Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2021
Many residents of Munich and Budapest experienced the events of 1919 as both political upheaval and personal trauma. The supporters and opponents of the various political movements, as well as the “innocent bystanders,” witnessed the revolution and counterrevolution as violence and chaos, personal retribution, rumor, innuendo, denunciation, and misinformation. After the immediate crisis of counterrevolution, the interwar years were marked by account-taking, assessment of guilt, and searching for historical explanations, both on a personal and a societal level.
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