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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DAH-DEM |
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DEAK, FRANCIS (FERENCZ), (1803-1876) , Hungarian states-man, was born at SojtSr in the county of Zala, on the 17th of October r8o3. He came of an ancient and distinguished noble family, and was educated for the law at Nagy-Kanizsa, Papa, Raab and Pest, and practised first as an advocate and ultimately as a notary. His first case was the defence of a notorious robber and murderer. His reputation in his own county was quickly established, and when in 1833 his elder brother Antal, also a man of extraordinary force of character, was obliged by ill-health to relinquish his seat in the Hungarian parliament, the electors chose Ferencz in his stead
During the diet of 1839-1840 Deak succeeded in bringing about an understanding between a reactionary government, sadly in want of money, and a Liberal opposition determined that the nation should have its political privileges respected. " Let us put all jealousy on one side and allow him the pre-eminence," wrote Szechenyi of Deak (April 3oth, 1840). Deak would not go to the diet of 1843-1844, though he had received a mandate, because his election was the occasion of bloodshed in the struggle between the Clericals who would have ousted him and the Liberals who brought him in. In 1848, however, he accepted the post of minister of justice offered to him by Louis Batthyany. He never ceased to urge moderation in those stormy days, holding rather with Eotvos
House
hair 's-breadth from their legitimate position. He was one of the parliamentary deputation which waited in vain upon Prince Windischgratz in his camp. (See HUNGARY: History.) He then retired to his estate at Kehida. After the war of in-dependence he was tried by court-martial, but acquitted.During the years of repression he lived in complete retirement. He rejected Schmerling's proposal that he should take part in the project of judicial reform, but on the other hand he held completely aloof from the widespread, secret revolutionary movements. After 1854 he spent the greater part of his time at Pest, and his little room at the " Queen of England " inn became the meeting-place for those patriots who in those dark days looked to the wisdom of Deak for guidance. He used every opportunity of stimulating the moral strength of the nation and keeping its hopes alive. He invited the nation to contribute to the support of the orphans of Vorosmarty when that great poet died. He drew up the petition of the academy to the government, in which he defended the maintenance of this asylum of the national language against Austrian intervention. He trusted that, as had so often happened in the course of Hungarian history, the weakness and blindness of the court would.help Hungary back to her constitutional rights. Armed resistance he considered dangerous, but he was an immutable defender of the continuity of theHungarian constitution on the basis of the reforms of 1848. His principles alienated him from the Kossuth faction, which looked for salvation to a second war with Austria, engineered from abroad; but he was equally opposed to the attitude of resignation taken up by the followers of Szechenyi, who, according to Deak, always regarded the world from a purely provincial point of view. The war of 1859 convinced the Austrian government, at last, of the necessity of a reconciliation with Hungary; but the ensuing negotiations were conducted not through Deak, but through the Magyar Conservatives. In 1860 Deak rejected the October diploma (see HUNGARY: History), which was simply a cast-back to the Maria Theresa system of 1747; but, at the request of the government, he went to Vienna to set forth the national demands. On this occasion he insisted on the re- establishment
standing
House
After Koniggratz
" It was beyond the king's power to give him anything but a clasp of the hand." His real recompense was the assurance of the prosperity and the tranquillity of his country in the future, and the reconciliation of the nation and its sovereign. The consciousness of these great services even reconciled him to the loss of much of his popularity; for there can be no doubt that a large part of the Hungarian nation regarded the Composition of 1867 as a sort of surrender and blamed Dal as the author of it. The Composition was the culminating point of Deak's political activity; but as a party-leader he still exercised considerable influence. He died at midnight of the 28th-29th of July 1876, after long and painful sufferings. His funeral was celebrated with royal pomp on the 3rd of February, and representatives from every part of Hungary followed the " Sage " to the grave. A mausoleum was erected by national subscription, and in 1887 a statue, overlooking the Danube, was erected to his memory. See Speeches (Hung.) ed. by Man& K&nyi (Budapest, 1882) ; Z. Ferenczi, Life of Dedk (Hung., Budapest, 1894) ; Memorials of Ferencz Dedk (Hung., Budapest, 1889189o) ; Ferencz Pulszky, Charakterskizze ( Leipzig
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