István Friedrich
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
István Friedrich (July 1, 1883 - 1951) was a Hungarian politician and factory owner who served as prime minister of Hungary for three months in 1919.
He was born in the town of Malacka (today Malacky, Slovakia) and studied engineering at the universities of Budapest and Charlottenburg before reading law at Budapest and Berlin.
Being a "counter-revolutionary", he was arrested during the time of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, but managed to escape. On August 6, 1919 he took part in the coup that ousted Prime Minister Gyula Peidl. Appointed by Archduke Joseph, he served as Prime Minister of Hungary from August 7 to November 25, 1919 and remained Minister of Defence until March 15, 1920.
In the early 1920s, he founded an extreme-right-wing association, and was MP from 1920 to 1939.
He was supposedly arrested in 1951 by the Mátyás Rákosi administration; however, his further fate remains unknown. The proposed date of his death is 1958.
Preceded by Gyula Peidl |
Prime Minister of Hungary 1919 |
Succeeded by Károly Huszár |
Preceded by Archduke Joseph |
Acting Head of State of Hungary 1919 |
|
|