About the Embassy
Embassy History
Return of the Holy Crown of St. Stephen
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| The Holy Crown |
When
Stephen became King of Hungary on Christmas Day in the year 1000, Pope
Sylvester II made him the gift of a crown. Stephen had resolved to
raise Hungary to the status of a Christian kingdom, placing it on an
equal footing with other European states. He had shrewdly requested his
crown from the Pope, the spiritual leader of Western Europe, rather
than from the Holy Roman Emperor. This crown became one of the most
powerful symbols of Hungarian nationhood.
During World War II,
the crown was spirited out of Hungary to protect it from the Germans
and the Soviets. On May 2, 1945, the Holy Crown and other jewels were
handed over by a Hungarian Army General to a U.S. Army Colonel near
Egglesberg, Austria. The Crown had been packed in a large black
satchel. It was initially sheltered in Wiesbaden, in the American Zone,
but was later transferred to the United States Gold Reserve at Ft.
Knox, Kentucky. It was not considered as spoils of war; rather, the
U.S. Government stored it in hopes of returning it to the Hungarian
people one day.
The decision by President Jimmy Carter to return
the Crown in 1978 was a controversial one, and one which took political
courage. President Carter made his decision based on the evidence that
Hungary's record on human rights - its tolerance of religious
expression, its facilitating of travel and communication - while not
perfect, deserved recognition as an example to other Soviet-bloc
countries. Many people on both sides of the Atlantic adamantly opposed
the return of the Crown at a time when Hungary was still under
Communist rule. Carter felt that it was only right that the Crown be
returned before a whole generation of Hungarians came of age without
understanding its symbolism. After all, he said, the Crown belonged to
the Hungarian people.
As hoped, the return of the Crown was both
an occasion for improving U.S. - Hungarian relations and a device for
pulling Hungary towards the west. It allowed the traditional warm
relations between the two countries to resurface.
The delegation
that President Carter sent to bring the Crown to Hungary was a
distinguished one, led by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. It included
Senator Adlai Stevenson, Congressman Lee Hamilton, and Nobel Prize
Winner Dr. Albert Szent-Györgyi. On the Hungarian side, the Cardinal,
the Chief Rabbi, Protestant Bishops, and leaders of the academic,
scientific and cultural communities participated in the ceremony, as
well as representatives of the Hungarian state.