Tivadar Andrássy

Hungarian painter, nobleman, politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroHungarian painter, nobleman, politician
A.K.A.Tivadar Andrassy
A.K.A.Tivadar Andrassy
PlacesHungary
wasPolitician Painter
Work fieldArts Politics
Gender
Male
Birth10 July 1857, Paris, Seine, Île-de-France, France
Death13 May 1905Budapest, Central Hungary, Hungary (aged 47 years)
Family
Mother:Katinka Kendeffy
Father:Gyula Andrássy
Spouse:Eleonóra Zichy
Children:Ilona Andrássy
The details

Biography

Count Tivadar Andrássy de Csíkszentkirály et Krasznahorka (10 July 1857 – 13 May 1905) was a Hungarian politician, Member of Parliament, painter, and art collector. He served as a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the National Museum, the Metropolitan Board of Public Works, and the House of Representatives economics committee.

Andrássy was born in 1857 in Paris. His father was Gyula Count Andrássy de Csíkszentkirály et Krasznahorka (1823–1890), a Hungarian statesman, who served as Prime Minister of Hungary (1867–1871) and Foreign Minister of Austria-Hungary (1871–1879). His mother was Katinka Kendeffy (1830–1896). Andrássy had two younger siblings, a sister, Ilona (1858–1952), who married Lajos Batthyány, Governor of Flume, and a brother, Gyula Andrássy the Younger (1860–1929), a politician. He was educated in Vienna and Budapest.

In 1881, he was elected Member of Parliament for Tőketerebes district. He was President of the House of Representatives Committee on conflict of interest, but resigned circa 1897. An art collector, he was also a painter, mainly painting landscapes. In Trebišov, he financially supported the arts. Beginning in 1890, he served as President of the Hungarian University of Fine Arts. In 1907, two years after his death, the Fine Arts Society exhibited 80 of his works.

Personal life

He married Countess Eleonóra Zichy de Zich et Vásonkeő on 24 June 1885; they had four daughters:

  • Ilona (1886–1967)
  • Borbála (1890–1968)
  • Katalin (1892–1985); wife of Count Mihály Károlyi
  • Klára (1898–1941), Communist partisan

Death

Andrássy died in Budapest in 1905. Four years after her husband's death, his widow married her former brother in law, Gyula the Younger.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.