Americans, Hungarians, and the Sacred Crown of St. Stephen

In ‘This Week in History,’ a 1,000-year-old crown kept safe in America from the communists finally makes its way home.
Americans, Hungarians, and the Sacred Crown of St. Stephen
The Crown of St. Stephen, the holy crown of Hungary. granada_turnier/CC BY 2.0
Dustin Bass
Updated:
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It was buried in the mud along the Danube River. The Crown of St. Stephen, along with the coronation jewels, was placed there by Hungarian revolutionary leaders (either Lajos Kossuth or Bertalan Szemere). The Habsburgs, with help from Russian troops, were stamping out the short-lived Hungarian Revolution of 1848 to 1849. The revolution was lost, but keeping the jewels from the Habsburgs was a consolation. The consolation was short-lived as well.

In September of 1853, near modern-day Orsova, Romania, a traveler discovered the crown and jewels inside a mud-covered wooden box. The jewels were immediately taken to Vienna, capital of the Habsburgs. There was some relief when the jewels were returned to Hungary, as the Crown of St. Stephen had by this time been an 850-year-old symbol of statehood.

In 1867, the crown was placed on the head of Franz Joseph, the monarch of the newly established Austro-Hungarian Empire—an empire that lasted 50 years. Shortly after Joseph’s death in 1916, the empire witnessed its demise in 1918, weeks before the end of World War I. From 1920 to 1944, the Kingdom of Hungary (though there was never a king) became the new home of the Crown of St. Stephen. By 1945, occupied by the Nazis but faced with imminent invasion by the Soviets, the Kingdom needed to find a new hiding place for the crown jewels.

Franz Joseph I crowned with the Holy Crown as the King of Hungary. (Public Domain)
Franz Joseph I crowned with the Holy Crown as the King of Hungary. Public Domain

Jewels Taken and Retaken

The Allies were sweeping through Europe. The Americans and British from the west and the Soviets from the east. It was a race to Berlin.

By April 1945, the 12th U.S. Army Group, which fought alongside British, Canadian and French armies, was pushing through western Germany. Within this Army Group was the 86th U.S. Infantry Division, which had become part of Gen. George Patton’s Third Army on April 19, and was moving through southern Germany. A week later, on April 27, the division crossed the Danube, heading toward Munich, and, ultimately, the Austrian border.

While the 86th was sweeping across Austria and the Third Ukrainian Front was sweeping through Hungary, the Nazi-installed prime minister of Hungary, Ferenc Szalasi, was caught between two invading forces. He fled Budapest to Austria and was captured in Mattsee on May 2 by troops of the 86th. In Szalasi’s possession were the Hungarian crown jewels—a scepter, an orb, mantle, coronation robe and sword, and the Crown of St. Stephen.

Considering the fact that the Soviets were now occupying Hungary, the crown jewels were handed over to the Americans for safekeeping. The jewels, stowed in a black bag, were safely transported to Wiesbaden in western Germany, part of the American Zone. Szalasi, for his trouble, was taken by the Soviets, placed on trial, convicted of war crimes, and executed.

Ferenc Szalasi as chief of the Hungarian government. (Public Domain)
Ferenc Szalasi as chief of the Hungarian government. Public Domain
Giving the Americans the jewels proved the right choice, as Hungary quickly came under communist control. The new government abolished the Hungarian coat of arms, which was symbolized in large part by the Crown of St. Stephen. Hungary’s oldest symbol of nationhood was now in the possession of the Americans, who decided to place the jewels in its safest location: Fort Knox in Kentucky.

American-Hungarian Relations

Shortly after the end of World War II, the Cold War between the former allies of the western democracies and the Soviet Union began. The Soviet-backed communist government of Hungary showed little concern about regaining its Christian-themed symbols. And so the jewels remained in America.

Over the ensuing decades, America and Hungary’s diplomatic relations were under constant strain. The Hungarian Communist regime proved to be consistently suspicious of espionage, often in cases where there was no espionage. Diplomats were often forced to leave the country or prevented from returning.

In 1956, Hungary experienced another revolution. The revolution, as it had been a century before, was short-lived and crushed, again, by the Russians. One of the most vocal critics of the communist rulers was Cardinal József Mindszenty, who had been archbishop of Hungary since 1945 and had been imprisoned since 1949. When the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 ended after 12 days, with thousands killed and hundreds of thousands fleeing to the West (with approximately 30,000 settling in America), Mindszenty, freed from prison, fled to safety inside his own country. He found a place of refuge in the U.S. embassy in Budapest.

Anti-Soviet demonstrators march in protest against the USSR's control of Hungary, on Oct. 25, 1956. (<a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:F%C3%A6">Fæ</a>/<a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/">CC BY-SA 3.0</a>)
Anti-Soviet demonstrators march in protest against the USSR's control of Hungary, on Oct. 25, 1956. /CC BY-SA 3.0
Mindszenty lived in a small apartment within the embassy for the next 15 years. When he was provided safe passage to the Vatican in 1971, it was a symbol that the icy Hungarian rule was beginning to thaw, though slightly. The possibility of returning the crown jewels, a possibility that had very rarely been discussed formally, appeared real.

Diplomatic Considerations

A few months before Mindszenty left Budapest, Helmut Sonnenfeldt, of President Richard Nixon’s National Security Council Staff, sent a dispatch to the Presidentʼs Assistant for National Security Affairs Henry Kissinger, entitled, “The Crown of St. Stephen: Should We Return It?”

Sonnenfeldt understood the difficulty of returning such an important national and Christian symbol to a nation that was both anti-nationalist and atheist. It was difficult not just because of optics, but also because of the large Hungarian American population that was adamantly against such an action while the country was under communist control. He noted that returning it would be viewed as “a breach of the trust under which we have safeguarded the Crown since 1945” and that it was this difficulty that was the primary reason the Hungarian government had not pressed for its return.

Hungary, however, had been hoping to receive Most Favored Nation status from the Americans. The country had maintained a more distant relationship from Moscow than most other, if not all other, Soviet satellite states. Considering the U.S.-Hungarian relationship, Sonnenfeldt suggested, “From the foreign relations standpoint, some symbolic gesture may be in order for the most liberal communist regime in Eastern Europe. In strictly bilateral terms, there has been some improvement.”

A Convincing Argument

It took the administration of President Jimmy Carter before such action was strongly considered. But nearly six years had passed since Sonnenfeldt had sent his dispatch, and the countries’ diplomatic relations had continued to slowly improve.
On June 3, 1977, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance sent a letter to President Carter, entitled “Strengthening Relations with Hungary—The Crown of St. Stephen Issue.” His argument for strong consideration of returning “the paramount symbol of Hungary’s nationhood and Western Christian tradition” proved quite convincing.

“The Communist regime in Hungary is a far cry from being democratic,” he wrote, “but over the past few years, Hungary has developed into the most internally liberal country in the Warsaw Pact: a tolerant attitude toward dissidents, good church-state relations and a modus vivendi with the Vatican, openness to Western information, a relatively liberal travel and emigration policy, and an innovative, decentralized economic system.”

He conceded that Hungarian Americans opposed the action because it would appear to legitimize the communist regime, but added that “[f]or most Americans, return of the Crown would not be an issue, and return would probably be supported as a moral act.” He provided seven more reasons for returning the crown, including that it would “concretely support our long-range goal of encouraging greater autonomy, national identity and Western orientation in Eastern Europe.”

In order to alleviate public resistance, Vance recommended Congress pass a joint resolution on the matter, that Congress be involved in the public ceremony in Budapest, and that the government require the Hungarians to commit to placing “the Crown on permanent public display.”

Carter’s Choice

Carter had been in office less than six months when Vance sent his letter. America had held Hungary’s most important symbols for more than three decades, far longer than had the mud along the Danube. Carter was convinced and announced his decision to return the Crown of St. Stephen to Budapest. Public outcry was immediate.
“It is the communists who have steadily pressured our State Department and officials for the return of the Holy Crown of St Stephen to give Dictator [Janos Jozsef] Kadar the appearance of legality,” stated a representative of the Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation. “It must never be returned to the communist government.”
Ferenc Nagy, who had once served as Hungary’s prime minister before the Soviets forced him out, suggested that the Hungarian people needed hope and encouragement, and that “maybe the Holy Crown, the symbol of the continuity of national life and history, will do it.”

With the world still more than a decade from the end of the Cold War and being a new president, it indeed took political courage for President Carter to make this decision.

“It took a lot of guts to do what Carter did,” said Philip Kaiser, the U.S. Ambassador to Hungary from 1977 to 1979.

A Public Ceremony

In a religious twist, the 1,000-year-old Crown of St. Stephen was presented to the Hungarian government in Budapest on Jan. 6, 1978, the day of the Epiphany, considered the day the magi brought gifts to Jesus in Bethlehem. The crown was presented by an American delegation, which included Kaiser, Sec. Vance, Sen. Adlai Stevenson, Congressman Lee Hamilton, and Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, the Hungarian biochemist who had won the Nobel Prize in 1937.
The Crown, Sword, Sceptre and Globus Cruciger of Hungary, in the Hungarian Parliament Building. (<a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:CSvBibra">CSvBibra</a>/<a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/">CC BY SA-3.0</a>)
The Crown, Sword, Sceptre and Globus Cruciger of Hungary, in the Hungarian Parliament Building. CSvBibra/CC BY SA-3.0

In order to make it appear as though the ceremony was not politically driven, Kaiser requested that Kadar not be present at the ceremony. The request was fulfilled. There was another request that was fulfilled shortly after the ceremony. It was during this week in history, on Jan. 31, 1978, that the Hungarians, complying with one of the stipulations made by the State Department, placed the crown jewels on public display.

In March, Hungary was given Most Favored Nation status, and American-Hungarian diplomatic relations continued to improve. In 1989, communism fell. The following year, Jozsef Antall became Hungary’s first freely elected prime minister in nearly 50 years.

On Oct. 18, 1990, the State Department hosted a dinner for Antall in Washington. President George H.W. Bush raised a glass to toast Antall and the many heroic Hungarians, like “the great founder of the Hungarian state, St. Stephen.” He added, “If [Lajos] Kossuth could be with us here tonight, he would see that his dream of a free and democratic Hungary had been fulfilled.”

In response, Antall raised his glass and toasted, “We have restored the old Hungarian coat of arms and the holy crown—according to tradition, the crown of King Stephen the Saint was preserved by you. And sometime in the future, historian may find that the return of the crown played a very important role to once again being able to identify ourselves within our own self. … I raise my glass to eternal friendship of the United States of America and Hungary.”

The Hungarian Parliament Building, where the crown jewels are on display today. (<a href="https://www.flickr.com/people/46191841@N00">Jorge Franganillo</a>/<a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/">CC BY 2.0</a>)
The Hungarian Parliament Building, where the crown jewels are on display today. Jorge Franganillo/CC BY 2.0
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Dustin Bass
Dustin Bass
Author
Dustin Bass is the creator and host of the American Tales podcast, and co-founder of The Sons of History. He writes two weekly series for The Epoch Times: Profiles in History and This Week in History. He is also an author.