Gyula Andrássy eljoven


Gyula Andrássy el Joven.

Count Gyula (Julio) Andrássy of Csíkszentkirály and Krasznahorka "the Young" (Hungarian: Andrássy Gyula) (June 30, 1860 - June 11, 1929) was a Hungarian noble politician.

He was the second son of Count Gyula Andrássy and became undersecretary in the ministry of Sándor Wekerle in 1892; in 1893 was appointed Minister of Education and in June of 1894 Minister of Assistance to the King, retiring in 1895 with Wekerle. In 1898, together with his older brother, left the Liberal Party of Hungary, but returned again after the fall of the government of Bánffy. In 1905 he was one of the leaders of the political Coalition that brought about the fall of the liberal government of Sisza. In 1906 he became Minister of the Interior in a compromise government led by Wekerle and maintained his ministry until the fall of the government in 1909. In 1912 represented the Austrohungarian Empire in a diplomatic mission to avoid the outbreak of War of the Balkans, that failure. In 1915, after the outbreak of World War I supported the peace negotiations between the contenders. As foreign minister in 1918 he declared the alliance with Germany dissolved and tried to negotiate a separate peace with the Allied countries. He resigned his position that same year but returned in 1920 to the new Hungarian National Assembly as an independent delegate. Later it would become leader of the National Christian Party and in 1921 participated in the conspiracy to restore in Hungary the monarchical institution in the figure of Carlos IV. He is the author of Ungarns Ausgleich mit Österreich vom Jahre 1867 (Ger. ed., Leipzig, 1897), and of a work in Hungarian on the origins of the state and the constitution of Hungary (Budapest, 1901), The Development of the Constitutional Freedom of Hungary. Among his later works in Hungarian and German are Wer hat den Krieg verbrochen? Interessensolidarität des Deutschtums and Ungartums and Diplomatie und Weltkrieg.



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