regni Hungariae (Schlacks, Los Angeles, 1990-1994). His publications include studies on kinship and medieval Hungarian history.

Zsolt Bánhegyi is the Systems Librarian of the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

András Bródy is scientific advisor at the Institute of Economics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. A mathematical economist by training, his publications in English include Proportions, Prices and Planning (North Holland, Amsterdam, 1972) and Slowdown (Sage, Berkeley-New Delhi, 1985). He edits Economic Systems Research, the quarterly of the International Input Output Association.

Ágnes Deák teaches 19th-century Hungarian history at the University of Szeged. Her research centres on the history of ideas in the 19th century.

Vilmos Heiszler , a historian, is Associate Professor at the Department for Cultural History of the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. Special fields of interest are foreign policy and interethnic relations in Central Europe and multiculturalism in historical Hungary, especially in old Buda-Pest.

Balázs Nagy teaches medieval history at the Eötvös Loránd University and at the Central European University, Budapest. His field of research is the history of trade in medieval Europe.

Péter Pete received his Ph.D. at the University of Connecticut and is currently Senior Researcher at the Institute of Economics in Budapest. His publications include an intermediate textbook on monetary macroeconomics.

Ilona Rév was Associate Professor at the Art History Department of the Academy of Applied Arts before her retirement. Her publications include a book on turn-of-the-century architecture and interior design and a book on contemporary church architecture in Hungary.

Tamás Szõnyei is on the staff of the weekly Magyar Narancs .

András Török is a Budapest author, editor and lecturer in urban history. His books include Budapest: A Critical Guide.

Ágnes R. Várkonyi heads the Department of Medieval and Early Modern History at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. Her many publications include books on Transylvania in the 17-18th centuries, on the Turkish occupation in Hungary, and on Prince Ferenc Rákóczi II.

Mária Zentai is Associate Professor at the Department of Classical Hungarian Literature of the József Attila University, Szeged. Her main fields of interest are the literature of Hungarian Enlightenment and Romanticism, history of criticism, and the history and theory of genres.


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