Jenő Landler | |
---|---|
Born |
Gelse, Austria-Hungary (now Hungary) |
November 23, 1875
Died | February 25, 1928 Cannes, France |
(aged 52)
Nationality | Hungarian |
Political party |
Hungarian Communist Party Hungarian Social Democratic Party (before 1918) |
Jenő Landler (November 23, 1875 – February 25, 1928) was a Jewish-born Hungarian Communist leader. He studied to be a lawyer and was drawn to the Social Democratic Party through his involvement in the ironworker's trade union movement. But he kept moving politically to the left and became a Communist. After the Hungarian Revolution of 1919 he became people's commissar of interior affairs in the new communist government. He was also a commander of the Hungarian Red Army fighting the foreign troops of the interventionists. After the fall of the Hungarian Soviet Republic he emigrated to Austria where he continued to be a leader of the exiled Hungarian communist movement.
Jenő Landler died in 1928 in exile in Cannes. His ashes were brought to Moscow and placed in the Kremlin wall.