April Laws

The April Laws with the portrait of prime minister Lajos Batthyány

The April Laws, also called March Laws,[1][2] were a collection of laws legislated by Lajos Kossuth with the aim of modernizing the Kingdom of Hungary into a parliamentary democracy, nation state. The laws were passed by the Hungarian Diet in March 1848 in Pozsony (Pressburg, now Bratislava, Slovakia)[3] and signed by king Ferdinand V at the Primate's Palace in the same city on 11 April 1848.[4]

The April laws utterly erased all privileges of the Hungarian nobility.[5] In April 1848, Hungary became the third country of Continental Europe [after France (1791), and Belgium (1831) ] to enact law about democratic parliamentary elections. The new suffrage law (Act V of 1848) transformed the old feudal estates based parliament (Estates General) into a democratic representative parliament. This law offered the widest suffrage right in Europe at the time.[6]The imperative program included Hungarian control of its popular national guard, national budget and Hungarian foreign policy, as well as the removal of serfdom.

In 1848, the new young Austrian monarch Francis Joseph arbitrarily "revoked" the laws without any legal competence. 18 years later, during the negotiations of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, the April Laws of the revolutionary parliament (with the exception of the laws based on the 9th and 10th points) were accepted by Francis Joseph. Hungary did not regain full external autonomy until the Compromise of 1867 which would later influence Hungary's position in World War I.

  1. ^ Britannica article on March laws
  2. ^ The April Laws on net.jogtar.hu (hungarian)
  3. ^ March Laws (Hungary [1848]) - Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  4. ^ "Between the campaigns of Napoleonic troops and the abolition of bondage". City of Bratislava. Archived from the original on 24 February 2007. Retrieved 8 June 2007.
  5. ^ Chris Thornhill (2011). A Sociology of Constitutions.Constitutions and State Legitimacy in Historical-Sociological Perspective. Cambridge University Press. p. 245. ISBN 9781139495806.
  6. ^ prof. András Gerő (2014): Nationalities and the Hungarian Parliament (1867-1918) LINK:[1] Archived 2019-04-25 at the Wayback Machine

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