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Tomb of the royal court judge Emil of Bulgaria

Cemeteries, tombstones, grave sites

Bolgár Emil (inámi), judge of the royal court of Bratislava, son of Bolgár Ferencz lawyer, royal treasury councilor and Medveczky Aurora, born on June 23, 1840 in Máramaros-Sziget, where he completed the four grades of the gymnasium, the 5th and 6th grades as a private student in Satu Mare. His father died in 1855, and his mother moved to Pest with her eight children in difficult financial circumstances to raise her children. Bolgár Emil attended the 7th grade of the gymnasium here with the Piarists, the eighth grade in Košice until 1857, when he became a medical student in Pest, but in 1858 he switched to law. In 1861–62 he was a tutor for the Count Bolza family. In 1863 he worked in a law office and was a lawyer at the royal court. He passed the bar exam in 1864 and settled in Jász-Árokszállás at the beginning of 1866. He organized the Jászkun-district Deák party and was its chief orator from 1867 to 1872. On the occasion of the organization of the royal courts, on January 1, 1872, he entered the judicial career in Jászberény, where he was a royal court judge until August 1885, when he was transferred to Szolnok. In May 1887, he was appointed as an ordinary judge to the Pest royal court, and at the latest organization (1891) he was transferred to Bratislava. ; The December 8, 1907 issue of the Vasárnapi Ujság also reported on his death: "Died ... retired court judge Emil Bolgár, brother of the Minister of Defense Secretary Ferencz Bolgár, in Nagy-Borsa." ; His first poem was published in Hölgyfutár in 1858 (and 1859, 1862), since then he has written numerous poems, short stories, travelogues, historical and policy articles in the following newspapers: Napkelet (1860), Divatcsarnok (1860–63), Nefelejts (1861–63, 1871, 1873), Vasárnapi Ujság (1863–66, 1868, 1876, 1884), Magyar Ember Könyvtára (1863), Főv. Lapok (1864–65), Igazmondó (1871), Figyelő (1871, 1875), P. Napló (1877, 18th issue), the Tavasz szépirod. Zsebkönyvbe (1871) and the M. Orvosok és Term. In his works (XIX. 1878. Excursion to Viskvárhegy). Most of his essays were published anonymously. He also wrote for the following provincial newspapers: Jászkun Figyelő, Lehel Kürt, Jászberény and Vidéke. The death of his wife in August 1874 had a profound effect on his mood and since then we only rarely encounter his name in literature. ; His work: Bolgár Emil költeményei 1856–1883. Bpest, 1884. (Im. Egyetértés, no. 248)

Inscription/symbol:

inámi / Bulgarian / Émil / royal court judge / 1840 - 1907.

Inventory number:

3592

Collection:

Repository

Municipality:

Nagyborsa   (községi temető)