István Bethlen
de Bethlen
Prime Minister of Hungary
In office
14 April 1921  24 August 1931
RegentMiklós Horthy
Preceded byPál Teleki
Succeeded byGyula Károlyi
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
31 October 1901  16 November 1918
In office
18 February 1920  2 February 1939
Personal details
Born(1874-10-08)8 October 1874
Gernyeszeg, Kingdom of Hungary
(now Gornești, Romania)
Died5 October 1946(1946-10-05) (aged 71)
Moscow, Soviet Union (now Russian Federation)
Political partyLiberal Party (1901–1903)
Party of Independence and '48 (1904–1913)
National Constitution Party (1913–1918)
Christian National Union Party (1919–1922)
Unity Party (1922–1935)
SpouseCountess Margit Bethlen de Bethlen
ChildrenAndrás
István
Gábor
ProfessionPolitician, jurist

Count István Bethlen de Bethlen (8 October 1874 – 5 October 1946) was a Hungarian aristocrat and statesman and served as prime minister from 1921 to 1931.

Early life

The scion of an old Bethlen de Bethlen noble family from Transylvania, he was the only son of Count Istvan Bethlen de Bethlen (1831–1881) and Countess Ilona Teleki de Szék (1849–1914). He had two elder sisters: Countess Klementine Mikes de Zabola (1871–1954) and Countess Ilona Haller de Hallerkeö (1872–1924).

Career

Bethlen was elected to the Hungarian Parliament as a liberal in 1901.[1] Later, he served as a representative of the new Hungarian government at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. In that year, the weak centrist Hungarian government collapsed and was soon replaced by the communist Hungarian Soviet Republic, under the leadership of Béla Kun. Bethlen quickly returned to Hungary to assume leadership of the anti-communist "white" government, based in Szeged, along with former Austro-Hungarian Navy Admiral Miklós Horthy. After the "white" forces had seized control of Hungary, Horthy was appointed Regent of Hungary. Bethlen again took a seat in the Hungarian Parliament and allied with the conservative factions there.

In 1919, Bethlen rejected a personal union between Romania and Hungary under the King of Romania.[2][3]

After the attempted return of King Charles IV to the throne of Hungary in 1921, Horthy asked Bethlen to form a strong government to eliminate the possibility of other such threats to the new country. Bethlen founded the Party of National Unity. He was also able to unite the two most powerful factors in Hungarian society, the wealthy primarily-Jewish industrialists in Budapest and the old Magyar gentry in rural Hungary, into a lasting coalition. That effectively checked the rise of fascism in the country for at least a decade. Bethlen reached an accord with the labour unions, earned their support for the government and eliminated a source of domestic dissent.

During the May 1926 trial of the Franc affair plotters, Bethlen was called to testify over his involvement in it.[4] French Prime Minister Aristide Briand used the scandal by pushing for Bethlen's removal from power and his replacement by a more liberal politician.[5] The plot centred on the efforts of Hungarian nationalists to damage the French economy by disseminating forged 1,000 French franc banknotes. Several plotters provided incriminating evidence of Bethlen's involvement, but he managed to cover up his role by exercising direct control over the proceedings.[4][6][7]

Facing considerable public pressure, Bethlen offered his resignation to Horthy, who refused to accept it.[8] Bethlen subsequently shuffled his cabinet by replacing Interior Minister Iván Rakovszky.[6] The outcome of the trials, in fact, increased Bethlen's popularity in Hungary.[9]

Bethlen and the Hungarian delegation in the Hague

During his decade in office, Bethlen led Hungary into the League of Nations,[10] arranged a close alliance with Fascist Italy and even entered into a Treaty of Friendship with Italy in 1927 to further his nation's revisionist hopes.[11] He was, however, defeated in his attempts to change the Treaty of Trianon, which had stripped Hungary of most of its territory after the First World War.

The Great Depression shifted Hungarian politics to the extreme right, and Horthy replaced Bethlen with Count Gyula Károlyi de Nagykároly,[12] which was followed quickly by Gyula Gömbös de Jákfa, a noted fascist and antisemite.

Increasingly shunted into political obscurity, Bethlen stood out as one of the few voices in Hungary to be actively opposed to an alliance with Nazi Germany. As it became apparent that Germany was going to lose the Second World War, Bethlen attempted to negotiate a separate peace with the Allied powers. By the spring of 1945, most of Hungary had fallen to the advancing Soviet troops.

The communists, who returned with the Soviets, immediately began their scheme to take over the country. They saw the aging Bethlen as a threat, a man who could unite the political forces against them. That made the Soviets arrest in March 1945. Soon afterward, Bethlen was taken to Moscow,[13] where he died in prison on 5 October 1946.[14]

István Bethlen – Buda Castle

Personal life

On 27 Jun 1901, he married his distant cousin, the author Countess Margarete Bethlen de Bethlen (1882–1970). They had 3 sons:

  • Count András Bethlen de Bethlen (1902–1970) ⚭ Magda Viola (b.1901) ⚭ Eszter Mészáros (1892–1955) ⚭ Maria Palma 'Mizzi' Hoffmann (b.1906); no issue
  • Count István Bethlen de Bethlen (1904–1982) ⚭ Donna Maria Isabella dei Conti Parravicini (1912–2008); had issue
  • Count Gábor Bethlen de Bethlen (1906–1981) ⚭ Edith Schmidt (1909–1969); had issue

Notes

  1. Romsics, pp. 25–26.
  2. Ignác Romsics, Social Science Monographs, 1995, István Bethlen: a great conservative statesman of Hungary, 1874-1946, p. 111
  3. "Mementó 1917: Így nem lett perszonálunió Romániával". 25 October 2017.
  4. 1 2 Petruccelli 2016, pp. 519–520, 525.
  5. Petruccelli 2016, pp. 519–520.
  6. 1 2 Klay 1974, pp. 111–112.
  7. Cooley 2008, p. 185.
  8. Lendvai 2004, p. 398.
  9. Petruccelli 2016, p. 522.
  10. Romsics, p. 169.
  11. Romsics, p. 225.
  12. Romsics, p. 298.
  13. Romsics, p. 386.
  14. Romsics, p. 388.

References

  • Cooley, John (2008). Currency Wars: How Forged Money is the New Weapon of Mass Destruction. New York: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1602392700.
  • Ignác Romsics: István Bethlen: A Great Conservative Statesman of Hungary, 1874–1946. East European Monographs. Columbia University Press, 1995.
  • Klay, Andor (1974). "Hungarian Counterfeit Francs: A Case of Post-World War I Political Sabotage". Slavic Review. 33 (1): 107–113. doi:10.2307/2495329. JSTOR 2495329.
  • Lendvai, Paul (2004). The Hungarians: A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691119694.
  • Petruccelli, David (2016). "Banknotes from the Underground: Counterfeiting and the International Order in Interwar Europe". Journal of Contemporary History. 51 (3): 507–530. doi:10.1177/0022009415577003. S2CID 156881357.
  • Bethlen Istvan Emlekirata, 1944, Published in Hungarian/Magyar by Zrinyi Katonai Koenyvkiado, 1988.
  • Record of Margarete Bethlen de Bethlen's death certificate from the Magyar Főnemességi Adattár (Hungarian Database of the Aristocracy)
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