Gróf Károlyi Gábor följegyzései (1. kötet)

audiobook

Gróf Károlyi Gábor följegyzései (1. kötet)

by Károly Eötvös

HU·~7 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total

GRÓF KÁROLYI GÁBOR FÖLJEGYZÉSEI

0:14

A MIT ELŐRE KELL MONDANOM.

39:44

GYEREKKOROM.

9:17

GRÓF BATTHYÁNYI LAJOS ELFOGATÁSA.

21:12

GRÓF BATTHYÁNYI LAJOS HALÁLA.

18:01

MIRE TANITOTTAK?

21:14

UTAZÁSAINK.

32:47

VADÁSZATOM AFRIKÁBAN.

23:03

EGYIPTOMBAN.

24:59

A SZENT FÖLDÖN.

38:15

Description

A collection of candid notes left by a Hungarian aristocrat offers a rare glimpse into the political ferment of early‑20th‑century Budapest. The writer describes a deep, years‑long partnership with his close friend, Count Károlyi, whose shared struggle for constitutional liberty placed them at the center of the nation’s most urgent debates. Their daily lives were devoted to safeguarding the country’s independence, often at great personal cost, and the manuscript conveys the quiet determination that guided their actions. The opening pages set the scene with vivid reflections on loyalty, sacrifice, and the complex web of allies within the parliamentary arena.

The narrator explains his responsibility to present these fragmentary recordings faithfully, shaping the scattered entries into a coherent testimony for future generations. He weaves in details of the Károlyi family’s lineage and the historic Kaplyon estate, grounding the political narrative in a rich cultural context. Listeners will hear a voice that strives for truth above literary polish, preserving the spirit of a movement that fought for Hungary’s basic freedoms. The work promises an intimate portrait of friendship, duty, and the relentless pursuit of national hope.

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Details

Language

hu

Duration

~7 hours (424K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by the Google Books Library Project

Release date

2020-08-21

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Károly Eötvös

Károly Eötvös

1842–1916

Best remembered as the lawyer who defended the accused in the 1883 Tiszaeszlár blood libel case, he also wrote lively, reflective prose about Hungarian public life and memory. His work blends the voice of a seasoned advocate with the warmth of a gifted storyteller.

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