Ferenc Nagy

Ferenc Nagy

Infobox_President
name= Ferenc Nagy


nationality=Hungarian
order=1st Prime Minister of the Second Hungarian Republic
term_start=February 4,1946
term_end=May 31,1947
predecessor=Zoltán Tildy
successor=Lajos Dinnyés
order2 =
primeminister2 =
term_start2 =
term_end2 =
predecessor2 =
successor2 =
primeminister3 =
term_start3 =
term_end3 =
predecessor3 =
successor3 =
birth_date=Birth date|1903|10|8|mf=y
birth_place=Bisse, Austria-Hungary
death_date=Death date and age|1979|06|12|1903|10|8|mf=y
death_place=Herndon, United States
spouse=
party=Smallholders Party
profession=

Ferenc Nagy (1903-1979) was a Hungarian politician of the Smallholders Party. He was a member of the High National Council from December 7, 1945 to February 2, 1946. Later he served as Prime Minister of Hungary from February 4,1946 to May 31, 1947. He was elected in 1946, in Hungary's first democratic election. As prime minister, he resisted attempts by the Hungarian Communist Party to gain complete control of the government. He refused attempts by the Communists to become a puppet of a Soviet backed police state, but resigned under duress (they had kidnapped his son). He gave up the premiership in return for his son and 300,000 Swiss francs. Subsequently he was granted asylum in the USA.

He documented his life and political career in "The Struggle behind the Iron Curtain", published by MacMillan in 1948.

Royalties from his memoirs helped him buy a house with a substantial garden plot in Herndon, Virginia (then an exurb of Washington, D.C.), there to live out his days.


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