- Rongyos Gárda
The "Rongyos Gárda" (Scrubby or Ragged Guards) were a non-regular
paramilitary unit inHungary , active in 1921 then reestablished in 1938.The
Treaty of Trianon which concluded theFirst World War , awarded a stretch of land with mixed Hungarian and ethnic German population toAustria . However during August 1921 when Austrian police and customs officers attempted to occupy the area, their efforts were thwarted by the armed resistance organised by the Rongyos Gárda. The Guards were amilitia of Hungarian volunteers, many of them former soldiers of the anti-communist detachments that fought alongside Nicholas Horthys National Army. They were lead by captain Pál Prónay. The name Scrubby Guards reflected the fact that they were a non-governmental force.The Guards' primary goal was to reduce the land loss after the 1920
Treaty of Trianon . First they proclaimed a new country betweenAustria and Hungary, theLajtabánság , supposedly ruled by their commander,Pál Prónay . At the same time they launched a series of attacks to oust the Austian forces that entered the area. After the clashes, Sopron's status as part of Hungary (along with that of the surrounding eight villages) was decided by a localplebiscite held onDecember 14 ,1921 , with 65% voting for Hungary. Since then Sopron has been called "Civitas Fidelissima" ("The Most Loyal Town", _hu. A Leghűségesebb Város), and the anniversary of the plebiscite is a city holiday.The Guards were reorganised in 1938 on the eve of Hungarian-Czechoslovak negotiations, which took place between
October 9 andOctober 13 ,1938 , inKomárno aiming to resolve the territorial conflict between the two sides. The guerillas began to infiltrate into southern Slovakia and Ruthenia. The military pressure contributed to the decision of the Czechoslovak government to accept an international arbitration to solve the territorial dispute. main|First Vienna AwardThe historic role of the Scrubby Guards is disputed. Some historians claim they were saviors of Hungarian land, the only ones fighting the Trianon Peace Pact's dictations. During the communist rule they were depicted as savage terrorists, who killed innocent people. Parts from Pál Prónays diary were published during the 1960s in order to disseminate these views. The first books about their activity were only published after 1989. The existence of the Guards was rarely mentioned in Hungarian textbooks before the millennium.
ee also
*
Uprising in West-Hungary References
*Bela Bodo: Paramilitary violence in Hungary after the first world war. East European Quarterly, June, 2004.
*Bálint István János: A Rongyos Gárda harcai, 1919-1939, Magyar Ház könyvek, Budapest, 1999.
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