Zoltán Sulkowsky and Gyula Bartha
Zoltán Sulkowsky and Gyula Bartha (born c. 1904–1905[1]) were Hungarian long-distance motorcycle riders who traveled c. 90,000 miles (140,000 km) on a Harley-Davidson sidecar rig between 1928 and 1936.[2] Their travels are recounted in a book originally published in Hungarian in 1937, and reissued in an English translation in 2008.[3]
Their journey started in Hungary in August, 1928, and ended in the United States. Along the way they visited these countries and regions: France, Germany, Spain, Czechoslovakia, Portugal, Italy, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, the Sudan, India, the Arabian peninsula, French Indochina, Siam, the Malay Peninsula, Japan, China, Hawaii, and Australia;[1] then after landing in America at San Francisco, they spent two years touring North America then another two years in South America, visiting Mexico, Cuba, Panama, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil.[4]
Bibliography
- Sulkowsky, Zoltán (2001) [First published 1937], Motorral a Föld körül (in Hungarian), Zeusz, Viágjárók, ISBN 963-00-6862-1
- Sulkowsky, Zoltán (2008), Around the World on a Motorcycle: 1928 To 1936, translated by Noémi M. Najbauer, Whitehorse Press, ISBN 9781884313776
References
Notes
Sources
- "TWO ON MOTORCYCLE HERE ON WORLD TOUR: Students Started From Budapest in 1928 -- Have Visited 43 Lands and Gone 65,000 Miles", The New York Times, p. 15, January 27, 1932 – via ProQuest
- "The Motorcyclist Pictorial", Motorcyclist, January 15, 1936
- "Around the World on a Motorcycle 1928-1936 [book review]", Roadrunner, March 15, 2013
- Tesch, Bernd (April 11, 2013), Around-The-World by motorcycle, 1901-1950, retrieved 2014-04-26