Everything about Count Istv N Tisza totally explained
Count István Tisza de Borosjenő et Szeged (
22 April 1861 -
31 October 1918) was a
Hungarian politician.
Tisza was born in
Budapest. He was the
Prime Minister of Hungary from
1903 to
1905 and from
1913 to
1917, and a major power behind the scenes in the interval. He was the son of Count
Kálmán Tisza, prime minister of Hungary from
1875 to
1890, whose Liberal Party political machine he inherited. The Tiszas were originally a
Calvinist common nobility (nobility with no title; often regarded as equivalent to the British
gentry) family from
Transylvania, and since their title was very recent, they were much disliked and resented by the greater noble (nobility with titles) families.
Tisza received his post-graduate education at
Oxford in the 1880s, during which time he became fluent in English. The Liberal Party was renamed the National Party of Work in 1905. A tough, no-nonsense leader and efficient manager, Tisza dominated Hungarian politics during his career by the generous use of electoral corruption. Though Tisza's power was limited by the relatively free Magyar language press and the courts, at the elections, opposition in the free boroughs was ruthlessly smashed through the use of police intimidation. In the "rotten boroughs", such methods were not necessary.
Tisza's hero and role model was
Otto von Bismarck. Tisza saw himself as the embodiment of everything best about Hungarian life and was staunchly opposed to any reforms that might allow any wider voting franchise (before 1918 10% of Hungarian men could vote and hold office). In economic affairs, Tisza was a modernizer who encouraged and supported industrialization. In particular, Tisza was an opponent of
anti-Semitism, which he feared could jeopardize Hungary's economic development. Much of the emerging middle class were either Jewish or Jewish converts to Christianity. Tisza often used his influence at Court to have titles given to wealthy Jewish families, especially industrialists and bankers. Towards the non-Magyar population, Tisza carried out a policy of forcible
Magyarization. Under Tisza, the size of the state grew to offset the decline of the common nobility. It became official policy to hire as many common aristocrats into the bureaucracy. Count Tisza was a very aggressive and belligerent man who fought numerous duels with his political opponents.
In July 1914, he was opposed to
Austria-Hungary going to war with
Serbia under the grounds that the Dual Monarchy already had too many
Slavs. Tisza was removed as Prime Minister by the reformist King-Emperor
Karl I for his opposition to expanding the franchise. However, Tisza continued to frustrate reforms until the end of the war via his control of the largest block of parliamentary deputies. He was murdered in
Budapest by a gang of soldiers during Chrysanthemum Revolution of October 1918. In the trial that followed the fall of the Communist regime, finalized on October 6, 1921, Judge István Gadó established the guilt of the following persons: Pál Kéri (exchanged with the Soviet Union),
József Pogány (aka
John Pepper), fled to Vienna, then Moscow and USA); István Dobó; Tivadar Horváth Sanovics (fled); Sándor Hüttner (died in prison hospital in 1923); Tibor Sztanykovszky (the only one who actually served his 18 year sentence, being released in 1938).
To this day in Hungary, many people believe that
Count Mihály Károlyi, who became the first Prime Minister of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and didn't do all his best to investigate the murder during his more than three months government, was involved in the assassination of Count Tisza.
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