1941-90 Hungary

# MCC734 - 1941-90 Hungary

$775.00
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Issue Dates:            1941-1990

Scott Catalogue Value:      $1,410.00

Mystic Price:            $775.00

You Save:                  $635.00

 

Expand your worldwide holdings quickly with this extra-large Hungary collection of approximately 2,800 stamps and 150 Scott album pages.  Most of the stamps are in mint condition, with about half also never-hinged, and mounted on the album pages.  Features many large complete sets plus topical stamps picturing popular subjects like Olympics, Space, Birds and Flowers.  Highlights include mint never-hinged #2932-36 1985 Horses set and #2261-67, the 1973 set commemorating Hungary’s victories in water sports at Tampere and Belgrade.  Plus F1-3, the complete Hungary Registration stamp set of 1946.

 

Many countries border the central European country of Hungary: Romania, Yugoslavia, Austria, and the Ukraine.  It was invaded and conquered in 896 by the Magyars, a nomadic warrior people who came from the Ural Mountains of Russia.  The Magyars spoke, and still speak, a language that is related to Finnish.  A small percentage of Hungarians continue the ancient nomadic tradition.  They are the Gypsies whose way of life requires them to move from place to place.  

 

Farmers grow crops similar to those of our Midwest corn, wheat, oats, rye, potatoes, and sugar beets.  Most of the farms are either owned by the State or are cooperatives, where the production and harvest is shared among its members.  However, over half the population lives in cities and many workers are employed in the industrial center of Budapest, the capital of Hungary, and in a few other large cities.  The Hungarian people still call themselves Magyars, and indeed, the majority of the population is just that.   Their roots are ancient and very strong. 

 

Hungary is mainly a country of low plains, and because it had no natural barriers for protection, its early history tells of repeated invasions by the Turks.  In modern times, Hungary has been ruled by Austria, Germany, and Russia.  It has been divided up among its neighbors and then put back together again, like a puzzle, more than once.

 

Allied with Germany in World War II, Hungary was occupied by Russian troops, the beginning of Soviet control.  During a 1956 anti-Communist uprising in Hungary, about 200,000 people left the country.  But a few years later, over 60,000 returned.  Despite its strict political and governmental policies under the communist regime, Hungary was a leading center of cultural reform and private ownership of business.  In 1989, as many other Soviet-controlled governments gave way, so did that of Hungary.  Now a parliamentary democracy, Hungary faces the future with hopes of a better life for its citizens.

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Issue Dates:            1941-1990

Scott Catalogue Value:      $1,410.00

Mystic Price:            $775.00

You Save:                  $635.00

 

Expand your worldwide holdings quickly with this extra-large Hungary collection of approximately 2,800 stamps and 150 Scott album pages.  Most of the stamps are in mint condition, with about half also never-hinged, and mounted on the album pages.  Features many large complete sets plus topical stamps picturing popular subjects like Olympics, Space, Birds and Flowers.  Highlights include mint never-hinged #2932-36 1985 Horses set and #2261-67, the 1973 set commemorating Hungary’s victories in water sports at Tampere and Belgrade.  Plus F1-3, the complete Hungary Registration stamp set of 1946.

 

Many countries border the central European country of Hungary: Romania, Yugoslavia, Austria, and the Ukraine.  It was invaded and conquered in 896 by the Magyars, a nomadic warrior people who came from the Ural Mountains of Russia.  The Magyars spoke, and still speak, a language that is related to Finnish.  A small percentage of Hungarians continue the ancient nomadic tradition.  They are the Gypsies whose way of life requires them to move from place to place.  

 

Farmers grow crops similar to those of our Midwest corn, wheat, oats, rye, potatoes, and sugar beets.  Most of the farms are either owned by the State or are cooperatives, where the production and harvest is shared among its members.  However, over half the population lives in cities and many workers are employed in the industrial center of Budapest, the capital of Hungary, and in a few other large cities.  The Hungarian people still call themselves Magyars, and indeed, the majority of the population is just that.   Their roots are ancient and very strong. 

 

Hungary is mainly a country of low plains, and because it had no natural barriers for protection, its early history tells of repeated invasions by the Turks.  In modern times, Hungary has been ruled by Austria, Germany, and Russia.  It has been divided up among its neighbors and then put back together again, like a puzzle, more than once.

 

Allied with Germany in World War II, Hungary was occupied by Russian troops, the beginning of Soviet control.  During a 1956 anti-Communist uprising in Hungary, about 200,000 people left the country.  But a few years later, over 60,000 returned.  Despite its strict political and governmental policies under the communist regime, Hungary was a leading center of cultural reform and private ownership of business.  In 1989, as many other Soviet-controlled governments gave way, so did that of Hungary.  Now a parliamentary democracy, Hungary faces the future with hopes of a better life for its citizens.