Katalin Szőke

The native form of this personal name is Szőke Katalin. This article uses the Western name order.
Katalin Szőke

Katalin Szőke in 1952
Personal information
Full name Katalin Szőke-Markovits
Nationality  Hungary
Born 17 August 1935 (1935-08-17) (age 80)
Budapest, Hungary
Sport
Sport Swimming
Strokes Freestyle
Club Budapesti Kinizsi
Coach Imre Sarosi, Steffen Hunyadfi

Katalin Szőke (born 17 August 1935) is a retired Hungarian swimmer. She competed at the 1952 Olympics and won two gold medals, in the 100 m and 4×100 m freestyle events. Two years later she repeated that success at the 1954 European Championships. She also competed in these two events at the 1956 Olympics but without success. During her career Szőke set four world records.[1] In 1985 she was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame.[2]

Biography

Szőke was born in Budapest to Márton Homonnai, an Olympic champion in water polo in 1932 and 1936. During World War II, her father was a policeman and a member of the Arrow Cross Party, which supported the Nazis. After the war, fearing prosecution (he was sentenced to death in absentia), he flew via Germany and Brazil to Argentina, where he died in 1969.[3] Meanwhile, his daughter remained in Hungary and took her mother's name to hide relationship with her father. In 1956, due to the Soviet intervention in Hungary, she immigrated to the United States. She married an Olympic water polo player Kálmán Markovits, but later divorced him and married his teammate, Arpad Domjan. They settled in Los Angeles, where she worked at a bank and did some modelling, while her husband built a successful career in developing office buildings and living apartments. They both adopted a last name of Domyan, and raised a son, Bryan Domyan, who became a basketball player.[1]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Katalin Szőke.
  1. 1 2 Katalin Szőke. sports-reference
  2. "KATALIN SZOKE (HUN) 1985 Honor Swimmer" International Swimming Hall of Fame (Retrieved on 4 May 2008)
  3. Márton Homonnai. sports-reference.com


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