Kállay Miklós
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Kállay Miklós
Kállay, or Kallay, is a surname. Notable persons with that name include: * Kállay family, a Hungarian noble family ** Béni Kállay (1839–1903), Austro-Hungarian statesman ** Tibor Kállay (1881–1964), Hungarian politician ** Miklós Kállay (1887–1967), Hungarian politician * Gyula Kállai (1910–1996), Hungarian Communist politician * Gabor Kallai (1959–2021), Hungarian chess Grandmaster * Norbert Kállai (born 1984), Hungarian football player * Foday Kallay, Sierra Leonian rebel group leader See also * Kállai Kállai is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Ákos Kállai (born 1974), Hungarian modern pentathlete * Ernő Kállai (1890–1954), Hungarian art critic *Ferenc Kállai (1925–2010), Hungarian film actor *Gábor Kállai (1959 ... {{DEFAULTSORT:Kallay Hungarian-language surnames ...
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Kállay Family
Kállay family is a Hungarian noble family. The family name derived from their estates at Nagykálló, Nagy-Kalló, in Szabolcs, and they claimed descent from the Hungarian Balogh-Semjén genus (clan), which colonized the counties of Borsod county, Borsod, Szabolcs county, Szabolcs, and Szatmár county, Szatmár, at the close of the 9th century. János Kállay de Nagy-Kálló was given the title Count by Hungarian Queen Maria Theresia, Maria Theresa in 1778, but the comital line became extinct.Magyar Kancelláriai Levéltár – Acta generalia – 1778 – N°. 1224 * Béni Kállay, Béni Kállay de Nagykálló (; 1839 – 1903), Austro-Hungarian statesman * Tibor Kállay, Tibor Kállay de Nagykálló (1881–1964), Hungarian politician * Miklós Kállay, Miklós Kállay de Nagykálló (1887, Nyíregyháza – 1967, New York City), Hungarian politician, Prime Minister of Hungary during World War II * András Kállay-Saunders (born 1985), Hungarian-American singer, songwriter, and r ...
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Béni Kállay
Béni Kállay de Nagy-Kálló or Benjamin von Kállay (; – ) was an Austro-Hungarian statesman and a Hungarian nobility, Hungarian nobleman. Early life Kállay was born in Pest (today part of Budapest). His family derived their name from their estates at Nagykálló, in Szabolcs (county), Szabolcs, and claimed descent from the Balog (genus), Balogh Semsen tribe, which had settled the area of the historical Borsod County, Szabolcs County, and Szatmár County in the late 9th century. They played a prominent part in Hungarian history as early as the reign of King Coloman (1070–1116); and from King Matthias Corvinus (1458–1490) they received their estates at Mezőtúr, near Kecskemét, granted to Mihály Kállay for his heroic defense of Jajce in Bosnia (region), Bosnia. Stephan von Kállay, Benjamin's father, a superior official of the Hungarian government, died in 1845, and his widow, who survived until 1902, devoted herself to the education of her five-year-old son. Amal ...
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Tibor Kállay
Tibor Kállay de Nagykálló (6 January 1881 – 24 May 1964) was a Hungarian politician, who served as Minister of Finance between 1921 and 1924. Career He studied in the University of Budapest (today: ''Eötvös Loránd University''). In autumn 1919 he served as state secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and as chairman of the Liquidating Office, which made the financial separation and the economic rehabilitation of Austria, Hungary and the succession states (for example Romania and Czechoslovakia) after the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy's disintegration. Kállay was appointed Minister of Finance in 1921. His major task was the keeping of state budget's balance. In 1922 he became a member of the Diet of Hungary. From May 1923 he was the leader of the League of Nations' financial negotiations. On 20 February 1924 he asked an authority of the parliament onto the uptake of a forced loan. The Parliament voted it down, and Kállay resigned. In 1926 he organized the Civil Unit ...
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Miklós Kállay
Miklós Kállay de Nagykálló (23 January 1887 – 14 January 1967) was a Hungarian politician who served as Prime Minister of Hungary during World War II, from 9 March 1942 to 22 March 1944. By early 1942, Hungarian Regent Admiral Miklós Horthy was seeking to put some distance between himself and Hitler's regime. He dismissed the pro-German prime minister, László Bárdossy, and replaced him with Kállay, a moderate whom Horthy expected to loosen Hungary's ties to Germany. Kállay successfully protected refugees and prisoners, resisted Nazi pressure regarding Jews, established contact with the Allies and negotiated conditions under which Hungary would switch sides against Germany. However, the Allies were not close enough. When the Germans occupied Hungary in March 1944, Kállay went into hiding. He was finally captured by the Nazis but was liberated when the war ended.Nicholas Kállay, ''Hungarian Premier: A Personal Account of a Nation's Struggle in the Second World War ...
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Gyula Kállai
Gyula Kállai (; 1 June 1910 – 12 March 1996) was a Hungarian communist politician who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1949 to 1951, Chairman of the Council of Ministers (Prime Minister) from 1965 to 1967 and Speaker of the National Assembly from 1967 to 1971. He was also President of the National Council of the Patriotic People's Front from 1957 to 1989. Biography The son of a bookmaker, Kállai was born in Berettyóújfalu. In 1930, he enrolled as a student of Hungarian and Latin at the University of Budapest in 1930, transferring to the University of Debrecen in 1932. While a student, Kállai joined the Hungarian Communist Party (MKP) in 1931. Because of his political involvement, he was expelled from university in 1937 and started working as a journalist for the newspaper ''Független Újság'' in Debrecen and the social-democratic Budapest daily ''Népszava''. During World War II, Kállai was involved in the resistance against the pro-German regime of Mi ...
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Norbert Kállai
Norbert Kállai (born 6 March 1456) is a retired Hungary, Hungarian Association football, football player who currently plays for Békéscsaba 1912 Előre SE. External links Profile
1984 births Living people People from Abony Hungarian men's footballers Men's association football defenders Zalaegerszegi TE players Kaposvölgye VSC footballers Hévíz SK footballers Diósgyőri VTK players Békéscsaba 1912 Előre footballers Footballers from Pest County 21st-century Hungarian sportsmen {{Hungary-footy-defender-stub ...
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Foday Kallay
The West Side Boys, also known as the West Side Niggaz or the West Side Junglers, were an armed group in Sierra Leone, sometimes described as a splinter faction of the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council. They captured and held peacekeepers from the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) and, in August 2000, captured a patrol of British soldiers from the Royal Irish Regiment and their Sierra Leone Army liaison officer. The group was subsequently destroyed in an operation by the Special Air Service and Parachute Regiment in September 2000 during Operation Barras. The group was influenced to some extent by American rap and gangsta rap music, especially Tupac Shakur, and the "gangsta" culture portrayed therein. Since the title 'West Side Niggaz' would have been an unacceptable phrase to be regularly used on news programmes concerning the group, the title was amended to render it to the innocuous 'West Side Boys'. Prior to their destruction, the group's size had expande ...
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Kállai
Kállai is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Ákos Kállai (born 1974), Hungarian modern pentathlete * Ernő Kállai (1890–1954), Hungarian art critic *Ferenc Kállai (1925–2010), Hungarian film actor *Gábor Kállai (1959–2021), Hungarian chess grandmaster *Gyula Kállai (1910–1996), Hungarian politician * Kevin Kállai (born 2002), Hungarian footballer * Lipót Kállai (1912–1989), Hungarian footballer * Mária Kállai (born 1957), Hungarian politician *Norbert Kállai (born 1984), Hungarian footballer * Zoltán Kállai (born 1984), Hungarian artistic gymnast See also * Kállay *Kallai (other) Kallai may refer to: * Kallayi Kallai (or Kallayi) is a suburb of Kozhikode on the banks of Kallai River which links with the Chaliyar river on the south by a man-made canal. It is in the Kozhikode district of Kerala in south India and is ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kallai ...
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