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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tibor_DéryTibor Déry - Wikipedia

    Tibor Déry (18 October 1894 in Budapest – 18 August 1977 in Budapest) was a Hungarian writer and poet. He also wrote under the names Tibor Dániel and Pál Verdes . György Lukács praised Dery as being "the greatest depicter of human beings of our time".

  2. Aug 18, 2008 · Tibor Déry was a Hungarian novelist, short-story writer, poet, and playwright, one of the most respected and controversial figures in 20th-century Hungarian literature. He was imprisoned for his role in the 1956 revolution. Born to an upper-middle-class Jewish family, Déry graduated from the

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Ifjúsága (1894–1920) Déry Tibor jómódú polgári zsidó család gyermekeként Budapesten született, a Wesselényi utca 13-as számú házban, ami az édesapja tulajdona volt. Édesapja Déry Károly (Deutsch) ügyvéd, édesanyja Rosenberg Ernesztin, aki gazdag osztrák család sarja volt. A Budapesti Kereskedelmi Akadémia elvégzése ...

  4. Tibor Déry has 86 books on Goodreads with 2501 ratings. Tibor Déry’s most popular book is Niki: The Story of a Dog.

  5. Tibor Déry. Tibor Déry was a Hungarian writer, born in Budapest in 1894. In his early years he was a supporter of communism, but after being excluded from the ranks of the Hungarian Communist Party in 1953 he started writing satire on the communist regime in Hungary. Georg Lukács praised Dery as being 'the greatest depicter of human beings ...

    • (895)
    • August 18, 1977
    • October 18, 1894
  6. First imprisoned in 1919, then in 1934 for translating André Gide’s diary of his journey to Russia, over twenty years later Tibor Déry was imprisoned again, this time sentenced to nine years for his writings and political activites during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 against Soviet occupation.

  7. Hungary. period. 1915-1946. Tibor Déry (Budapest, 1894 – 1977) was a Hungarian writer and poet. He graduated from the Budapest Academy of Commerce in 1991 and studied for a year in St. Gallen. After the First World War, he joined the Communist Party. During the brief Hungarian Soviet Republic, he became a member of the Directorate.