Béla Jankovich

Jankovich became a member of the House of Representatives in 1910 in the colours of the Party of National Work. Between 1911 and 1913 he served as second deputy speaker of the lower house. He was appointed privy councillor in 1912. Before his ministerial appointment he worked as state secretary of the Ministry of Religion and Education for less than two weeks. Then László Lukács appointed him minister on 26 February 1913. Jankovich held this position until the resignation of the István Tisza cabinet.
More educational reforms are connected his name, onto the defiance for the First World War and the economic crisis. His laws directed the state, denominational and privacy kindergartens' legal status. He extended the free education: school councils were created, which checked the efficiency of the teaching, the school attendance and the compulsory education. The ministry organized the secondary schools with a specialisation in the sciences. They acknowledged the Islamic religion legally. Jankovich used mathematical methods as an economist between the first ones to economic analyses. He was corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Provided by Wikipedia
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1Published 1917Other Authors: “...Jankovich, Béla 1865-1939...”
Call Number X 230c PA
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2Published 1917Other Authors: “...Jankovich, Béla 1865-1939...”
Call Number X 230d PA
Book