The official foundation of International Workers’ Day, which basically set in stone the eight-hour shift for factory workers, was on 1 May 1891, when it was declared a ‘holiday for the international unity of the working class’.
After World War II, it gained special importance around the Eastern Bloc. In Hungary, the first May Day parade had been held in 1919, during the Soviet Republic, and from 1946 it became a State holiday. In the gloomy 1950s, it was almost mandatory to attend the parade, only slightly alleviated in the 1960s.
Later, as the system relaxed, independent, traditional May Day elements were added to the 1 May celebration.
Megjelent első bookazine-unk, ne maradj le róla!
Már 15 éve lélegzünk összhangban a fővárossal. Jubileumi kiadványunkban mindent megtalálsz, ami magazinunk és eddigi munkánk esszenciája. Gasztronómia, kultúra, városi legendák és Budapest arcai, interjúk, történetek és a legjobb helyek – úgy, ahogyan mi látjuk a fővárost.
Rendeld meg itt vagy keresd a nagyobb könyvesboltokban!
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