H. Szilasi Ágota - Várkonyi Péter - Bujdosné Pap Györgyi - Császi Irén (szerk.): Agria 50. (Az egri Dobó István Vármúzeum Évkönyve - Annales Musei Agriensis, 2017)
Romsics Ignác: Közép- és/vagy Kelet-Európa? Egy definíciós vita, és ami mögötte van
Szűcs Jenő 1981 Vázlat Európa három történeti régiójáról Történelmi Szemle 3. szám 313-359. Wandycz, Piotr S. 1992 East European History and Its Meaning. The Halecki-Bidlo-Handelsman Debate. In: Jónás Pál - Peter Pastor - Tóth Pál Péter (szerk.): Király Béla Emlékkönyv. Budapest, 308-321. Wirsing, Giselher 1932 Zwischeneuropa und die deutsche Zukunft.Jena.. Zernack, Klaus 1977 Osteuropa. Eine Einführung in seine Geschichte. München. Ignác Romsics CENTRAL AND/OR EASTERN EUROPE? A definition debate and what is behind that The region bounding the Baltic Sea in the north and the Adriatic and Aegean in the south, having Germany on its western frontier and Russia as its eastern neighbor has many names. It has been referred to as Eastern Europe, Central Europe, East Central Europe, Central EasternEurope, and even Lands Between (in the German original: Zwischeneuropa). The article explains the geographical, political and cultural background of this ambiguity in terminology. Special emphasis is placed on the approaches of the famous interwar Polish historian Oscar Halecki and the Czech Byzantinist Jaroslaw Bidlo as well as the postwar Hungarian historian Jenő Szűcs. Romsics argues that Europe can be divided into western, central and eastern zones along a number oflines, according to religious, social and political criteria and the use of this or that term depends greatly on the position and the perspective of the person referring to the region. What was called during and after WWI Mitteleuropa or Zwischeneuropa in German-speaking lands, in the English-speaking world appeared to be Eastern Europe. After WWII, the word Mitteleuropa seemed to have died with Adolf LTitler, and the post-Yalta order dictated a strict and single dichotomy to capture the continental divide. Therefore, for four decades after 1945 Europe was taken to consist of two halves, Western and Eastern Europe. With the disintegration of the Soviet bloc at the end of the 1980s the term Eastern Europe came once more to be replaced by Central or East Central Europe, as it has proposed by Oscar Halecki. 60