Leo Veigelsberg

Leo Veigelsberg

Leo Veigelsberg (born January 18, 1846– died October 31, 1907 in Budapest) was a Hungarian publicist.

He was born at Nagy-Boldogasszony and was educated at Kiskőrös, Budapest, and Vienna. For a short time he taught in the Jewish public school in Kecskemét, where he wrote noteworthy political articles for several newspapers, especially the "Politik" of Prague; in 1867 he became a member of the editorial staff of the "Neuer Freier Lloyd," and in 1872 he became editor-in-chief of the "Pester Lloyd." His political leaders, usually signed with two asterisks, always attracted great attention. His services as a publicist were recognized by Franz Joseph I, who conferred upon him the decoration of the Order of the Iron Crown (3d class) on July 9,1904.

His son Hugo Veigelsberg was a significant author of the subsequent generation.

References

*JewishEncyclopedia


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  • VEIGELSBERG, LEO — (1846–1907), Hungarian journalist. Born in Nagyboldogasszony, Veigelsberg studied medicine in Vienna, became a teacher in Hungary and contributed essays to the Prague newspaper, Politik. Later he joined the Neuer Freier Lloyd, then the Neues… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Hugo Veigelsberg — (born 2 November 1869 in Budapest, died August 3, 1949 in [Budapest] ) was a noted Hungarian editor and writer. He was distinguished for the lyric individuality of his poems, stories, and sociological works. He usually wrote under one of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Ignotus — erste Ausgabe Nyugat 1908. Ignotus als Chefredakteur Ignotus (lateinisch: „der Unbekannte“; geboren als Hugó Veigelsberg) (* 2. November 1869 in Pest; † 3. August 1949 in Budapest) war ein ungarischer Publizist, Literaturkritiker, Dichter und… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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