Imre Nagy - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Imre Nagy
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Imre Nagy - ορισμός

HUNGARIAN POLITICIAN (DIED 1958)
Nagy, Imre; Nagy Imre
  • Nagy after his arrival from Moscow in June 1953.
  • Erzsébet]] in 1929.
  • Imre Nagy statue at Jászai Mari tér in [[Budapest]].
  • Nagy's reinterment on 16 June 1989. One of the speakers at the funeral was a young [[Viktor Orbán]], who demanded democratic elections and the withdrawal of the [[Soviet Army]] from the country.

Imre Csősz         
HUNGARIAN JUDOKA
Imre Czosz; Imre Csosz; Imre Csösz
Imre Csősz (born 31 May 1969, in Debrecen) is a Hungarian judoka. He competed at three Olympic Games.
Imre Gyöngyössy         
HUNGARIAN FILMMAKER (1930-1994)
Imre Gyongyossy; Imre Gyoengyoessy
Imre Gyöngyössy (25 February 1930 – 1 May 1994) was a Hungarian film director and screenwriter. His film The Revolt of Job (1983), which he co-directed with Barna Kabay, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
Feró Nagy         
HUNGARIAN SINGER
Fero Nagy; Nagy Feró
Ferenc "Feró" Nagy (born 14 January 1946 in Letenye, Hungary) is a Hungarian rock singer and musician. Although not proficient on any instrument, he can play the guitar, the harmonica, the saxophone and the piano.

Βικιπαίδεια

Imre Nagy

Imre Nagy (Hungarian: [ˈimrɛ ˈnɒɟ]; 7 June 1896 – 16 June 1958) was a Hungarian communist politician who served as Chairman of the Council of Ministers (de facto Prime Minister) of the Hungarian People's Republic from 1953 to 1955. In 1956 Nagy became leader of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 against the Soviet-backed government, for which he was sentenced to death and executed two years later.

Nagy was a committed communist from soon after the Russian Revolution, and through the 1920s he engaged in underground party activity in Hungary. Living in the Soviet Union from 1930, he served the Soviet NKVD secret police as an informer from 1933 to 1941. Nagy returned to Hungary shortly before the end of World War II, and served in various offices as the Hungarian Working People's Party (MDP) took control of Hungary in the late 1940s and the country entered the Soviet sphere of influence. He served as Interior Minister of Hungary from 1945 to 1946. Nagy became prime minister in 1953 and attempted to relax some of the harshest aspects of Mátyás Rákosi's Stalinist regime, but was subverted and eventually forced out of the government in 1955 by Rákosi's continuing influence as General Secretary of the MDP. Nagy remained popular with writers, intellectuals, and the common people, who saw him as an icon of reform against the hard-line elements in the Soviet-backed regime.

The outbreak of the Hungarian Revolution on 23 October 1956 saw Nagy elevated to the position of Prime Minister on 24 October as a central demand of the revolutionaries and common people. Nagy's reformist faction gained full control of the government, admitted non-communist politicians, dissolved the ÁVH secret police, promised democratic reforms, and unilaterally withdrew Hungary from the Warsaw Pact on 1 November. The Soviet Union launched a massive military invasion of Hungary on 4 November, forcibly deposing Nagy, who fled to the Embassy of Yugoslavia in Budapest. Nagy was lured out of the embassy under false promises on 22 November, but was arrested and deported to Romania. On 16 June 1958, Nagy was tried and executed for treason alongside his closest allies, and his body was buried in an unmarked grave.

In June 1989, Nagy and other prominent figures of the 1956 Revolution were rehabilitated and reburied with full honours, an event that played a key role in the collapse of the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party regime.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Imre Nagy
1. With the revolution defeated, thousands of dissidents were imprisoned and hundreds executed, including the erstwhile premier Imre Nagy.
2. And it‘s a big missed opportunity." Timeline 1'56 National revolt against Soviet rule and Imre Nagy becomes prime minister.
3. He described Imre Nagy, the communist–turned–democrat who was briefly returned to power in 1'56, as the political predecessor of every prime minister‘‘ of post–communist Hungary.
4. The Soviets allowed popular, liberal–minded former–Prime Minister Imre Nagy to come back from political obscurity to lead the hopeful nation.
5. The Soviet leadership agreed to a ceasefire, a reformist government under Imre Nagy took over in Budapest and devastation gave way to jubilation.