• Mátyás Rákosi ([ˈraːkoʃi ˈmaːcaːʃ]; born Mátyás Rosenfeld; 9 March 1892 – 5 February 1971) was a Hungarian communist politician who was the de facto leader of Hungary...
  • Matyas Rakosi was born one of eleven children to Jewish parents on 9 March 1892 in a village called Ada, now in Serbia but then part of the...
  • An adherent of Social Democracy from his youth, Rákosi returned to Hungary a Communist in 1918, after a period as prisoner of war in Russia.
  • Son of a retail merchant, Mátyás Rákosi pursued his studies at the Eastern Trade Academy in Budapest.
  • Mátyás Rákosi failed to understand the anger that existed in his country against Soviet authority and his blind faith approach in ‘what was good for Moscow was...
  • Bununla birlikte, Rákosi, Nagy'nin tüm girişimlerini engellemek için Birinci Sekreter olarak süregelen nüfuzunu kullanabildi. reform ve nihayetinde 1955'te ikincisini...
  • former First Secretary of the Hungarian Working People's Party (1892-1971).
  • During the period of the Hungarian Soviet Republic (1919), Rákosi was deputy people’s commissar of trade and people’s commissar of social production.
  • One of the “Little Stalins” installed to power in the wake of the Red Army’s march toward Germany during the closing months of World War II, Mátyás Rákosi...
  • The young Mátyás Rákosi (1892–1971) loved London. The son of a Jewish shopkeeper in southern Hungary, he had made his way there via Hamburg in 1913.
  • Kaynak ara: "Mátyás Rákosi" – haber · gazete · kitap · akademik · JSTOR (Mart 2020) (Bu şablonun nasıl ve ne zaman kaldırılması gerektiğini öğrenin).
  • Mátyás Rákosi was born on 9 March 1892 in Ada, Austria-Hungary [now Serbia].
  • Mátyás Rákosi ( 1892-1971). Born into a shopkeeper's family in Ada (now in Serbia), Rákosi completed secondary school in 1910 and then studied at the Keleti...