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President Áder leads tributes to the thirteen martyr generals of Arad

The service took place in Kossuth square, in front of the Parliament building, and the Hungarian national flag was lowered with military honors

President János Áder and Tibor Benkő, general-in-chief of the Hungarian armed forces, have led tributes at a commemoration for the thirteen martyr generals of Arad and the country’s first prime minister, who were all executed in 1849 as a result of reprisals that followed Hungary’s revolution and fight for independence.

The service took place in Kossuth square, in front of the Parliament building, and the Hungarian national flag was lowered with military honors in the presence of diplomatic guests and country officials, MTI reports.

The generals of Arad were captured by the Austrian army and executed to make sure that Hungary will never again rebel against the Habsburg realm.

The executions were ordered by Austrian general Julius Jacob von Haynau after forces of the Habsburg Empire and Imperial Russia re-established Habsburg rule in Hungary.

The 13 executed generals are widely regarded as martyrs for promoting the ideals of independence and national freedom.

Not all the generals were ethnic Hungarians; as their names show, many of them had German or Slavic roots: Károly Leiningen-Westerburg, János Damjanich, Ignác Török, Lajos Aulich, Károly Vécsey, Vilmos Lázár, Arisztid Dessewffy, József Nagy-Sándor, Károly Knézich, József Schweidel, Ernő Kiss, György Láhner and Ernő Poeltenberg.

On the same symbolic day, exactly one year after the revolution of Vienna broke out, Count Lajos Batthyány (1806–1849), the first Hungarian prime minister, was also executed in Pest in an Austrian military garrison. It was also general Haynau who sentenced the first Hungarian prime minister to death.

According to contemporary reports, Lajos Batthyány knelt in front of the firing squad and shouted just before he was executed: “Long live my country! Come on, huntsmen!” October 6 was officially declared the “Day of National Mourning” by the Hungarian government in 2001.