Martin Lacko
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Martin Lacko (Born in 1976 in
Piešťany Piešťany (; , , , ) is a town in Slovakia. It is located in the western part of the country within the Trnava Region and is the seat of its Piešťany District, own district. It is the biggest and best known spa town in Slovakia and has around ...
) is a Slovak historian. He specialises in modern Slovak history, particularly the period of the Slovak state from 1939 to 1945. Originally a mainstream historian with internationally acclaimed and cited works, Lacko has been considered controversial since 2014 due to his historical revisionist positions and his open support for the far-right ĽSNS party.


Life

Lacko studied history and philosophy at the
Comenius University Comenius University Bratislava () is the largest university in Slovakia, with most of its faculties located in Bratislava. It was founded in 1919, shortly after the creation of Czechoslovakia. It is named after Jan Amos Comenius, a 17th-century ...
. He completed his doctorate at the Historical Institute of the
Slovak Academy of Sciences The Slovak Academy of Sciences (, or SAV) is the main scientific and research institution in Slovakia fostering basic and strategic basic research. It was founded in 1942, closed after World War II, and then reestablished in 1953. Its primary ...
in Bratislava. Lacko worked as a member of the scientific research section of the National Memory Institute in
Bratislava Bratislava (German: ''Pressburg'', Hungarian: ''Pozsony'') is the Capital city, capital and largest city of the Slovakia, Slovak Republic and the fourth largest of all List of cities and towns on the river Danube, cities on the river Danube. ...
. He specializes in Slovak history during the Second World War and has published over 30 academic studies on this topic in Slovakia and abroad. In 2002–2004, he organised the conference Slovenská republika 1939-1945 očami mladých historikov (The Slovak Republic 1939–1945 in the Eyes of Young Historians) three times. Lacko was regarded (see section Controversies) as one of the most renowned Slovak historians of the so-called ‘young generation of historians’, who in their assessment of Slovak history, especially the Slovak state, see themselves as a middle way between the ‘glorifying works’ of exiled Slovak historians such as Milan Stanislav Ďurica and František Vnuk and the ‘strongly negative works’ of Slovak historians still active under the communist regime such as
Ivan Kamenec Ivan Kamenec (born 27 August 1938) is a Slovak historian. Life Kamenec was born into a Jewish family in Nitra on 27 August 1938 and grew up in . His father, a civil engineer, managed to secure an economic exception to the 1942 deportations, du ...
and
Dušan Kováč Dušan Kováč (born 3 January 1942) is a Slovak historian and writer. He specializes in Slovak and Central European history of the 19th and 20th centuries, the author or co-author of several synthetic works about Slovak history. The head of the ...
.


Reception

Lacko was originally regarded as a renowned historian in Slovakia. Lacko's work also attracted international attention. For example, the German historian Tatjana Tönsmeyer (2011) wrote in her review of Lacko's 2008 monograph on the Slovak National Uprising: : However, the internal Slovak disputes about the significance and the ability of the state of the war years to maintain its traditions for the Slovak self-image continue and have come to a head in the debate about the ‘national’ uprising. A further contribution to this debate is to be presented here by a younger Slovak historian, who has already made a name for himself with several works, especially on the military history of the Slovak state, as well as with several highly regarded editions of sources, including situation reports from the security services from January to August 1944. Martin Lacko has recently published an easy-to-read book for a wider audience, which is attractively designed with selected illustrations. In contrast to earlier accounts, it is also positive that aspects that have been less focussed on to date are also taken into account. Not only are the various groups involved in the resistance presented in detail, but everyday life in the area of the uprising is also discussed and it is impressively shown that at the end of 1944 and beginning of 1945, Slovakia was also included in the history of violence that is known from many regions, especially in Eastern Europe under German occupation.Recension from Tatjana Tönsmeyer, published in: ''Bohemia'', Vol. 51 (2011), p. 529–530, on Martin Lacko (2008): ''Slovenské národné povstanie 1944 he Slovak National Uprising 1944'' Slovart: Bratislava.
online
The picture of the uprising painted by Lacko is much more multifaceted than earlier accounts, but Tönsmeyer is critical of the fact that Lacko does not take into account the results of international research and, in Tönsmeyer's opinion, pursues a ‘historical-political intention’. Lacko constructs an image of history for Slovak society for which he claims ‘truth’, offers military ‘heroes’ in particular and hopes that his readership will take a positive view of Slovak statehood. The German historian Martin Zückert also comments on Lacko's monograph on the Slovakian National Uprising. In his essay (2011) on the Slovakian resistance against the Tiso regime, Zückert categorises Lacko's work among those accounts that ‘critically assess the role of the partisans and the Soviet Union’ and have recently caused controversy in Slovakia. The Czech historian Lenka Šindelářová (2013), on the other hand, writes about Lacko's account of the history of Slovakia from 1939 to 1945, also published in 2008, that Lacko's work and that of Ivan Kamenec and Ján Korček in particular proved to be helpful for an overall picture of developments in the Slovak state. In 2014, a controversy broke out in Slovakia over Lacko. The ultra-nationalist Slovakian website www.29august1944.sk, which criticised the Slovak National Uprising against the National Socialists and the Slovak collaborationist regime as an ‘anti-national betrayal’, named Martin Lacko as one of the historians supporting it. Since then, he has been cited in Slovakian media as a ‘controversial historian’. At the end of October 2015, Lacko signed a declaration supporting Marian Kotleba's far-right party against the backdrop of the ongoing election campaign for the 2016 parliamentary elections. In early September 2016, Lacko was dismissed as an employee of the ‘Institute of the Memory of the Nation’ (Slovak: Ústav pamäti národa, ÚPN), which investigates the crimes of both the National Socialists and the Communists in Slovakia. In 2017, it became known that Lacko was now officially working as an assistant to MP Natália Grausová from the Kotleba party.''Z ÚPN ho vyhodili, historik Martin Lacko už oficiálne pracuje pre ĽSNS''.
In: aktuality.sk, 3 April 2017, last check on 21 January 2019, 00:26. (in Slovak)


Selected works

Document collections * ''Zrod Slovenského štátu v kronikách slovenskej armády'' The birth of the Slovak state in the chronicles of the Slovak army Ústav pamäti národa: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-89335-19-0. (2010) * ''Dotyky s boľševizmom. Dokumenty spravodajstva slovenskej armády 1940–1941'' Contact with Bolshevism. Documents of the Intelligence Service of the Slovak Army 1940-1941 Ústav pamäti národa: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-89335-11-4. (2009) * ''Proti Poľsku. Odraz ťaženia roku 1939 v denníkoch a kronikáck slovenskej armády'' Against Poland. Effects of the campaign in 1939 in the diaries and chronicles of the Slovak army Ústav pamäti národa: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-89335-00-8. (2007) Monographs * ''Slovenskí generáli 1939–1945'' Slovak Generals 1939–1945 Ottovo nakladatelství: Prag, ISBN 978-80-7451-246-9. (2013, together with Peter Jašek und Branislav Kinčok) * ''Dwuramienny krzyż w cieniu swastyki. Republika Słowacka 1939–1945'' The double cross in the shadow of the swastika. The Slovak Republic 1939-1945 EL-Press: Lublin, ISBN 83-86869-32-1. (2012, Polish) * ''Slovenské národné povstanie 1944'' he Slovak National Uprising 1944 Slovart: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-8085-575-8. (2008) * ''Slovenská republika 1939–1945'' he Slovak Republic 1939–1945 Perfekt: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-8046-408-0. (2008) * ''Dezercie a zajatia príslušníkov zaisťovacej divízie v ZSSR v rokoch 1942–1943'' esertions and captures of members of the Security Division in the USSR in the years 1942-1943 Ústav pamäti národa: Bratislava, ISBN 978-80-969699-4-4. (2007)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lacko, Martin 1976 births 20th-century Slovak historians Comenius University alumni People from Piešťany Living people Historians of the Holocaust Historians of Slovakia 21st-century Slovak historians