Holy Crown Society

Holy Crown Society
Szent Korona Társaság
Leader Miklós Kállay
Founded 15 February 1989
Dissolved 5 April 1990
(as party)
Ideology Holy Crown doctrine
Legitimism
Ultraconservatism
Political position Right-wing
Website
www.szentkoronatarsasag.hu
This article is part of a series on the
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The Holy Crown Society (Hungarian: Szent Korona Társaság; SZKT), is a legitimist and ultra-conseravtive civil organization and a former political party in Hungary.

History

Founded in February 1990, the Holy Crown Society considers itself as the legal successor of the first Holy Crown Society, existed between 1920 and 1948, the Holy Crown League founded in 1920 and the National Hungarian Holy Crown Alliance established in 1926. The SZKT was founded as a scientific group by historians, heraldists, constitutionalists for studying the Holy Crown of Hungary, its history and legal doctrine. Miklós Kállay de Nagykálló, Jr. (1918–1996), the son of the late Prime Minister Miklós Kállay, was elected President of the Holy Crown Society, while historian and academic István Kállay was appointed Secretary-General. The ultra-conservative Franciscan monk Othmár Faddy and historian Iván Bertényi, Sr. became vice-presidents.[1]

After a lengthy debate, the SZKT decided to run in the 1990 parliamentary election and was registered as a party by the Metropolitan Court of Budapest. Its Somogy County branch joined the regional electoral alliance of Somogy County Christian Coalition (SKK).[1] Beside this, the SZKT had two individual candidates in Körmend and Tiszavasvári, who received 0.04 percent of the individual votes.[2] Meanwhile, the majority of the SZKT decided to continue the work as a tradition preserving social organization. Because of disputes, the organization split into two factions, when the newly formed Hungarian Holy Crown Alliance quit the SZKT, which dissolved as a party in April 1990.[3]

Election results

National Assembly

Election year National Assembly Government
# of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
1990 1,906
0.04%
0 / 386
extra-parliamentary

References

  1. 1 2 Vida 2011, p. 455.
  2. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 899. ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  3. Vida 2011, p. 456.

Sources

External links

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