Körmöczi Katalin szerk.: Historical Exhibition of the Hungarian National Museum 3 - From the End of the Turkish Wars to the Millennium - The history of Hungary in the 18th and 19th centuries (Budapest, 2001)

ROOM 14. Endurance, Compromise and Economic Boom "The Repudiation of That Which is Illegal is No Mere Option, But Rather an Obligation" (Ferenc Deák) (Katalin Körmöczi - Edit Haider)

48. Count László Teleki (1811-1861), Lithograph emigres. The emigres had counted as for­eign support since the Italian-Austrian War of 1859. Two groupings emerged in the House of Deputies: the motion party led by László Teleki and the petition party led by Ferenc Deák. László Teleki (1810-61) entered the House of Deputies after spending a number of years in exile (Fig. 48). He represented the position of the emigres, and proposed his submissions in the form of a motion. The petition party led by Ferenc Deák professed the principle of reaching agree­ment, as in 1848, and of neutralizing con­flicts, and proposed what it had to say in

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