Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Mihály Táncsics

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Mihaly Tancsics

Role
  
Writer

Books
  
Jozanesz


Mihaly Tancsics wwwbekesarchivhudataimagesbekesszakkonyvtar

Died
  
June 28, 1884, Budapest, Hungary

Similar People
  
Lajos Kossuth, Mor Jokai, Mihaly Vorosmarty, Janos Arany, Endre Ady

Táncsics Mihály (Serbian: Михајло Танчић) (21 April 1799, Ácsteszér – 28 June 1884, Budapest) was a Hungarian writer, teacher, journalist and politician.

Contents

Life

Mihály Táncsics Mihly Tncsics Wikipedia

Mihály Táncsics was born on 21 April 1799 in the village of Ácsteszér in the Komárom-Esztergom county of the Kingdom of Hungary. By his own account, his father was of Serbian antecedents and his mother was Slovak, but he was brought up to be a Hungarian-speaker and an ardent Hungarian. He was incarcerated in Budapest for his radical political convictions in 1846. He propagated in his pamphlet The Word of the People Is God's Word, a paraphrase of Vox populi, vox Dei. The pamphlet resulted in his arrest. Táncsics was freed from the Habsburgs's prison on 15 March 1848, the very day when the Hungarian revolution broke out. Although Táncsics's role in the Revolutions of 1848 in the Habsburg areas is highly emphasized in Hungarian history books, however, in literature he does not rank among the great active heroes of these events. He is remembered as someone who is freed rather than someone who liberates others.

Mihály Táncsics httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

As a teacher, Táncsics tirelessly worked to extend elementary education in Hungarian among children and adults in Hungary's urban centres, and his slim textbook on geography with a map of Hungary was part of a large educational project.

Commemoration

He is the namesake of a Hungarian national award for journalism, the Táncsics Prize. In 1948 a Hungarian 20 Forint coin was issued for the Centenary of the 1848 Revolution with his image.

References

Mihály Táncsics Wikipedia