Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Miklós Horthy Jr. | |
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| Name | Miklós Horthy Jr. |
| Birth date | 14 February 1907 |
| Birth place | Pula, Austria-Hungary |
| Death date | 13 March 1993 (aged 86) |
| Death place | Estoril, Portugal |
| Nationality | Hungarian |
| Known for | Son of Regent Miklós Horthy |
| Spouse | Countess Ilona Edelsheim-Gyulai |
| Parents | Miklós Horthy, Magdolna Purgly |
Miklós Horthy Jr. was the younger son of Hungarian Regent Miklós Horthy and a figure in the political and diplomatic circles of the interwar Kingdom of Hungary. His life was profoundly shaped by his father's regime, the pressures of World War II, and the subsequent rise of Communist Hungary. Horthy Jr. is primarily remembered for his involvement in a failed 1944 armistice attempt, which led to his arrest by the Gestapo, and his later trial and execution by the post-war communist government.
Born in the Austro-Hungarian naval port of Pula, he was the second son of Admiral Miklós Horthy and Magdolna Purgly. He grew up within the privileged circles of the Hungarian nobility, with his father ascending to the position of Regent of Hungary in 1920. He married Countess Ilona Edelsheim-Gyulai, a member of a prominent aristocratic military family, in 1938, further cementing his ties to the old elite. His elder brother, István Horthy, who had been designated as a potential successor to the regency, was killed in 1942 while serving on the Eastern Front with the Royal Hungarian Air Force. This tragedy placed Miklós Jr. in a more prominent, though unofficial, position within the political sphere of the Horthy era.
As the war turned against the Axis powers, Miklós Horthy Jr. became involved in his father's secret efforts to extricate Hungary from its alliance with Nazi Germany. He acted as an intermediary between the Regent's circle and various Hungarian resistance groups, including those connected to the Hungarian Social Democratic Party. The pivotal moment came in October 1944, when Regent Horthy attempted to announce an armistice with the Allies. In preparation, Miklós Jr. was sent to negotiate with the Red Army and the partisan Tito's forces. However, the operation, codenamed Operation Panzerfaust, was swiftly crushed by the Gestapo and Waffen-SS units under Otto Skorzeny. Miklós Horthy Jr. was arrested at the Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and, along with his father, was taken into custody and transported to Bavaria, where they were held at Schloss Hirschberg.
After the war, he returned to a Hungary now under Soviet occupation and evolving communist control. In the politically charged atmosphere of the post-war years, he was arrested by the ÁVH, the communist secret police. In 1946, he was put on trial as part of the People's Tribunal system, which was used to purge former regime figures. He was charged with war crimes and "crimes against the people," largely based on his association with his father's government and its policies, including the Second Vienna Award and Hungary's participation in the war against the Soviet Union. Despite international appeals for clemency, the court, under the influence of Mátyás Rákosi's regime, sentenced him to death. Miklós Horthy Jr. was executed by hanging in Budapest in 1946, becoming a high-profile martyr for anti-communist Hungarians.
The legacy of Miklós Horthy Jr. is inextricably linked to the controversies surrounding his father's regency and the tragic history of Hungary in World War II. In Communist Hungary, he was vilified as a symbol of the "Horthyist" old order. Following the fall of the Hungarian People's Republic in 1989, his trial was widely reassessed as a show trial and a judicial murder, part of the communist consolidation of power. His remains were reinterred with honor in 1993 in the Kerepesi Cemetery in Budapest. Historians view him less as an independent political actor and more as a loyal son caught in the catastrophic machinations of great power politics, whose fate underscored the brutal transition from the Horthy era to the Stalinist dictatorship in Central Europe.
Category:Horthy family Category:1907 births Category:1993 deaths Category:People executed by Hungary by hanging Category:Hungarian people of World War II