Abstract
This study of the Hungarian Kingdom in the Pre-World War I period aims to analyse two of its special phenomena and institutions, namely its parliamentary-constitutional crisis and the legal framework of the extraordinary state of war. Furthermore, the study attempts to explain the regulations contained in the Act nr. LXIII (1912) regarding measures to avert danger in times of war. Also, obstruction as a crisis phenomenon of the era discussed, and a related symbolic event, the so-called âhandkerchief votumâ (âzsebkendöszavazásâ), will be interpreted as symptoms of an unleashed constitutional crisis (1904â 1906), including a description of the course of events as well as the political circumstances.
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