Dénes Berinkey

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Dénes Berinkey
The neutral zone in Hungary due to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919

Dénes Berinkey (born October 17, 1871 , † June 25, 1944 ) was a Hungarian politician and brief prime minister .

biography

Berinkey studied after school attendance law and was after graduation as a lawyer working. Between 1914 and 1918 he was a teacher at the commercial academy.

On November 4, 1918, Prime Minister Mihály Károlyi appointed him Minister of Justice in his cabinet.

After he had proclaimed the republic on November 16, 1918 and was elected first president on January 11, 1919 , Berinkey succeeded him as Prime Minister on January 18, 1918 and also took over the post of Foreign Minister from January 19 to January 24, 1919 . On March 20, 1919, France ordered the further withdrawal of Hungarian troops into Hungarian territory through the Vix-Note named after the head of the French military mission, Lieutenant Colonel Fernand Vix , with these military lines being regarded as the future territory.

After recognizing this note, which threatened the country's territorial integrity, Berinkey and his cabinet resigned on March 22, 1919. Subsequently, the Communist Party around Béla Kun came to power .

In 1920 he resumed his work as a lawyer and also wrote specialist articles on the subjects of international law , civil law and criminal law .

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