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Mihály
Mihály () is a Hungarian masculine given name, It is a cognate of the English Michael and may refer to: * Mihály András (1917–1993), Hungarian cellist, composer, and academic teacher * Mihály Apafi (1632–1690), Hungarian Prince of Transylvania *Mihály Babák (born 1947), Hungarian politician and member of the Hungarian National Assembly *Mihály Babits (1883– 1941), Hungarian poet, writer and translator *Mihály Bakos (ca. 1742-1803), Hungarian-Slovene Lutheran priest, author, and educator *Mihály Balázs (born 1948), Hungarian historian and professor of religious history * Mihály Balla (born 1965) Hungarian politician and member of the Hungarian National Assembly *Mihály Barla (ca 1778–1824), Slovene evangelic pastor, writer and poet * Mihály Bertalanits (1788–1853), Slovene cantor, teacher, and poet in Hungary *Mihály Bíró (1914-????), Hungarian football forward * Mihály Bozsi (1911–1984), Hungarian water polo player and Olympic medalist *Mihály Csáky ...
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Mihály Csokonai Vitéz
Mihály () is a Hungarian masculine given name, It is a cognate of the English Michael and may refer to: * Mihály András (1917–1993), Hungarian cellist, composer, and academic teacher *Mihály Apafi (1632–1690), Hungarian Prince of Transylvania * Mihály Babák (born 1947), Hungarian politician and member of the Hungarian National Assembly * Mihály Babits (1883– 1941), Hungarian poet, writer and translator * Mihály Bakos (ca. 1742-1803), Hungarian-Slovene Lutheran priest, author, and educator *Mihály Balázs (born 1948), Hungarian historian and professor of religious history *Mihály Balla (born 1965) Hungarian politician and member of the Hungarian National Assembly *Mihály Barla (ca 1778–1824), Slovene evangelic pastor, writer and poet *Mihály Bertalanits (1788–1853), Slovene cantor, teacher, and poet in Hungary * Mihály Bíró (1914-????), Hungarian football forward *Mihály Bozsi (1911–1984), Hungarian water polo player and Olympic medalist * Mihály Csá ...
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Mihály Csáky
Mihály Csáky de Mihály (''Csáki''; c. 1492 – May 1572) was a Hungarian noble in the Principality of Transylvania, who served as the first Chancellor of Transylvania from 1556 to 1571. Early career He was born into a lower noble family around 1492.Following the disclosure of historian József Kemény, the Romanian historiography believes him as serf-born, but another historian Zsigmond Jakó refuted that information, based on the data of Csáky archives in his study. Jakó 1997, pp. 91-96. His father, István Csáky (Csáki) participated in the Diet of 1505 as envoy of Sopron County.Jakó 1997, p. 92. Mihály studied at the University of Kraków, with the subsidization of his distant relative, Bishop of Transylvania János Gosztonyi between 1521 and 1525. His fellow students were, including, Matthias Dévay, Márton Kálmáncsehi and János Károlyi. After that he chose the ecclesiastical career and served in, according to his biographer, Zsigmond Jakó, John Sig ...
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Mihály Dresch
Mihály Dresch (born 1955) is a Hungarian saxophone player. He plays a combination of American free jazz and traditional Hungarian folk music. Dresch was studying to become an engineer when he turned to jazz. He was a member of the Károly Binder Quartet. Since 1998 he has performed in a quartet with István Baló (drums), Ferenc Kovács (violin), Miklós Lukács (dulcimer), Mátyás Szandai (double bass) has existed since 1998. Dresch has worked with John Tchicai, Archie Shepp, Roscoe Mitchell, Chico Freeman, David Murray, Hamid Drake, and Dewey Redman. The project with Archie Shepp led to the ''Hungarian Bebop'' recording of 2002, on which Shepp plays Dresch's compositions. Dresch has performed at jazz festivals worldwide, including the London Jazz Festival. Dresch is a member of György Szabados's band, the MAKUZ Ensemble. Szabados is part of the free music movement in Hungary. Discography As leader or co-leader * ''Cool Sky'' (2001) * ''Quiet as It Is'' (Budapest ...
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Mihály Babits
Mihály Babits (; 26 November 1883 – 4 August 1941) was a Hungarian poet, writer and translator. His poems are well known for their intense religious themes. His novels such as “The Children of Death” (1927) explore psychological problems. Biography Babits was born in Szekszárd. He studied at the University of Budapest from 1901 to 1905, where he met Dezső Kosztolányi and Gyula Juhász. He worked to become a teacher and taught at schools in Baja (1905–06), Szeged (1906–08), Fogaras (1908–11), Újpest (1911), and Budapest (1912–18). His reputation for his poems in the literary life started in 1908. He made a trip to Italy in the same year, which made him interested in Dante; he made several other trips in later years. This experience led him to translate Dante's ''Divine Comedy'' (''Hell'', 1913, ''Purgatory'', 1920, and ''Paradise'', 1923). Briefly after the Hungarian Revolution of 1919 he became a Professor of Foreign Literature and ...
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Mihály Balázs
Mihály Balázs (born 1948) is a Hungarian Catholic historian and professor of religious history at the University of Szeged. He is widely regarded as an expert on the religious history of Hungarian-speaking Transylvania. Works * Mihály Balázs, Early Transylvanian Antitrinitarianism (1566–1571) 1996 * J. Kaldos & M. Balazs (1993), Bibliotheca dissidentium. Répertoire des non-conformistes religieux des seizième et dix-sieptième siècles., Tome XV: Ungarlandische Antitinitarier II. Györgi Enyedi, Baden-Baden 1993 * Balázs, Mihály: Ferenc Dávid. Ungarländische Antitrinitarier IV. Bibliotheca Dissidentium. Répertoire des non-conformistes religieux des seizième et dixseptième siècles édité par André Séguenny. Valentin Koerner: Baden-Baden & Bouxwiller, 2008. (Tome XXVI. Bibliotheca Biographica Aureliana CCXXII.) 325 p. English translation ''Ferenc David,'' 2010. References 1948 births Living people 20th-century Hungarian historians Hungarian Roman Catholi ...
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Mihály Babák
Mihály Babák (born 12 November 1947) is a Hungarian politician, member of the National Assembly (MP) between 1998 and 2014. Biography He was born in Szarvas on 12 November 1947. He acquired building industry technician's qualifications in Veres István Building Industrial Secondary Technical School in Szeged in 1966. In 1978 he passed the master's qualification examination in the trades of carpentry and masonry. In 1983 he graduated from the College of Public Administration of Budapest as an administration manager, then obtained a diploma in finance administration management in 1989. He was a student in the specialist economist programme of the College of Trade and Catering in 1992. He graduated as a community management engineer from Debrecen University of Agriculture in 1998. He worked as a draftsman planner for the Bács-Kiskun County Planning Institute from 1966 to 1969. He was the technical manager of the Szarvas Building Industrial Cooperative from 1969 to 1975. He wo ...
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Mihály Fazekas
Mihály Fazekas (6 January 1766 – 23 February 1828) was a Hungarian writer from Debrecen. He was an army private for seven years before being commissioned as a Hussar A hussar ( , ; hu, huszár, pl, husarz, sh, husar / ) was a member of a class of light cavalry, originating in Central Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries. The title and distinctive dress of these horsemen were subsequently widely ... officer. As a hobby, Fazekas studied the natural sciences (botany) and wrote poetry. His poetry expressed his disgust with warfare and violence, and brought to light the social injustices of his society. Fazekas' epic poem '' Lúdas Matyi'' (Mattie the Goose-boy), written in 1804, was based on a folk-tale of unexact origins. In the story, Matyi, the main character, tries to sell his geese at the market, but runs into trouble with the servants of the local lord. The plot revolves around Matyi's scheme to get back at the lord. The story is popular because Matyi ...
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Mihály Fekete
Mihály Fekete (31 December 1884 – 16 April 1960) was a Hungarian actor, screenwriter and film director. Selected filmography Actor * '' The Yellow Foal'' (1913) * ''The Exile'' (1914) * ''Bánk Bán ''Bánk bán'' is an opera in 3 acts by composer Ferenc Erkel. The work uses a Hungarian-language libretto by Béni Egressy which is based on a stage play of the same name by József Katona. (''Bán'' is Ban (title), ban in English, similar to a v ...'' (1914) * '' Az aranyember'' (1936) Director * '' Szibéria'' (1916) * '' Doktorok tragédiája'' (1918) * '' Akik életet cserélnek'' (1918) * '' A kancsuka hazájában'' (1918) Bibliography * Cunningham, John. ''Hungarian Cinema: From Coffee House to Multiplex''. Wallflower Press, 2004. External links * 1884 births 1960 deaths People from Csongrád Hungarian film directors Hungarian male screenwriters Hungarian male film actors Hungarian male silent film actors 20th-century Hungarian male actors Hungarian male ...
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András Mihály
András Mihály ɒndraːʃ ˈmihaːj(6 November 1917 – 19 September 1993) was a Hungarian cellist, composer and academic teacher. Life Mihály was born in Budapest. He studied there at the Franz Liszt Academy: cello with Adolf Schiffer, chamber music with Leó Weiner and Imre Waldbauer, and composition in private lessons with Pál Kadosa and . In 1946, he was the principal cellist of the Budapest Opera and in 1950 a professor of chamber music at the Franz Liszt Academy. He then became a musical advisor for the radio (1962–1978). In 1967, he founded the Budapest Chamber Ensemble, dedicated to the repertoire of contemporary music, and from 1978 to 1987 he was the director of the Budapest Opera. He was notably the teacher of all four of the original members of the Takács Quartet: violinists Gábor Takács-Nagy and Károly Schranz, violist Gábor Ormai, and cellist András Fejér. Mihály composed the opera ''Együtt és egyedül'' (''Together and Alone'', 1965–66 ...
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Mihály Deák-Bárdos
Mihály Deák-Bárdos (born 30 January 1975) is a Hungarian amateur Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's super heavyweight category. He is a four-time Olympian, and a six-time medalist at the European Championships. Deák-Bárdos had also won a total of five silver medals at the World Championships, losing out to numerous top-level wrestlers including Alexander Karelin, Rulon Gardner, Khasan Baroyev, and Mijaín López, all of whom were Olympic champions in the same division. Wrestling career Born in Miskolc Deák-Bárdos emerged as one of Hungary's most prominent wrestlers. He first competed at the 1993 European Youth Wrestling Championships in Götzis, Austria, where he finished in fourth place, for the 110 kg division. In 1997, Deák-Bárdos achieved his earliest success in wrestling, when he won the silver medal against three-time Olympic champion Alexander Karelin at the World Championships in Wrocław, Poland. After Karelin's retirement in 2000, Deák-Bá ...
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Mihály Farkas
Mihály Farkas (born Hermann Lőwy; 18 July 1904 – 6 December 1965) was a Hungarian Communist politician who served as Minister of National Defense of the Hungarian People's Republic. Biography He was born in 1904 in Abaújszántó to Jewish parents, in the Abaúj-Torna County of the Kingdom of Hungary, and became a Communist in the 1920s. He lived in Košice and Prague then. He fought in the Spanish Civil War; later he moved to the Soviet Union. He returned to Hungary in late 1944 alongside other Hungarian communists and became a member of the Central Committee, the Political Committee and the Secretariat of the Hungarian Communist Party from May 1945. In 1945 he became under-secretary of Home Affairs. In 1946 he was elected deputy secretary and became the chairman of the party's Management Committee. He was Minister of National Defence from 9 September 1948 to 2 July 1953. He was one of the main instigators during the Rákosi era. In 1956 he was expelled from the part ...
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Mihály Erdélyi
Mihály Erdélyi (May 28, 1895 – January 27, 1979) was a Hungarian composer, lyricist, actor, and producer, particularly prolific in the interwar period. Erdélyi was born in Szeged in 1895 and began a career as an actor then a stage producer, but became most famous for his operettas, including ''Csókos regiment'' (1932), ''Fehérvári huszárok'' (1933), ''A csavargólány'' (1936), ''Sárgapitykés közlegény'' (1937), ''A zimberi-zombori szépasszony'' (1939), ''Sárgarigófészek'' (1940), ''Vedd le a kalapod a honvéd előtt'' (1942), and ''A két kapitány'' (1943). Many of his songs have entered the Hungarian musical canon as folk music, often without an awareness of the original composer. ''A dorozsmai szélmalom'' brought Erdélyi the most lasting fame, and the title piece of the operetta was the subject of many covers and arrangements by popular musicians of the time, including Georges Boulanger, Barnabás von Géczy, Zarah Leander, Will Glahé, Ilja Livschako ...
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