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RES INTEGRATION CONCEPT PAPER D5.1 – Final Version
GeoCom – FP7 CONCERTO – 239515 RES INTEGRATION CONCEPT PAPER D5.1 – Final version WP Leader: P9 – University of Szeged. Key Contributors: P1, P2, P8 2012 GEOCOM WP5 - Technological Research / WP5.1 Integration with other RES The main scope of this sub-WP has been to outline ways of integrating geothermal energy in energy systems in Central-Eastern Europe. In this WP available experience of integrating geothermal energy into a cascaded facility with a view to environmental improvements and extending the utilization time and spectrum of uses of such facilities has been be studied. Researchers at the University of Szeged looked at the economic and environmental factors of geothermal systems operating in the South Great Plain Region, outlined potential project sites and developed a number of project plans presented here in brief. We collected data from GeoCom project partners too regarding utilization in other CEE countries. This volume presents the first concise study of actual and potential geothermal projects in the South Great Plain of Hungary, with project concepts developed entirely by our researchers and contracted experts. Our work is complemented by data provided by our partners from Serbia, Slovakia, FYROM and Poland. As projects in renewable energy use differ greatly from one-another we did not intend to formulate general conclusions regarding economic or environmental factors of RES integration. Rather, we present the RE potential of the target region, showcase our development proposals, and provide a tool (GIS model) to assist future project development. As stated in Annex 1 the main scope of this sub-WP has been to outline ways of integrating geothermal sources in energy systems, including those with other RES. -
Oligarchs, King and Local Society: Medieval Slavonia
Antun Nekić OLIGARCHS, KING AND LOCAL SOCIETY: MEDIEVAL SLAVONIA 1301-1343 MA Thesis in Medieval Studies Central European University CEU eTD Collection Budapest May2015 OLIGARCHS, KING AND LOCAL SOCIETY: MEDIEVAL SLAVONIA 1301-1343 by Antun Nekić (Croatia) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies. Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU. ____________________________________________ Chair, Examination Committee ____________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ____________________________________________ Examiner CEU eTD Collection ____________________________________________ Examiner Budapest Month YYYY OLIGARCHS, KING AND LOCAL SOCIETY: MEDIEVAL SLAVONIA 1301-1343 by Antun Nekić (Croatia) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies. Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU. CEU eTD Collection ____________________________________________ External Reader Budapest Month YYYY OLIGARCHS, KING AND LOCAL SOCIETY: MEDIEVAL SLAVONIA 1301-1343 by Antun Nekić (Croatia) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies. Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU. ____________________________________________ External Supervisor CEU eTD Collection Budapest Month YYYY I, the undersigned, Antun Nekić, candidate for the MA degree in Medieval Studies, declare herewith that the present thesis is exclusively my own work, based on my research and only such external information as properly credited in notes and bibliography. I declare that no unidentified and illegitimate use was made of the work of others, and no part of the thesis infringes on any person’s or institution’s copyright. -
Hungary As a Country of Asylum, March 2016 2 A
Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Ukraine Austria Hungary Slovenia Croatia Romania Bosnia and Serbia Herzegovina Montenegro Kosovo (UNSCR 1244) HungaryThe former Yugoslav Republic As a Country of Asylumof Macedonia Italy Albania Greece Observations on restrictive legal measures and subsequent practice implemented between July 2015 and March 2016 May 2016 Contents Contents A. Introduction .................................................................................................................................................................................3 B. Executive Summary ..................................................................................................................................................................4 C. Background .................................................................................................................................................................................5 D. Border procedure in the transit zones at Hungary’s borders with Serbia and Croatia ..................................8 a) Legal basis of the border procedure in the transit zones .............................................................................................8 b) Implementation of the border procedure in practice ................................................................................................. 10 E. Safe third country concept ................................................................................................................................................. 13 a) Introduction -
LEARNING in ADULTHOOD Cases of Lifelong Learning
Edina Márkus PhD – Barbara Máté-Szabó Márta Takács-Miklósi PhD (eds.) LEARNING IN ADULTHOOD Cases of lifelong learning Debrecen, 2019 Publishing data Responsible publisher: Nullpont Cultural Association Project name: Learning communities and social transformation Project number: EFOP-5.2.2-17-2017-00066 Technical editor, typography: Balázs Pete Press work: Kapitális Press Book Format: A5 size Scope of the book: 132 Font: Arial Lectors: Tamás Kozma DSc Balázs Benkei-Kovács PhD Learning in Adulthood Edited: Edina Márkus PhD – Barbara Máté-Szabó Márta Takács-Miklósi PhD ISBN number: 978-615-00-5230-4 Contents Foreword ..................................................................................... 9 I. Settlement-based analyses and good practices ........................... 13 Anita Hegedűs:The role of cultural and community learning in the development of the Makó township: Cultural and community learning in Földeák ............................................................................................ 15 Dávid Rábai: Community learning and social innovation – the case of Hajdúhadház .................................................................................... 27 Barbara Máté-Szabó: The role of sports in community building and developing learning in the Hajdúnánás township ......................... 37 Dorina Anna Tóth: CHEC as an opportunity for breaking out – the case of Sátoraljaújhely ................................................................... 47 II. Organisation-based initiatives, domestic and international good -
Treaty Series Recueil Des Traite's
Treaty Series Treaties and internationalagreements registered or filed and recorded with the Secretariat of the United Nations VOLUME 577 Recueil des Traite's Traitis et accords internationaux enregistres ou classes et inscrits au r'pertoire au Secritariat de l'Organisation des Nations Unies United Nations* Nations Unies New York, 1968 Treaties and internationalagreements registered or filed and recorded with the Secretariat of the United Nations VOLUME 577 1966 I. Nos. 8370-8381 TABLE OF CONTENTS Treaties and internationalagreements registeredfrom 9 November 1966 to 10 November 1966 Page No. 8370. Hungary and Yugoslavia: Agreement establishing regulations for the transport of goods by lorry or similar motor vehicle and the customs procedure in connexion there- with (with Protocol). Signed at Budapest, on 9 February 1962 .. ..... 3 No. 8371. Hungary and Yemen: Treaty of Friendship and Co-operation. Signed at Budapest, on 30 May 1964 . .. 39 No. 8372. Hungary and Yugoslavia: Convention concerning scientific, educational and cultural co-operation. Signed at Belgrade, on 15 October 1963 ... ............. .. 49 No. 8373. Hungary and Bulgaria: Agreement concerning scientific and cultural co-operation. Signed at Buda- pest, on 19 August 1965 ....... .................... ... 67 No. 8374. Hungary and Yugoslavia: Agreement concerning the abolition of the visa requirement. Signed at Budapest, on 23 November 1965 ..... ................ 89 No. 8375. Hungary and Yugoslavia: Agreement concerning the regulation of minor frontier traffic (with annexes). Signed at Budapest, on 9 August 1965 .... .............. ... 103 No. 8376. Hungary and Poland: Agreement concerning international motor transport. Signed at Budapest, on 18 July 1965 .... ... ... ......................... 161 Traitis et accords internationauxenregistris ou classis et inscrits au ripertoire au Secritariat de l'Organisationdes Nations Unies VOLUME 577 1966 I. -
The Ginger Fox's Two Crowns Central Administration and Government in Sigismund of Luxembourg's Realms
Doctoral Dissertation THE GINGER FOX’S TWO CROWNS CENTRAL ADMINISTRATION AND GOVERNMENT IN SIGISMUND OF LUXEMBOURG’S REALMS 1410–1419 By Márta Kondor Supervisor: Katalin Szende Submitted to the Medieval Studies Department, Central European University, Budapest in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies, CEU eTD Collection Budapest 2017 Table of Contents I. INTRODUCTION 6 I.1. Sigismund and His First Crowns in a Historical Perspective 6 I.1.1. Historiography and Present State of Research 6 I.1.2. Research Questions and Methodology 13 I.2. The Luxembourg Lion and its Share in Late-Medieval Europe (A Historical Introduction) 16 I.2.1. The Luxembourg Dynasty and East-Central-Europe 16 I.2.2. Sigismund’s Election as King of the Romans in 1410/1411 21 II. THE PERSONAL UNION IN CHARTERS 28 II.1. One King – One Land: Chancery Practice in the Kingdom of Hungary 28 II.2. Wearing Two Crowns: the First Years (1411–1414) 33 II.2.1. New Phenomena in the Hungarian Chancery Practice after 1411 33 II.2.1.1. Rex Romanorum: New Title, New Seal 33 II.2.1.2. Imperial Issues – Non-Imperial Chanceries 42 II.2.2. Beginnings of Sigismund’s Imperial Chancery 46 III. THE ADMINISTRATION: MOBILE AND RESIDENT 59 III.1. The Actors 62 III.1.1. At the Travelling King’s Court 62 III.1.1.1. High Dignitaries at the Travelling Court 63 III.1.1.1.1. Hungarian Notables 63 III.1.1.1.2. Imperial Court Dignitaries and the Imperial Elite 68 III.1.1.2. -
Monastic Landscapes of Medieval Transylvania (Between the Eleventh and Sixteenth Centuries)
DOI: 10.14754/CEU.2020.02 Doctoral Dissertation ON THE BORDER: MONASTIC LANDSCAPES OF MEDIEVAL TRANSYLVANIA (BETWEEN THE ELEVENTH AND SIXTEENTH CENTURIES) By: Ünige Bencze Supervisor(s): József Laszlovszky Katalin Szende Submitted to the Medieval Studies Department, and the Doctoral School of History Central European University, Budapest of in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies, and CEU eTD Collection for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Budapest, Hungary 2020 DOI: 10.14754/CEU.2020.02 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My interest for the subject of monastic landscapes arose when studying for my master’s degree at the department of Medieval Studies at CEU. Back then I was interested in material culture, focusing on late medieval tableware and import pottery in Transylvania. Arriving to CEU and having the opportunity to work with József Laszlovszky opened up new research possibilities and my interest in the field of landscape archaeology. First of all, I am thankful for the constant advice and support of my supervisors, Professors József Laszlovszky and Katalin Szende whose patience and constructive comments helped enormously in my research. I would like to acknowledge the support of my friends and colleagues at the CEU Medieval Studies Department with whom I could always discuss issues of monasticism or landscape archaeology László Ferenczi, Zsuzsa Pető, Kyra Lyublyanovics, and Karen Stark. I thank the director of the Mureş County Museum, Zoltán Soós for his understanding and support while writing the dissertation as well as my colleagues Zalán Györfi, Keve László, and Szilamér Pánczél for providing help when I needed it. -
It's the Survivors Who Rebuild! … the Story of József Osztróvszky by Vic Berecz
It's the Survivors Who Rebuild! … the Story of József Osztróvszky by Vic Berecz. Our Yankee neighbors to the north proudly proclaim, Live Free or Die . Martyrdom is a great symbolic act. But, I’d like to recount the story of a survivor. With it, I hope to convince you that progress is driven by the living -- that it’s the survivors who are presented with the opportunity to rebuild a nation. That survivor is József Osztróvszky, my great-great-grandfather. My mother in New York, because her father had died when she was still young and the family had no contact with relatives in Hungary, knew very little about her ancestors. She knew only that her Heszlényi grandfather was born in Szeged, and that his wife was named Mária Osztróvszky. She also knew that her father had been orphaned at age five, and was brought up by his grandfather and his aunt Vilma. She knew nothing else about the family. It was not until recent years, when I began investigating my roots in Hungary -- and when I had some luck on the Internet -- that I became aware of all that was happening in 1849, when my great-grandmother Mária was József Osztróvszky in 1861 … born. from painting in Szeged City Hall. József Osztróvszky was born in 1818 in Szeged. He was the son of a prosperous butcher. of Hungarian progress that he dedicated his later Like all the wealthier Roman Catholic boys of life to broad civic interests. In the 1830’s and Szeged, József attended the Piarist Academy. -
Visegrád Group at the Heart of Europe
#V4KÖZÖSEN VISEGRÁD GROUP AT THE HEART OF EUROPE 1 SETTLEMENTS#V4KÖZÖSEN 1. Budapest 26. Auschwitz-Birkenau 2. Bratislava 27. Český Krumlov 3. Warsaw 28. Olomouc 4. Prague 29. Selmecbánya 5. Visegrád 30. Gdańsk 6. Krakow 31. Komárom 7. Szentendre 32. Trencsén 8. Gödöllő 33. Árva 9. Eger 34. Zólyom 10. Pécs 35. Zakopane 11. Esztergom 36. Mariánské Lázně 12. Żelazowa Wola 37. Janské Lázně 13. Sierpc 38. Zalakaros 14. Łódź 39. Hévíz 15. Kutná Hora 40. Harkány 16. Teletín 41. Bükfürdő 17. Karlovy Vary 42. Kamień Śląski 18. Plzeň 43. Pöstyén 19. Vöröskő 44. Trencsénteplic 20. Szomolány 45. Zsolna 21. Pannonhalma 46. Mád 22. Besztercebánya 47. Chopok 23. Garamszentbenedek 48. Donovaly 24. Brno 49. Kutná Horá 25. Tyniec 50. Luhačovice IMPRESSUM Published by Hungarian Tourism Agency, Zoltán Guller dr, CEO of Hungarian Tourism Agency 15-23 Kacsa Street, 1027 Budapest, Hungary. Phone: +36 1 488 8700 Designed, produced and edited by Lounge Design Ltd. 2 Printed by Keskeny és Társai Ltd. 30. 13. 12. 3. WARSAW 14. GERMANY 42. 37. 6. 17. 4. PRAGUE 26. 25. 36. 15. 28. UKRAINE 18. 16. 49. 35. 45. 33. 50. 24. 44. 47. 32. 27. 22. 48. 20. 43. 29. 34. 23. 19. 46. 2. BRATISLAVA 11. 9. 31. AUSTRIA 5. 7. 8. 21. 41. 1. BUDAPEST 39. ROMANIA 38. 10. SLOVENIA 40. WARSAW PRAGUE Distance Budapest Bratislava 200 km Budapest Prague 525 km BRATISLAVA BUDAPEST Budapest Warsaw 780 km Bratislava Prague 328 km Bratislava Warsaw 649 km Prague Warsaw 683 km #V4KÖZÖSEN 4 #V4CONNECTS DEAR READER, On account of its strategically important location, these lines that we drew up our publication, which throughout history, Central Europe frequently gives a taste of our countries’ adventurous histo- became a seat of war. -
King St Ladislas, Chronicles, Legends and Miracles
Saeculum Christianum t. XXV (2018), s. 140-163 LÁSZLó VESZPRÉMY Budapest KING ST LADISLAS, CHRONICLES, LEGENDS AND mIRACLES The pillars of Hungarian state authority had crystallized at the end of the twelfth century, namely, the cult of the Hungarian saint kings (Stephen, Ladislas and Prince Emeric), especially that of the apostolic king Stephen who organized the Church and state. His cult, traditions, and relics played a crucial role in the development of the Hungarian coronation ritual and rules. The cult of the three kings was canonized on the pattern of the veneration of the three magi in Cologne from the thirteenth century, and it was their legends that came to be included in the Hungarian appendix of the Legenda Aurea1. A spectacular stage in this process was the foundation of the Hungarian chapel by Louis I of Anjou in Aachen in 1367, while relics of the Hungarian royal saints were distributed to the major shrines of pilgrimage in Europe (Rome, Cologne, Bari, etc.). Together with the surviving treasures, they were supplied with liturgical books which acquainted the non-Hungarians with Hungarian history in the special and local interpretation. In Hungary, the national and political implications of the legends of kings contributed to the representation of royal authority and national pride. Various information on King Ladislas (reigned 1077–1095) is available in the chronicles, legends, liturgical lections and prayers2. In some cases, the same motifs occur in all three types of sources. For instance, as to the etymology of the saint’s name, the sources cite a rare Greek rhetorical concept (per peragogen), which was first incorporated in the Chronicle, as the context reveals, and later transferred into the Legend and the liturgical lections. -
Annual Report of the President of the National Office for the Judiciary 2017
Annual report of the President of the National Office for the Judiciary 2017 SYNOPTIC TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I – EFFICIENCY OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE .................................................................. 13 PART II – HUMAN CAPACITIES OF THE JUDICIAL ORGANISATION ...................................................... 61 PART III – ASSETS ............................................................................................................................................................. 77 PART IV – INTEGRITY OF THE JUDICIAL ORGANIZATION ........................................................................ 103 PART V – ACCESS TO JUSTICE .................................................................................................................................. 129 PART VI – THE TRAINING ........................................................................................................................................... 151 PART VII – OPERATION OF THE NATIONAL OFFICE FOR THE JUDICIARY ...................................... 179 ANNEXES ............................................................................................................................................................................ 189 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I – EFFICIENCY OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE .................................................................. 13 1. Caseload ............................................................................................................................................................................. -
History of Slovakia
History of Slovakia Obchodná akadémia, Veľká okružná 32, 011 57 Žilina Prehistory Slovakia's territory had been inhabited in the Palaeolithic - Nové Mesto nad Váhom, Bojnice and Gánovce. The best known artifact is the Venus of Moravany from Moravany nad Váhom. Neolithic habitation was found in Želiezovce, Gemer, the Domica cave and at Nitriansky Hrádok. 2 History of Slovakia Prehistory Bronze Age was marked by the Čakany andVelatice cultures, followed by the Calenderberg culture and the Hallstatt culture.The major Celtic tribes living in Slovakia were Cotini and Boii. The great invasions of the 4–8th centuries saw the emergence of the Huns, followed by the expansion of the Ostrogoths, Lombards, Gepids, Heruli. Eurasian Avars followed, battling the Byzantine Empire, to be replaced by the Slavs. 3 History of Slovakia The Slavs Parts of the Slavic population that settled in the Middle Danube area were unified by King Samo,after a successful Slavic insurrection against the Avar Khaganate in 623. In 631, Samo defeated the Frankish army of King Dagobert at the Battle of Wogastisburg. Samo's Empire, the first known political formation of Slavs, disappeared after the death of its founder in 665 and its territory was again included into Avar Khaganate. Around 828, Archbishop Adalram of Salzburg consecrated a church for Prince Pribina in Nitrava. In 833, Mojmír I, Duke of the Moravians, expelled Pribina. 4 History of Slovakia The era of Great Moravia Great Moravia arose around 830 when Mojmír I unified the Slavic tribes settled north of the Danube and extended the Moravian supremacy over them.