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Nagy, Imre
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Nagy, Imre (1895–1958)

Hungarian politician, prime minister 1953–55 and 1956. He led the Hungarian revolt against Soviet domination in 1956, for which he was executed.

Nagy, an Austro-Hungarian prisoner of war in Siberia during World War I, became a Soviet citizen after the Russian Revolution, and lived in the USSR 1930–44. In 1953, after Stalin's death, he became prime minister, introducing liberal measures such as encouraging the production of consumer goods, but was dismissed in 1955 by hardline Stalinist premier Matyas Rákosi. Reappointed in October 1956 during the Hungarian uprising, he began taking liberalization further than the Soviets wanted; for example, announcing Hungarian withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. Soviet troops entered Budapest, and Nagy was dismissed in November 1956. He was captured by the KGB and shot. In 1989 the Hungarian Supreme Court recognized his leadership of a legitimate government and quashed his conviction for treachery.



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1956: Soviet troops overrun Hungary Soldiers pour into the capital Budapest (pictured right) in a giant dawn offensive in response to a national uprising led by Prime Minister Imre Nagy.
Imre Nagy, prime minister of Hungary and the leader of the revolution, is the story's protagonist.
Imre Nagy, the leader of the Hungarian revolt in 1956, and Dubcek became parts of their national legends, which belies the claim that communism was exclusively a foreign imposition.
 
 
 
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