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Hungarian Counterfeit Francs: A Case of Post-World War I Political Sabotage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Extract
Stalin's little-known 1928 caper, the production and distribution of bogus hundred-dollar bills, was preceded by an even less known venture of the same sort. Specialists in East European history have left it unexplored during the decades which have passed since it occurred, and several aspects of the plot behind it, as well as some of its most powerful supporters, remain unknown. It happened in 1925, and involved a string of high-ranking Hungarian civilian and military personages, with a prince at one end and a bishop at the other.
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 1974
References
1. Arnold, Krammer, “Russian Counterfeit Dollars : A Case of Early Soviet Espionage,” Slavic Review, 30, no. 4 (December 1971) : 762–73 Google Scholar.
2. “A 25-6s Bizottsag Jelentesei” [Reports of the Parliamentary Committee of 25], Hungarian National Archives, Budapest, vol. 4, 1926.
3. Kozma Iratok [Kozma Documents], 1. csom6, adatgyfijtemSny, 1920-22, p. 12, Hungarian National Archives, Budapest.
4. Nemzetgyuusi Naplo [Parliamentary Record], vol. 2, 1927.
5. Auer, Paul de, Fil ivszdsad [Half Century] (Washington, D.C. : Occidental Press, 1971), p. 134 Google Scholar.
6. Bethlen to Horthy, Sept. 24, 1926, doc. 13, in Mikl6s Szinai and Liszl6 Szfics, eds., Horthy Miklds titkos iratai [Mikl6s Horthy's Secret Papers], 2nd ed. (Budapest, 1963), pp. 62, 66. This letter appears as doc. 11 in an English version of the book : The Confidential Papers of Admiral Horthy (Budapest, 1965).
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