Béla Edvárd: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "'''Béla Edvárd''' was a Veszprémic {{wpl|philosopher}} and was part of the Four Blue Vanguards, the leaders of the Blue Guardsmen. Born to...")
 
m (Added infobox)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Béla Edvárd''' was a [[Veszprémic people|Veszprémic]] {{wpl|philosopher}} and was part of the [[Four Blue Vanguards]], the leaders of the [[Blue Guardsmen]].  
{{Infobox person
| name              = Béla Edvárd
| honorific_suffix  =
| image              = Charles_G._D._Roberts_cph.3a43709.jpg
| imagesize          = 200px
| caption            = Béla Edvárd in 1900
| birth_name        = Béla Edvárd
| birth_date        = {{birth date|df=y|1878|12|07}}
| birth_place        =
| death_date        = {{death date and age|df=y|1937|09|14|1878|12|05}}
| death_place        =
| nationality        =
 
{{unbulleted list|
| party              = [[Blue Guardsmen]] (1901-1915)<br>[[Blue Movement Party]] (1915-1927)<br>[[Citizenry Committee of the Republic]] (1929-1937)
| father            =
| mother            =
| relatives          =
}}
}}'''Béla Edvárd''' was a [[Veszprémic people|Veszprémic]] {{wpl|philosopher}} and was part of the [[Four Blue Vanguards]], the leaders of the [[Blue Guardsmen]].  


Born to an immigrating Veszprémic family in <foreign town> in <foreign country>, Edvárd became qualified {{wpl|lawyer}} in 1881, and returned to [[Nagymező]] in 1898 to pursue a job offer at the [[Central University of Nagymező]]. He met both [[István Szálast]] and [[Sólyom Magdolna]] during his time there and took interest in their private political discussions. He was the third Blue Vanguard to join and in 1901, during the [[Néma Forradalom]], collaborated with all four Vanguards to release the ''[[Véres Talárok]]''. The book popularized the idea of [[Blue Nationalism]], and later Edvárd would standardize his own form of Blue Nationialism called [[Edvárdism]].  
Born to an immigrating Veszprémic family in <foreign town> in <foreign country>, Edvárd became qualified {{wpl|lawyer}} in 1881, and returned to [[Nagymező]] in 1898 to pursue a job offer at the [[Central University of Nagymező]]. He met both [[István Szálast]] and [[Sólyom Magdolna]] during his time there and took interest in their private political discussions. He was the third Blue Vanguard to join and in 1901, during the [[Néma Forradalom]], collaborated with all four Vanguards to release the ''[[Véres Talárok]]''. The book popularized the idea of [[Blue Nationalism]], and later Edvárd would standardize his own form of Blue Nationialism called [[Edvárdism]].  

Revision as of 11:55, 28 December 2020

Béla Edvárd
Charles G. D. Roberts cph.3a43709.jpg
Béla Edvárd in 1900
Born
Béla Edvárd

(1878-12-07)7 December 1878
Died14 September 1937(1937-09-14) (aged 58)

Béla Edvárd was a Veszprémic philosopher and was part of the Four Blue Vanguards, the leaders of the Blue Guardsmen.

Born to an immigrating Veszprémic family in <foreign town> in <foreign country>, Edvárd became qualified lawyer in 1881, and returned to Nagymező in 1898 to pursue a job offer at the Central University of Nagymező. He met both István Szálast and Sólyom Magdolna during his time there and took interest in their private political discussions. He was the third Blue Vanguard to join and in 1901, during the Néma Forradalom, collaborated with all four Vanguards to release the Véres Talárok. The book popularized the idea of Blue Nationalism, and later Edvárd would standardize his own form of Blue Nationialism called Edvárdism.

Edvárd was considered to be the most moderate of the voices within the Vanguards and was considered to have quarreled with Magdolna and Magdolnism due to the polarization on their methodology. Magdolna and her ideology of Magdolnism was considerably more radical than Edvárd and his ideology. In line with Blue Nationalism, Edvárd believed in the overthrow of the Nemesség and the supplementation of the central state,

Edvárd was considered to be the most mysterious member of the Blue Vanguards, preferring to keep out of the spotlight and mainly in the discussion background between the large party base. When the Hétumoger Civil War began, he withdrew from the public and entered seclusion until the establishment of both the Citizens Republic of Hétumoger and the Third Noble Republic of Hétumoger, where he became central to the Blue Movement in retaining the fragile economic stability of the Citizens Republic and was later appointed the First Minister of the Citizenry. He was quoted to have kept his social and economic policies in line with his moral philosophy of humanism. A far cry from the consequentialist philosophy that was set by Magdolnism, Edvárd would later continue his work after retiring as the First Minister. Edvárd, in his final years, published the Volumes of Edvárd, detailing his political, social and moral philosophy alongside his economic policies. Edvárd died in 1951, never having married or having any children.

Personal Life

Sexuality

Many observers in Edvárd's life noticed that he prefered to keep the company of men within his public life, and is generally agreed by histographers of the Blue Movement that he was primarily homosexual and that it was important in many aspects of his life. In his Volumes of Edvárd, he details in the fourth volume his personal memoirs, specifically his time out of the public eye during the Civil War. He had at that point moved to an unnamed small village where he surrounded himself with an entourage of men that

Edvárd's interest of men was noticed by both Magdolna and Teodóra. Unlike the two women, Edvárd often talked to Szálast more than he did to the other two female members, and typically arrived to meetings with a couple of men.