Bősz Attila (szerk.): A Nagy Háború és következményei a Dél-Dunántúlon - Baranyai Történelmi Közlemények 7. A Baranya Megyei Levéltár évkönyve, 2016 (MNL BaML Pécs, 2020)
Angol nyelvű összefoglalók
Summary prisoners of war while taking into account logistic and humanitarian aspects, facts and desertation witness of a rather gloomy fate of POWs. Had the prisoners of war felt good in Hungary, they would have stayed here after the war which happened only in some exceptional personal cases (families, work) or for political reasons. Bálint Ráció A Freemasonic Physician and an Anticlerical Socialist Arm in Arm at the Foot of the Mecsek Hill during the Serbian Occupation. Sándor Doktor's and Gyula Hajdu's Activity in the Socialist Party of Pécs The names of Sándor Doktor and Gyula Hajdú are not unknown to members of today's generation who are in their fifties or elder as the two were celebrated personalities of the Communist regime. The study aims at depicting the role the gynaecologist and freemasonic Grand Master Sándor Doktor on the one hand and his sonin-law, the lawyer Gyula Hajdú on the other played at the time of the Serbian occupation of the city as prominent members of the Socialist Party of Pécs. János Rózsafi Soldiers of Pécs in the Last Months of the Great War In autumn 1918 the soldiers of the Royal Hungarian Pécs Infantry Regiment No. 19 fighting on the Italian front were in the same tough situation as the soldiers of the other regiments struggling on the neighbouring frontlines. Their provision with food and vestment proved to be more and more difficult and the preparation for the coming winter had not started either. Nevertheless, they endured bravely in their posts. In September a new commander by the name of Béla Barna of Mellété came to the regiment. Colonel Barna won the trust of his officers and soldiers within a short period of time and kept holding together the battalions. This was very much needed in the course of the retreat that started early in November 1918. As the battalions broke up and their groups were retreating in a disorderly fashion there was no hope for their coming home unless a firm hand safeguarded obedience to military discipline. The day after day marches, the provisioning of the companies and coping with hardships constituted by the circumstances required the perseverance of all officers. All this was solved resolutely and effectively by Colonel Béla Barna of Mellété, the commander who directed home the infantry regiment of Pécs from the front. 288