Imre Steindl Explained

Imre Steindl
Other Names:Steindl Imre Ferenc Károly
Nationality:Hungarian
Birth Name:Imre Ferenc Károly Steindl
Birth Date:1839 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Pest, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire
Death Place:Budapest, Austria-Hungary
Alma Mater:TU Wien, Vienna
Technical University of Budapest
Significant Buildings:Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest
St Elisabeth Cathedral, Košice

Imre Ferenc Károly Steindl (29 October 1839 – 31 August 1902) was a Hungarian architect.

Steindl (sometimes called in German Emerich Steindl or Emmerich Steindl[1]) was the designer of the Hungarian Parliament Building, an associate professor and correspondent of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Around the end of the 19th century, along with Miklós Ybl and Frigyes Schulek, Steindl was the most significant architect within the lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen. His most famous work, the Hungarian Parliament Building (Országház) in Budapest, is regarded as a symbol of the capital city.

Biography

Steindl graduated from the Technical University of Budapest and the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. He was a teacher at the Budapest Technical University from 1869. He was elected honorary and corresponding member of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1891 and was admitted to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1898.

His architectural interest was initially romantic historicism, then Renaissance and Gothic style.

He is most famous for the Hungarian Parliament Building, an example of Gothic Revival architecture erected on the Pest bank of the Danube, but his other outstanding works include the St Elisabeth Church in Budapest as well as the reconstruction of the St Elisabeth Cathedral in Košice and the Hunyadi Castle.

Steindl went blind before the completion of the Hungarian Parliament in 1904 and died in 1902 in Budapest. He is buried at Kerepesi Cemetery.

Main works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: % 2C1077279001% 3Fcc% 3D1452460 & cc = 1452460 Deaths are registered in Bp. I-III. dist. united state mortal akv. 2201/1902.. FamilySearch.org. 29 October 2017.
  2. http://rozsaktere.uw.hu/ Website of the Saint Elisabeth Church
  3. Web site: The Square of Roses, where the above church is located. Earth-Photography.com. 29 October 2017.