- Miklós Perczel
-
Miklós Perczel
An engraving by Károly Rusz in the Vasárnapi Újság ("Sunday News") of 13 October 1867Born December 15, 1812
Bonyhád, Tolna countyDied March 4, 1904 (aged 91)
BajaAllegiance Revolutionary Hungarian Army
Union ArmyRank Colonel Battles Battle of Pákozd (1848)
Battle of Mór (1848)
Battle of Temesvár (1849)Other work Politician The native form of this personal name is bonyhádi lovag Perczel Miklós. This article uses the Western name order.Sir Miklós Perczel de Bonyhád (15 December 1812, Bonyhád, Tolna county – 4 March 1904, Baja), was a Hungarian landholder, general, and one of the leaders of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. After the emigration he participated in the American Civil War as a colonel of the Union Army. He had signification role in the liberation of Missouri. His older brother was Mór Perczel.
Notes and references
- Hermann Róbert: Az 1848–1849-es szabadságharc nagy csatái, Zrínyi Kiadó – 2004, ISBN 963-327-367-6
- Magyarország hadtörténete két kötetben (főszerkesztő: Liptai Ervin), Zrínyi Katonai Kiadó – 1985, ISBN 963-326-337-9
- Révai nagy lexikona
External links
Hungarian Revolution of 1848 Belligerents Pretext Major battles Other battles Buda · Isaszeg · Vienna UprisingInfluence Leaders for Austria Ferdinand I of Austria · Franz Joseph I of Austria · Eduard Clam-Gallas · Julius Jacob von Haynau · Josip Jelačić · Prince Franz de Paula of Liechtenstein · Alexander von Lüders · Fjodor Szergejevics Panutyin · Franz Schlik · Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-GrätzLeaders for Hungary Lajos Batthyány · Józef Bem · János Damjanich · Henryk Dembiński · Arisztid Dessewffy · Artúr Görgey · Richard Guyon · György Klapka · György Kmety · Lajos Kossuth · Vilmos Lázár · János Móga · Alessandro Monti · Ferenc Ottinger · Mór Perczel · István Széchenyi · Bertalan SzemereSee also: PerczelCategories:- 1812 births
- 1904 deaths
- 19th-century Hungarian people
- Hungarian soldiers
- Hungarian Revolution of 1848
- Hungarian knights
- People from Bonyhád
- Hungarian emigrants to the United States
- Union Army soldiers
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.