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Béla Király

Dr. Béla Király (14 April 1912 – 4 July 2009) was a Hungarian army officer before, during, and after World War II. After the war, he was sentenced to death under the Soviet-allied regime, but was later released. After his release, he commanded the National Guard in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. He then fled to the United States, where he became an academic historian. He returned to Hungary after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc and was elected a member of Hungarian Parliament.

Béla Király
Born
Király Béla Kálmán

(1912-04-14)14 April 1912
Died4 July 2009(2009-07-04) (aged 97)
Resting placePlot: Section 300, ÚJKÖZTEMETÕ, Budapest
Education
SpouseSarolta Gömbös (1947–1955 div.) (niece of Gyula Gömbös)
Military career
Allegiance
Service/branchHungarian army
Years of service1930–1951
RankMajor General
Commands held
  • 1956:
  • commander in chief of the Hungarian National Guard
  • commander of Budapest garrison
Battles/wars
Notes

Early life edit

Király was born in Kaposvár, Hungary, the son of a station master. As a youth he bred pigeons, a lifelong interest. His ambition to be a veterinary surgeon foundered because his family could not afford the fees. Color blindness barred his employment by the railroad. In 1930, military service became compulsory and he joined the army. Finding it interesting, he finished the Ludovika Military Academy in the top 5% of his class, and was commissioned a second lieutenant 20 August 1935. As a student at the General Staff Academy he was promoted to captain in December 1942.[2][8]

World War II and postwar imprisonment edit

Hungary joined the Axis powers and declared war on the Soviet Union in 1941. Király saw combat on the Eastern Front and was twice wounded. In 1943 he commanded 400 men guarding a Jewish labor battalion in the Don River valley. Contrary to orders, he provided them with warm clothing, decent food, and medical attention. In 1993, Yad Vashem named him one of the "Righteous Among the Nations", recognizing his humane treatment of the Jewish prisoners.[2][6][9][10]

In March 1945 Király commanded the defense of Kőszeg. Upon surrendering the city to the Red Army, he was arrested and sent to Siberia as a prisoner of war. He returned home following the Paris Peace Treaties, and joined the Hungarian Communist Party and the new Hungarian People's Army.

Communist officials warned him against his 1947 marriage to the widowed niece of far-right former prime minister Gyula Gömbös, who was, for much of his career, anti-Semitic. He expected to be sacked when General György Pálffy summoned him, but instead was appointed to command the Training Department. He was promoted to general in 1950, and later to the rank of major general. In 1950, he was put in command of the infantry. He was expected to command the Hungarian component of a planned Soviet invasion of Yugoslavia following the Tito–Stalin Split. Stalin ceased the operation, however, discouraged by the success of American intervention in the Korean War. According to Király, the situation in Korea "nipped Stalin's pet project in the bud".[3]

In 1951, the Mátyás Rákosi regime arrested him on charges of subversion, sedition, and espionage. He was sentenced on January 15, 1952 to death by hanging. His wife was detained by the ÁVH from August 1951 until August 1953. She divorced him in 1955. He then learned that his sentence had been commuted to life imprisonment at hard labor. In September 1956 the government of Ernő Gerő paroled him along with other prisoners, a measure intended to soften public unrest.[2][6][7][8]

Role in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution edit

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 began shortly after his release from prison. He was ill and recovering from surgery, but he escaped the hospital to join the Hungarian revolutionaries and accept appointment as commander-in-chief of the military guard and military commander of Budapest against the Soviets.

"I was skin and bones coming out of five years of imprisonment," Agence France-Presse quoted him as saying in 2006. "I was far from being healed, so I had to slip out of the hospital because the doctors would not let me go."

— Béla Király, Agence France-Presse 2006[2]

Violence broke out in Budapest on October 23, 1956. Soviet troops, unprepared for the strength of the revolutionary forces, arranged a ceasefire on October 28, and began to retreat from the city. The violence subsisted, however, as pro-Nagy communists and various nationalist factions engineered purges of pro-Soviet party members in the city. Király, sensing a chaotic fragmentation of the revolutionary forces, sought to unite various anti-Soviet factions into a National Guard. On October 30, 1956, Király-led revolutionaries attacked the building of the Central Committee of the Communist Party. The revolutionaries detained dozens of suspected pro-Soviets, executing many on the spot. Similar purges continued throughout the city.[11][12]

In spite of the continued violence directed against pro-Soviet communists, Soviet correspondent Anastas Mikoyan advised against a Soviet invasion, wishing for the Hungarian communists to suppress the "counter-revolution" themselves. This inaction led many pro-Soviets to question their loyalties. As Nikita Khrushchev lost confidence in the ability of the Hungarian communists the suppress the uprising, he directed the Soviet army to invade Budapest on November 4.[13]

Király recognized his forces, loyal to Nagy, had no hope of victory over the Soviet army. However, he resented Soviet ambassador Yuri Andropov's concealing of the imminent invasion, which Nikita Khrushchev had officially decided upon 3 days prior.

Here was this man Andropov who clearly understood what was going on, Mr. Kiraly said bitterly, yet he pretended until the last moment to me and to the Prime Minister and to others that everything was business as usual. Even pirates, before they attack another ship, hoist a black flag. He was absolutely calculating.

— Béla Király, 1982 interview with R.W. Apple, Jr.[5]

After the Soviets successfully suppressed the revolution, Király fled to the United States through Austria to avoid capture. He was, however, sentenced to death in absentia back in the Soviet Union (a fate which other revolutionary leaders like Nagy did not escape).[2][14]

Time in the United States edit

Király was well regarded in the United States, as the U.S. had been supportive of the Nagy-led government to which Király had been loyal. He arrived speaking good English, having taught himself through an English-Hungarian dictionary while in prison. He enrolled in Columbia University earned a Master's degree in history in 1959, and a Ph.D. in 1966.[15] His doctoral dissertation topic was "1790: Society in Royal Hungary," and was later revised and published as Hungary in the Late Eighteenth Century: The Decline of Enlightened Despotism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1969). The supervisor for his dissertation was Robert A. Kann, an Austrian-born historian at Rutgers University who spent several years as a visiting professor at Columbia.[16]

Király dedicated his second book, Ferenc Deák (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1975), to Kann, and also contributed to a Festschrift for Kann: Intellectual and Social Developments in the Habsburg Empire from Maria Theresa to World War I: Essays Dedicated to Robert A. Kann, ed. Stanley B. Winters and Joseph Held (Boulder: East European quarterly; distributed by Columbia University Press, 1975). From 1964 he taught Military History at Brooklyn College, and became chairman of the history department. He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1982.[2][7]

During Király's tenure he served as director of the Society In Change Program on East Central Europe, supervised Brooklyn College Press (the College's Publishing House), and was an adviser to the Brooklyn College Military History Club. The Brooklyn College Bela K. Kiraly Award, awarded to undergraduate students for outstanding work in modern history, bears his name.

Return to Hungary edit

After the collapse of the Soviet Bloc, he was an invited guest at Imre Nagy's funeral and re-interment, June 1989. He moved back to Hungary later that year, and was elected to the Hungarian National Assembly, representing his birthplace Kaposvár. He served from May–November 1990 as an independent deputy, then joined the Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ) parliamentary group,[2][6] later assuming the role of a government adviser. In 2004, he was made an associate member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Király died in his sleep in Budapest on 4 July 2009, aged 97.[6]

Selected works edit

  • Király, Béla K. (1969). Hungary in the late eighteenth century; the decline of enlightened despotism. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780598122759. LCCN 69019459.
  • Király, Béla K. (1975). Ferenc Deák. Boston: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0805730303. LCCN 74020558.
  • Király, Béla K., ed. (1975). Tolerance and movements of religious dissent in Eastern Europe. Boulder [Colo.] : East European Quarterly. New York. ISBN 0914710060. LCCN 75006229.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) distributed by Columbia University Press
  • Király, Béla K.; Barany, George, eds. (1977). East Central European perceptions of early America. Lisse: Peter de Ridder Press. ISBN 9789031601462. LCCN 77369620.
  • Kann, Robert A.; Király, Béla K.; Fichtner, Paula S., eds. (1977). The Habsburg Empire in World War I : essays on the intellectual, military, political, and economic aspects of the Habsburg war effort. Boulder Colo., New York: East European Quarterly. ISBN 0914710168. LCCN 76047779. distributed by Columbia University Press
  • Király, Béla K.; Jónás, Paul, eds. (1978). The Hungarian revolution of 1956 in retrospect. introd. by G. H. N. Seton-Watson. Boulder Colo., New York: East European quarterly. ISBN 0914710338. LCCN 77082394. distributed by Columbia University Press
  • Király, Béla K. (2001). Basic History of Modern Hungary, 1867–1999. Malabar, Florida: Krieger Pub. ISBN 0-89464-950-7. LCCN 2001018642.
  • Király, Béla Kálmán; Rothenberg, Gunther E., eds. (1979). Special topics and generalizations on the 18th and 19th centuries. New York: Brooklyn College Press. ISBN 0930888049. LCCN 79051780. Distributed by Columbia University Press
  • Rothenberg, Gunther E.; Király, Béla K.; Sugar, Peter F., eds. (1982). East Central European society and war in the prerevolutionary eighteenth century. New York: Boulder Social Science Monographs. ISBN 0930888197. LCCN 81050886. Distributed by Columbia University Press

References edit

  1. ^ Nagy, Terka (2009-07-04). . naplo-online.hu. Archived from the original on 2012-02-25. Retrieved 2009-07-04.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Fox, Margalit (8 July 2009). "Bela Kiraly Dies at 97; Led Revolt in Hungary". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-02-01.
  3. ^ a b Schindler, John R. (1998-02-24). . Cryptologic Quarterly: 85–95. Archived from the original on 2015-09-30. Retrieved 2016-10-27.
  4. ^ "Bela Kiraly". Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale. 2009. Gale Document Number: GALE|H1000054393. Retrieved 2014-02-01. Biography in Context. (subscription required)
  5. ^ a b Apple Jr., R.W. (28 December 1982). "SOME INSIGHTS INTO ANDROPOV GLEANED FROM BUDAPEST ROLE". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  6. ^ a b c d e Land, Thomas (26 July 2009). "Righteous Gentile Bela Kiraly dies at 92". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  7. ^ a b c Partos, Gabriel (11 July 2009). "Bela Kiraly: Soldier who led Hungarian resistance against the Soviet Union during the 1956 uprising". The Independent. London: Independent Educational Publishing. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  8. ^ a b c Congdon, Lee (8 August 2009). "Obituary: Béla K. Király, 1912-2009". Newsgroup: Habsburg H-Net Habsburg. Retrieved 2014-02-07. {{cite newsgroup}}: Check |newsgroup= value (help)
  9. ^ "Király Béla (1912 - 2009 ) Personal Information The Righteous Among The Nations". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  10. ^ "Király FAMILY - The Righteous Among The Nations". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  11. ^ Berecz, János (1986). 1956 Counter-Revolution in Hungary: Words and Weapons. Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 116. ISBN 978-9630543705.
  12. ^ Filimonov, Olef (October 30, 2016). "Мифы о восстании". Polit RU. Retrieved October 27, 2016.
  13. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita (2007). (PDF). University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 665. ISBN 978-0-271-02935-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-02-07.
  14. ^ Bay, Austin (29 July 2009). "Remembering a Hungarian Freedom Fighter". Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  15. ^ Béla K. Király, Wars, Revolutions and Regime Changes in Hungary, 1912-2004: Reminiscences of an Eyewitness (Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs; Highland Lakes, NJ: Atlantic Research and Publications, Inc.; New York: distributed by Columbia University Press, 2005), 381.
  16. ^ Winters, Stanley B. "The Forging of a Historian: Robert A. Kann in America, 1939-1976," Austrian History Yearbook 17 (Jan. 1981): 3-24.

Further reading edit

  • Fenyo, Mario (September 2010). "Bela Kiraly, Key figure in 1956 Hungarian Revolution, military historian, politician". Perspectives on History. American Historical Association. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  • Lebovits, Imre (2007). Zsidótörvények--zsidómentők [The Rescuers of Jews]. Budapest: Ex Libris. ISBN 9789638649058. LCCN 2008446880. or Jewish law - saving of Jewish lives
  • Rennie, David (18 October 2006). "It was almost World War III". The Spectator. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  • Vardy, Steven Bela; Vardy, Agnes Huszar, eds. (1983). Society in change : studies in honor of Béla K. Király. Boulder, New York: East European Monographs, distributed by Columbia University Press. ISBN 088033021X. LCCN 82083524.

External links edit

  • General Béla Király Personal Papers at the Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary
  • Article by the American Hungarian Federation
  • "Interview with Dr. Bela Kiraly". CNN/COLD WAR Episode 7 After Stalin. The National Security Archive. 1 June 1996. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  • Béla Király, "Ten Truths About 1956," from Freedom Fighter 56
  • "Bela Kiraly". The Daily Telegraph. July 6, 2009. Retrieved 2014-02-02. obituary
  • Béla Király at Find a Grave

béla, király, native, form, this, personal, name, király, béla, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, april, 1912, july, 2009, hungarian, army, officer, before, during, after, world, after, sentenced, death, under, soviet, a. The native form of this personal name is Kiraly Bela This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Dr Bela Kiraly 14 April 1912 4 July 2009 was a Hungarian army officer before during and after World War II After the war he was sentenced to death under the Soviet allied regime but was later released After his release he commanded the National Guard in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution He then fled to the United States where he became an academic historian He returned to Hungary after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc and was elected a member of Hungarian Parliament Bela KiralyBornKiraly Bela Kalman 1912 04 14 14 April 1912Kaposvar Kingdom of Hungary Austria HungaryDied4 July 2009 2009 07 04 aged 97 Budapest HungaryResting placePlot Section 300 UJKOZTEMETO BudapestEducationLudovica Military Academy B A 1935 General Staff Academy Budapest Hungary M A 1942 Columbia University M A 1959 Ph D 1966SpouseSarolta Gombos 1947 1955 div niece of Gyula Gombos Military careerAllegianceKingdom of Hungary People s Republic of Hungary Hungarian revolutionaries Republic of HungaryService wbr branchHungarian armyYears of service1930 1951RankMajor GeneralCommands held1956 commander in chief of the Hungarian National Guard commander of Budapest garrisonBattles warsWorld War IIHungarian Revolution 1956Notes 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Early life 2 World War II and postwar imprisonment 3 Role in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution 4 Time in the United States 5 Return to Hungary 6 Selected works 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editKiraly was born in Kaposvar Hungary the son of a station master As a youth he bred pigeons a lifelong interest His ambition to be a veterinary surgeon foundered because his family could not afford the fees Color blindness barred his employment by the railroad In 1930 military service became compulsory and he joined the army Finding it interesting he finished the Ludovika Military Academy in the top 5 of his class and was commissioned a second lieutenant 20 August 1935 As a student at the General Staff Academy he was promoted to captain in December 1942 2 8 World War II and postwar imprisonment editHungary joined the Axis powers and declared war on the Soviet Union in 1941 Kiraly saw combat on the Eastern Front and was twice wounded In 1943 he commanded 400 men guarding a Jewish labor battalion in the Don River valley Contrary to orders he provided them with warm clothing decent food and medical attention In 1993 Yad Vashem named him one of the Righteous Among the Nations recognizing his humane treatment of the Jewish prisoners 2 6 9 10 In March 1945 Kiraly commanded the defense of Koszeg Upon surrendering the city to the Red Army he was arrested and sent to Siberia as a prisoner of war He returned home following the Paris Peace Treaties and joined the Hungarian Communist Party and the new Hungarian People s Army Communist officials warned him against his 1947 marriage to the widowed niece of far right former prime minister Gyula Gombos who was for much of his career anti Semitic He expected to be sacked when General Gyorgy Palffy summoned him but instead was appointed to command the Training Department He was promoted to general in 1950 and later to the rank of major general In 1950 he was put in command of the infantry He was expected to command the Hungarian component of a planned Soviet invasion of Yugoslavia following the Tito Stalin Split Stalin ceased the operation however discouraged by the success of American intervention in the Korean War According to Kiraly the situation in Korea nipped Stalin s pet project in the bud 3 In 1951 the Matyas Rakosi regime arrested him on charges of subversion sedition and espionage He was sentenced on January 15 1952 to death by hanging His wife was detained by the AVH from August 1951 until August 1953 She divorced him in 1955 He then learned that his sentence had been commuted to life imprisonment at hard labor In September 1956 the government of Erno Gero paroled him along with other prisoners a measure intended to soften public unrest 2 6 7 8 Role in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution editThe Hungarian Revolution of 1956 began shortly after his release from prison He was ill and recovering from surgery but he escaped the hospital to join the Hungarian revolutionaries and accept appointment as commander in chief of the military guard and military commander of Budapest against the Soviets I was skin and bones coming out of five years of imprisonment Agence France Presse quoted him as saying in 2006 I was far from being healed so I had to slip out of the hospital because the doctors would not let me go Bela Kiraly Agence France Presse 2006 2 Violence broke out in Budapest on October 23 1956 Soviet troops unprepared for the strength of the revolutionary forces arranged a ceasefire on October 28 and began to retreat from the city The violence subsisted however as pro Nagy communists and various nationalist factions engineered purges of pro Soviet party members in the city Kiraly sensing a chaotic fragmentation of the revolutionary forces sought to unite various anti Soviet factions into a National Guard On October 30 1956 Kiraly led revolutionaries attacked the building of the Central Committee of the Communist Party The revolutionaries detained dozens of suspected pro Soviets executing many on the spot Similar purges continued throughout the city 11 12 In spite of the continued violence directed against pro Soviet communists Soviet correspondent Anastas Mikoyan advised against a Soviet invasion wishing for the Hungarian communists to suppress the counter revolution themselves This inaction led many pro Soviets to question their loyalties As Nikita Khrushchev lost confidence in the ability of the Hungarian communists the suppress the uprising he directed the Soviet army to invade Budapest on November 4 13 Kiraly recognized his forces loyal to Nagy had no hope of victory over the Soviet army However he resented Soviet ambassador Yuri Andropov s concealing of the imminent invasion which Nikita Khrushchev had officially decided upon 3 days prior Here was this man Andropov who clearly understood what was going on Mr Kiraly said bitterly yet he pretended until the last moment to me and to the Prime Minister and to others that everything was business as usual Even pirates before they attack another ship hoist a black flag He was absolutely calculating Bela Kiraly 1982 interview with R W Apple Jr 5 After the Soviets successfully suppressed the revolution Kiraly fled to the United States through Austria to avoid capture He was however sentenced to death in absentia back in the Soviet Union a fate which other revolutionary leaders like Nagy did not escape 2 14 Time in the United States editKiraly was well regarded in the United States as the U S had been supportive of the Nagy led government to which Kiraly had been loyal He arrived speaking good English having taught himself through an English Hungarian dictionary while in prison He enrolled in Columbia University earned a Master s degree in history in 1959 and a Ph D in 1966 15 His doctoral dissertation topic was 1790 Society in Royal Hungary and was later revised and published as Hungary in the Late Eighteenth Century The Decline of Enlightened Despotism New York Columbia University Press 1969 The supervisor for his dissertation was Robert A Kann an Austrian born historian at Rutgers University who spent several years as a visiting professor at Columbia 16 Kiraly dedicated his second book Ferenc Deak Boston Twayne Publishers 1975 to Kann and also contributed to a Festschrift for Kann Intellectual and Social Developments in the Habsburg Empire from Maria Theresa to World War I Essays Dedicated to Robert A Kann ed Stanley B Winters and Joseph Held Boulder East European quarterly distributed by Columbia University Press 1975 From 1964 he taught Military History at Brooklyn College and became chairman of the history department He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1982 2 7 During Kiraly s tenure he served as director of the Society In Change Program on East Central Europe supervised Brooklyn College Press the College s Publishing House and was an adviser to the Brooklyn College Military History Club The Brooklyn College Bela K Kiraly Award awarded to undergraduate students for outstanding work in modern history bears his name Return to Hungary editAfter the collapse of the Soviet Bloc he was an invited guest at Imre Nagy s funeral and re interment June 1989 He moved back to Hungary later that year and was elected to the Hungarian National Assembly representing his birthplace Kaposvar He served from May November 1990 as an independent deputy then joined the Alliance of Free Democrats SZDSZ parliamentary group 2 6 later assuming the role of a government adviser In 2004 he was made an associate member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Kiraly died in his sleep in Budapest on 4 July 2009 aged 97 6 Selected works editKiraly Bela K 1969 Hungary in the late eighteenth century the decline of enlightened despotism New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780598122759 LCCN 69019459 Kiraly Bela K 1975 Ferenc Deak Boston Twayne Publishers ISBN 0805730303 LCCN 74020558 Kiraly Bela K ed 1975 Tolerance and movements of religious dissent in Eastern Europe Boulder Colo East European Quarterly New York ISBN 0914710060 LCCN 75006229 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link distributed by Columbia University Press Kiraly Bela K Barany George eds 1977 East Central European perceptions of early America Lisse Peter de Ridder Press ISBN 9789031601462 LCCN 77369620 Kann Robert A Kiraly Bela K Fichtner Paula S eds 1977 The Habsburg Empire in World War I essays on the intellectual military political and economic aspects of the Habsburg war effort Boulder Colo New York East European Quarterly ISBN 0914710168 LCCN 76047779 distributed by Columbia University Press Kiraly Bela K Jonas Paul eds 1978 The Hungarian revolution of 1956 in retrospect introd by G H N Seton Watson Boulder Colo New York East European quarterly ISBN 0914710338 LCCN 77082394 distributed by Columbia University Press Kiraly Bela K 2001 Basic History of Modern Hungary 1867 1999 Malabar Florida Krieger Pub ISBN 0 89464 950 7 LCCN 2001018642 Kiraly Bela Kalman Rothenberg Gunther E eds 1979 Special topics and generalizations on the 18th and 19th centuries New York Brooklyn College Press ISBN 0930888049 LCCN 79051780 Distributed by Columbia University Press Rothenberg Gunther E Kiraly Bela K Sugar Peter F eds 1982 East Central European society and war in the prerevolutionary eighteenth century New York Boulder Social Science Monographs ISBN 0930888197 LCCN 81050886 Distributed by Columbia University PressReferences edit Nagy Terka 2009 07 04 1956 National Guard commander Bela Kiraly dies naplo online hu Archived from the original on 2012 02 25 Retrieved 2009 07 04 a b c d e f g h Fox Margalit 8 July 2009 Bela Kiraly Dies at 97 Led Revolt in Hungary The New York Times Retrieved 2014 02 01 a b Schindler John R 1998 02 24 Dodging Armageddon The Third World War That Almost Was 1950 Cryptologic Quarterly 85 95 Archived from the original on 2015 09 30 Retrieved 2016 10 27 Bela Kiraly Contemporary Authors Online Detroit Gale 2009 Gale Document Number GALE H1000054393 Retrieved 2014 02 01 Biography in Context subscription required a b Apple Jr R W 28 December 1982 SOME INSIGHTS INTO ANDROPOV GLEANED FROM BUDAPEST ROLE The New York Times Retrieved 2014 02 06 a b c d e Land Thomas 26 July 2009 Righteous Gentile Bela Kiraly dies at 92 Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 2014 02 06 a b c Partos Gabriel 11 July 2009 Bela Kiraly Soldier who led Hungarian resistance against the Soviet Union during the 1956 uprising The Independent London Independent Educational Publishing Retrieved 2014 02 06 a b c Congdon Lee 8 August 2009 Obituary Bela K Kiraly 1912 2009 Newsgroup Habsburg H Net Habsburg Retrieved 2014 02 07 a href Template Cite newsgroup html title Template Cite newsgroup cite newsgroup a Check newsgroup value help Kiraly Bela 1912 2009 Personal Information The Righteous Among The Nations Yad Vashem Retrieved 2014 02 02 Kiraly FAMILY The Righteous Among The Nations Yad Vashem Retrieved 2014 02 02 Berecz Janos 1986 1956 Counter Revolution in Hungary Words and Weapons Akademiai Kiado pp 116 ISBN 978 9630543705 Filimonov Olef October 30 2016 Mify o vosstanii Polit RU Retrieved October 27 2016 Khrushchev Nikita 2007 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev PDF University Park The Pennsylvania State University Press p 665 ISBN 978 0 271 02935 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 02 07 Bay Austin 29 July 2009 Remembering a Hungarian Freedom Fighter Retrieved 2014 02 02 Bela K Kiraly Wars Revolutions and Regime Changes in Hungary 1912 2004 Reminiscences of an Eyewitness Boulder CO Social Science Monographs Highland Lakes NJ Atlantic Research and Publications Inc New York distributed by Columbia University Press 2005 381 Winters Stanley B The Forging of a Historian Robert A Kann in America 1939 1976 Austrian History Yearbook 17 Jan 1981 3 24 Further reading editFenyo Mario September 2010 Bela Kiraly Key figure in 1956 Hungarian Revolution military historian politician Perspectives on History American Historical Association Retrieved 2014 02 02 Lebovits Imre 2007 Zsidotorvenyek zsidomentok The Rescuers of Jews Budapest Ex Libris ISBN 9789638649058 LCCN 2008446880 or Jewish law saving of Jewish lives Rennie David 18 October 2006 It was almost World War III The Spectator Retrieved 2014 02 02 Vardy Steven Bela Vardy Agnes Huszar eds 1983 Society in change studies in honor of Bela K Kiraly Boulder New York East European Monographs distributed by Columbia University Press ISBN 088033021X LCCN 82083524 External links editGeneral Bela Kiraly Personal Papers at the Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives Central European University Budapest Hungary Article by the American Hungarian Federation Interview with Dr Bela Kiraly CNN COLD WAR Episode 7 After Stalin The National Security Archive 1 June 1996 Retrieved 2014 02 02 Bela Kiraly Ten Truths About 1956 from Freedom Fighter 56 Bela Kiraly The Daily Telegraph July 6 2009 Retrieved 2014 02 02 obituary Bela Kiraly at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bela Kiraly amp oldid 1206735868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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