Do you know how many Hungarian PMs were executed? – videos

Change language:
Great-Britain executed one of their kings but none of their Prime Ministers. France executed a king, a queen and a Prime Minister. However, Hungary is somewhere at the top with six executed Prime Ministers. This means that Hungarians put to death almost 11 pc of their PMs. Of course, the situation is not that simple, since in most cases, foreign powers decided.
Not the safest job
One would say that being a PM is tiresome but not too dangerous since a lot of people’s job is only to protect you. However, in Hungary, this is a bit different. Since the country was always in the clash zone of foreign powers, after a military defeat or a change of the regime former decision makers could always found themselves in front of a judge easily.
This is what happened with the first Hungarian Prime Minister, Count Lajos Batthyány. Batthyány became PM after the victory of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 and resigned short after it, in October, because he saw that a compromise is unrealistic with the Habsburgs. He joined the army as an ordinary soldier but never gave up to
mediate between the government and the Habsburgs.
However, he was not successful and after the Austrian army occupied Budapest, he was taken to Olmütz (now Olomouc, Czech Republic). After the defeat of the revolution in 1849, the military court gave him a prison sentence and confiscated his possessions. However, because of the pressure of the imperial court, his sentence was later modified to death. In fact, he unsuccessfully tried to commit suicide before his execution by cutting his jugular veins with a short sword smuggled into his prison cell by his wife. Therefore, he could not be hanged. He bravely faced the firing squad and shouted: “Long live my country! Come on, huntsmen!”

Communist revenge?
The Hungarian Communists backed by the Soviet Union that occupied Hungary after WWII propagated that the unbelievable destruction of the country was caused by the previous governments. Thus, they
brought to so-called people’s courts all the Prime Ministers they could of the previous era.
Head of the state Miklós Horthy was not extradited by Western authorities like former PM Miklós Kállay and Ferenc Keresztes-Fischer. The former was freed from the Dachau concentration camp while the latter from Mauthausen because of their Anglo-Saxon sympathy. Géza Lakatos was taken to prison in Hungary and questioned many times as a witness in other trials. Pál Teleki committed suicide in 1941.





