Jakob Bleyer | |
Nationality: | Hungarian |
Order: | Minister for National Minorities |
Term Start: | 15 August 1919 |
Term End: | 16 December 1920 |
Predecessor: | Győző Knaller |
Successor: | Pál Teleki (acting) |
Birth Date: | 1874 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Dunacséb, Austria-Hungary (today Čelarevo, Serbia) |
Death Place: | Budapest, Hungary |
Restingplace: | New Public Cemetery, Budapest |
Party: | KNEP (1920–1922) EP/NEP (1922–1933) |
Profession: | literary scholar, politician |
Parents: | Jakob Bleyer Sr. Veronika Stern |
Jakob Bleyer (Hungarian: Bleyer Jakab; 25 January 1874 – 5 December 1933 in Budapest) was a Hungarian German studies scholar, literary scholar, MP of Hungarian-German origin, and the Hungarian Minister for National Minorities from 1919 to 1920.
Jakob Bleyer was born into a German-speaking peasant family on 25 January 1874 in Tscheb (Dunacséb), Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary (today Čelarevo, Serbia) in the region Batschka. After attending a German elementary school, he went to the Hungarian grammar school in Neusatz and the Jesuit grammar school in Kalocsa. He studied German and Hungarian philology at the University of Budapest. In 1897 he received his doctorate with the thesis "Hungarian Relations of German Historical Folk Songs until 1551" and in the same year became a high school teacher in Budapest and Sopron (Ödenburg).
In 1903 and 1904 Bleyer studied in Munich and Leipzig. He completed his habilitation in 1905 and then became a private lecturer at the University of Budapest. In 1908, he was appointed professor of German language and literature at the University of Cluj. In the years 1911 to 1919 and again from 1921 he held the chair for German studies at the University of Budapest.
Between 1902 and 1913 he published works on the history of literature on German-Hungarian references (see list of works). He was a corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences since 1910. In 1926, he became a senator of the Deutsche Akademie in Munich, as well as an honorary senator and honorary doctorate from the University of Tübingen.
Several German city streets are named after him, including streets in Gerlingen, Haßmersheim, Munich[1], Pocking and Schwäbisch Gmünd.
In the years from 1920 to 1926 Bleyer belonged to a newly founded German-speaking People's Council, which was founded by appeals of Karl I as an attempt to save the Habsburg monarchy. From 1926 until his death, he was a member of the Hungarian Parliament. Between 15 August 1919 and 16 December 1920, Bleyer was Minister for National Minorities (Nationalities Minister) of the Christian-nationalist governments. On 21 August 1919, he issued the ordinance on equal rights for national minorities, which was intended to guarantee linguistic and cultural autonomy for these minorities. He placed a special focus on the rural population and German-speaking illiteracy.[2]
Bleyer feared due to the increasing Magyarization a "neglect of the German-speaking minorities in the country", since in his opinion this could not be assimilated linguistically because of their low level of education. Above all, he campaigned for elementary schools for the minorities; for the German-speaking elites, he considered brief linguistic assimilation to be inevitable, as well as interference by the German Reich in Hungarian minority policy.[3] Bleyer was politically in favor of an independent Magyar-led kingdom. In speeches and essays he emphasized that he was in favor of the Hungarian rule and did not demand, in contrast to other German people's councils like Rudolf Brandsch, an "Eastern Switzerland" with several official languages.[4]
In January 1921 he founded the “Sunday paper for the German people in Hungary”, on 15 July 19 the “Hungarian German People's Education Association” and in 1929 the “German-Hungarian Homeland Papers”. Bleyer was co-editor of the Philological Universal-Anzeiger. As a permanent delegate he represented the Hungarian-German minority in the European Nationalities Congress from 1925 until his death in 1933, in which he maintained a good relationship with German and Jewish representatives.[5]