A Vajdasági Magyar Cserkészet története 1910-1945 között
The study presents the activities of the Hungarian scout troops in Vojvodina between 1910 and 1952. The scouting movement began in England in 1908, under the leadership of Baden-Powell. The youth movement was very popular, hence it developed rapidly and gained ground in several countries in the worl...
Elmentve itt :
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Dokumentumtípus: | Könyv része |
Megjelent: |
Szegedi Tudományegyetem Polgáraiért Alapítvány
Szeged
2023
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Sorozat: | Tanulmányok a társadalomról
6 Tanulmányok a társadalomról VI. : A Szegedi Tudományegyetem JGYPK Alkalmazott Társadalomtudományok Tanszék, ETSZK Szociális Munka és Szociálpolitika Tanszék, BTK Szociológia Tanszék és ÁJTK Politológiai Tanszék tudományos diákköri munkái 6 |
Kulcsszavak: | Cserkészet - magyar - Vajdaság - története |
Tárgyszavak: | |
Online Access: | http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/82244 |
Tartalmi kivonat: | The study presents the activities of the Hungarian scout troops in Vojvodina between 1910 and 1952. The scouting movement began in England in 1908, under the leadership of Baden-Powell. The youth movement was very popular, hence it developed rapidly and gained ground in several countries in the world. The cradle of Hungarian scouting can be linked to Nagybecskerek in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy: a Piarist high school teacher, László Králik, translated Baden-Powell's book. The translation of the Scouting for Boys in Hungarian was published in the school's yearbook in 1910. A piece of tangible physical evidence from the era, the flag of the Nagybecskerek Scout Regiment, suggests that some kind of scouting activity took place in the town. The rise of the scout movement was interrupted by the First World War, yet scouting continued in several Hungarian settlements despite the war conditions. After the First World War, the Scout Association was reorganized in Hungary and the Savez Izvidnika i Planinika scout organization was also established in the Kingdom of SerbiaCroatia-Slovenia. In the Kingdom of Serbo-Croatia-Slovenia and later Yugoslavia, troops of Hungarian-speaking or Hungarian majority members operated. After the annexation of Délvidék, several new scout groups were formed, which belonged to the Hungarian Scout Association. Historical events affected the operation of the scouting movement, but the social values held by it remained the same throughout the era. Hungarian and Serbian archival sources, contemporary press materials, school yearbooks, diaries, and interviews with scouts of the era were used to prepare the study. |
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Terjedelem/Fizikai jellemzők: | 56-73 |
ISBN: | 978-615-01-8147-9 |