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Admiral Nicholas Horthy de Nagybanya (1868-1957), who had led the counterrevolutionaries and their government, entered Budapest and was appointed regent and head of state in March 1920. He restored the monarchy, albeit separated from Austria, and thwarted two attempts (March and October 1921) by former Austrian emperor Charles I (1887-1922) to regain the Hungarian throne.
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A militantly anticommunist authoritarian government composed of military
officers entered Budapest on the heels of the Romanians. A "white
terror" ensued that led to the imprisonment, torture, and execution without
trial of communists, socialists, Jews, leftist intellectuals, sympathizers with
the Karolyi and Kun regimes, and others who threatened the traditional Hungarian
political order that the officers sought to reestablish. Estimates placed the
number of executions at approximately 5,000. In addition, about 75,000 people
were jailed. In particular, the Hungarian right wing and the Romanian forces
targeted Jews for retribution. Ultimately, the white terror forced nearly
100,000 people to leave the country, most of them socialists, intellectuals, and
middle-class Jews.
In 1920 and 1921, internal chaos racked Hungary. The white terror continued
to plague Jews and leftists, unemployment and inflation soared, and penniless
Hungarian refugees poured across the border from neighboring countries and
burdened the floundering economy. The government offered the population little
succor. In January 1920, Hungarian men and women cast the first secret ballots
in the country's political history and elected a large counterrevolutionary and
agrarian majority to a unicameral parliament. Two main political parties
emerged: the socially conservative Christian National Union and the Independent
Smallholders' Party, which advocated land reform. In March the parliament
annulled both the Pragmatic Sanction of 1723 and the Compromise of 1867, and it
restored the Hungarian monarchy but postponed electing a king until civil
disorder had subsided. Instead, Miklos Horthy (1920-44)--a former commander in
chief of the Austro-Hungarian navy--was elected regent and was empowered, among
other things, to appoint Hungary's prime minister, veto legislation, convene or
dissolve the parliament, and command the armed forces.
Horthy appointed Pal Teleki prime minister in July 1920. His right-wing
government set quotas effectively limiting admission of Jews to universities,
legalized corporal punishment, and, to quiet rural discontent, took initial
steps toward fulfilling a promise of major land reform by dividing about 385,000
hectares from the largest estates into smallholdings.
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