Draft:Endre Csatkai
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Comment: A bit more sources would be appreciated to demonstrate his notability. Also, the unreferenced paragraphs should be cited, and exact page numbers should be given for Tanulmányok Csatkai Endre emlékére. Kovcszaln6 (talk) 16:19, 28 May 2026 (UTC)
Endre Csatkai | |
|---|---|
| Csatkai Endre | |
| Born | 13 August 1896 |
| Died | 12 March 1970 (aged 73) Sopron, Hungary |
| Other names | Andreas Csatkai; André Csatkai |
| Education | Pázmány Péter University; University of Vienna |
| Occupations | Art historian, music historian, museologist, museum director, writer, journalist |
| Awards | Kossuth Prize (1954) |
Endre Csatkai (Hungarian: Csatkai Endre; also appearing in German-language sources as Andreas Csatkai or André Csatkai; 13 August 1896 – 12 March 1970) was a Hungarian art historian, music historian, museologist, museum director, writer and journalist. His career was rooted in the historical west-Hungarian cultural region around Sopron and Kismarton. He was born in Darufalva, a village of former Sopron County located between Sopron and Kismarton, and later worked for years in Kismarton while remaining closely connected with Sopron. His research focused mainly on the monuments, art history, music history and cultural life of Sopron, Kismarton and their surrounding region. He received the Kossuth Prize in 1954 for his work on the monument topography of Sopron and its surroundings.[1][2]
Early life and education
[edit]Csatkai was born in Darufalva, Sopron County, then part of the Kingdom of Hungary, in the multilingual border region between Sopron and Kismarton. Darufalva lay in the same historical county and regional cultural sphere as both towns, which later became central to Csatkai's scholarly and museum work. His father, Ignác Csatkai, formerly Krausz, was the communal physician of Darufalva.[3]
He completed his secondary-school studies at the Lutheran Lyceum in Sopron in 1914 and then enrolled at the Faculty of Humanities of Pázmány Péter University in Budapest, where he studied Hungarian and German. His studies were repeatedly interrupted by illness and by the political circumstances of the war and post-war years. Later biographical accounts also connect these interruptions with the numerus clausus restrictions then in force at Hungarian universities; however, he returned to Budapest before the 1928 amendment of the law and received his doctorate from Pázmány Péter University in 1925. Between 1920/1921 and 1922/1923 he studied art history and history at the University of Vienna, where he attended lectures by Julius von Schlosser, Max Dvořák and Hans Tietze. His dissertation dealt with Ferenc Kazinczy and the visual arts.[2][4]
Early journalism and regional art history
[edit]Already during the First World War, Csatkai published art-historical and museum-related articles in the Sopron press. In 1917 he argued for guided art walks and excursions to regional sites such as Eszterháza, Kismarton and Fraknó, and proposed temporary local exhibitions as a way to develop public taste, collecting and art-historical research.[5] In 1918 he published a series on painters from Sopron and Sopron County, treating the old county as a single cultural region that included towns and villages later divided by the Austrian-Hungarian border.[6]
His early writing also included articles on monument preservation and museum education. In 1920 he contributed to the series Amit el akarnak venni tőlünk with an essay on Kismarton, in which he described the town as part of the endangered west-Hungarian cultural inheritance and already referred to the Wolf Museum as evidence of the Roman-period culture of the town.[7] In 1922 Sopronvármegye announced his daily Soproni Naptár column and described him as a staff member and diligent researcher of Sopron's past.[8]
In the early 1920s Csatkai was a frequent contributor to the Sopron daily press, especially Sopronvármegye, where he published local-historical, art-historical and cultural articles at high frequency. From the mid-1920s his publication activity became less concentrated in the local daily press and increasingly extended to national newspapers and cultural journals. In 1925 he published historical and cultural-historical articles in national Hungarian newspapers, including the Nemzeti Újság and Magyarság, while his art-historical study Canova magyar mecénásai appeared in the national art journal Magyar Művészet.[9][10][11]
In October 1925 he organised a public cultural matinée in Sopron with projected images, lectures and musical illustrations. The programme dealt with the Renaissance and Baroque spirit, the three Sopron decades of Kristóf Lackner and a Sopron musical manuscript from 1689.[12] He was also active in the German-language cultural public sphere of Sopron: in 1925 the Oedenburger Zeitung announced a lecture by "Dr. Andreas Csatkai" at the Oedenburger Kunstverein on the old guilds of Sopron.[13]
By the mid-1930s his work had moved further into national cultural journalism. In 1935 the Sopron press reported that the Budapest-based journal Tükör had invited him to become a regular contributor; the notice added that this did not mean that he was leaving Sopron.[14] In 1939 he was admitted to the Journalists' Section of the National Hungarian Press Chamber, reflecting the fact that his work had long extended beyond museum scholarship into journalism and cultural writing.[15]
Wolf Museum and regional work around Sopron and Kismarton(Eisenstadt)
[edit]From the mid-1920s Csatkai worked for the private museum and library of the collector and patron Sándor Wolf in Eisenstadt. This work belonged to his wider activity in the Sopron–Eisenstadt(Kismarton) region, where his birthplace, schooling, museum work and later scholarship all overlapped. His early articles on the art history of his west-Hungarian homeland helped bring him into contact with Wolf.[3] Wolf employed him to catalogue and process his art collection; after a period of convalescence in Italy, Csatkai began working in Kismarton in August 1926 and thereafter spent several months a year there.[16] The Wolf Museum became an important centre of his professional work. By the 1930s the museum had grown to include 26 rooms, including a Haydn memorial room and later a Liszt room.[16]
Csatkai's work in Kismarton also connected him with the commemoration of earlier local intellectuals. In 1931 Sándor Wolf had a memorial plaque placed at his own expense on the former Kismarton residence of Franz Bizonfy, delivered the memorial speech, and Csatkai wrote Bizonfy's biography for the occasion.[17]
The Burgenland provincial museum and heritage-preservation framework was still in formation during these years. A 1926 contemporary account of the newly opened Landesmuseum in Eisenstadt stated that its origins went back only a few years and credited the understanding of several members of the Burgenland provincial government and the initiative of Alexander Wolf. Wolf made a building belonging to his firm, the Wolf-Leiner property near the Esterházy palace, available to the provincial government free of charge.[18] Csatkai's work in Kismarton and on the Eisenstadt-Rust monument topography therefore belonged to this emerging museum and heritage-preservation activity rather than to a long-established Burgenland institutional framework. Together with the Viennese art historian Dagobert Frey, he contributed to the Austrian monument-topography volume Die Denkmale des politischen Bezirkes Eisenstadt und der Freien Städte Eisenstadt und Rust, published as part of the Österreichische Kunsttopographie series in 1932.[16][19]
In the late 1920s and 1930s Csatkai became an active contributor to the emerging Burgenland scholarly and museum milieu. His studies appeared in Burgenland periodicals devoted to local history, monument preservation and museum work, including articles on Eisenstadt cemetery art, the musical culture of Eisenstadt, Haydn-related material in the Wolf Collection and Liszt iconography.[20][21][22]
Contemporary Burgenland reviews also treated his research on Sopron as relevant for Burgenland. A 1931 review of his book on Sopron goldsmiths described him as a well-known art historian through his Eisenstadt research and emphasised the presence of Sopron goldsmiths' works in several Burgenland localities.[23] In 1934 the Sopron county archive recorded that Csatkai, described as an art historian, had donated interesting Kismarton printed materials to the archive.[24]
In 1928 he helped prepare the Sopron special issue of the journal Magyar Művészet. In Kismarton he organised a Joseph Haydn exhibition in 1932 and a Franz Liszt exhibition in 1936.[1][2] He published in both Hungarian and Austrian periodicals, including Magyar Művészet, Soproni Szemle, Burgenländische Heimatblätter and the Mitteilungen des Burgenländischen Heimatschutzvereins.[25]
Csatkai also used national cultural periodicals to present material from the Wolf Museum. In 1935 he published an illustrated article in Színházi Élet on Fanny Elssler's connections with Kismarton, based on the Wolf Museum's Elssler collection. The article described the museum's Elssler room as preserving the local cult of the dancer, whose family had long-standing ties to Kismarton.[26] The Wolf Museum also formed part of a wider Jewish historical and archival project in Kismarton. Contemporary Jewish press coverage described Wolf's creation of the Jüdisches Zentralarchiv für das Burgenland, established with the consent of the Bundesdenkmalamt to collect records from the former Seven Communities of western Hungary/Burgenland.[27]
Csatkai was also involved in the Haydn memorial work in Eisenstadt. At the formal opening of the newly arranged Haydn Museum in the former house of Joseph Haydn in Eisenstadt in 1935, contemporary press reports listed Csatkai among those thanked for their contribution to the establishment of the museum.[28]
Return to Sopron and the Second World War
[edit]After the Anschluss in March 1938, Csatkai left Austria because of his Jewish origin and returned to Sopron.[16][25] His active Kismarton period appears to have ended at this point, and his later professional centre was again Sopron. Contemporary Jewish press accounts from 1939 described the Wolf Museum as having lost its original function after 1938, and reported uncertainty over the fate of its collections, library and archive.[29] In 1938 Csatkai converted to Catholicism, but the anti-Jewish laws in Hungary continued to affect him.[25] During this period he supported himself mainly through private teaching and writing, while continuing his local-history and art-historical work on Sopron and the surrounding region.[2]
In 1944, after the German occupation of Hungary, members of Sopron's secular and ecclesiastical intelligentsia petitioned for his exemption from the anti-Jewish legislation, but the attempt was unsuccessful. Csatkai was called up for forced labour in 1944. He survived the war seriously ill and almost completely deaf.[1][2]
Sopron Museum and later career
[edit]After the war Csatkai was entrusted with reorganising the damaged town museum of Sopron. He served as director of the Sopron Museum from 1945 until his retirement in 1963. Under his direction the institution resumed activity in 1947 and developed into an important regional museum.[1][2]
In 1949 Csatkai obtained a private-docent qualification in art history at the University of Szeged. In 1951 he became a member of the Art History Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and in 1952 he received the degree of Candidate of Sciences. In 1954 he and Dezső Dercsényi received the Kossuth Prize for the volume Sopron és környéke műemlékei.[2][30]
From 1955 until his death he edited the relaunched Soproni Szemle. His scholarly output was extensive: later biographical accounts describe nearly 500 publications, while other summaries refer to around a dozen books, nearly 200 studies and more than a thousand newspaper articles.[2][1] Csatkai died in Sopron on 12 March 1970 and was buried in the Old Saint Michael Cemetery there.[1][2]
Selected works
[edit]- Szépítő törekvések Sopron múltjában. Sopron, 1921.
- A soproni muzsika története. Sopron, 1925.
- Canova magyar mecénásai. Magyar Művészet, 1925.
- A XIX. század soproni festészetének és a Soproni Képzőművészeti Kör történetének vázlata. Sopron, 1927.
- A Soproni Városszépítő Egyesület évkönyve és története, 1869–1929. Sopron, 1929.
- Soproni ötvösök a XV–XIX. században. Sopron, 1931.
- Die Denkmale des politischen Bezirkes Eisenstadt und der Freien Städte Eisenstadt und Rust. Vienna, 1932. With Dagobert Frey.
- Sopron környékének műemlékei. Sopron, 1932.
- Régi soproni házak, régi soproni családok. Sopron, 1936.
- Idegenek a régi Sopronról. Sopron, 1938.
- Petőfi Sopronban. Sopron, 1948.
- Sopron és környéke műemlékei. Budapest, 1953. Edited with Dezső Dercsényi.
- Sopron. Budapest, 1954.
- A soproni képzőművészet története, 1848–1948. Sopron, 1962.
- Kazinczy és a képzőművészetek. Budapest, 1983.
Legacy
[edit]Csatkai's private library, correspondence and research materials entered the collection of the Liszt Ferenc Museum in Sopron after his death.[2] His grave was declared protected by the National Committee for Memorials and Piety in 2004.[2]
The Csatkai Endre Prize was established for young researchers of the history of Sopron and was first awarded in 1973. A street in Sopron has borne his name since 1987, and memorial plaques mark his former home in Sopron and his birthplace in Draßburg.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Csatkai Endre". Nemzeti Örökség Intézete (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kozák, Péter. "Csatkai Endre". Névpont (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ a b Schlag, Gerald (1996). "André Csatkai und das Burgenland". In Környei, Attila; G. Szende, Katalin (eds.). Tanulmányok Csatkai Endre emlékére (in German). Sopron. pp. 13–15.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "In memoriam Galavics Géza" (PDF). Soproni Szemle (in Hungarian) (3): 269–270. 2023. Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (11 September 1917). "Művészeti séták". Sopronvármegye (in Hungarian). p. 3.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (8 September 1918). "Soproni és megyei származású festők". Sopronvármegye (in Hungarian). p. 2.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (1 May 1920). "Kismarton". Sopronvármegye (in Hungarian). p. 2.
- ^ "Soproni naptár". Sopronvármegye (in Hungarian). 1 August 1922. p. 4.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (28 June 1925). "Magyar dokumentumok a "Sasfiókról": A reichstadti herceg a kortársak írásaiban". Nemzeti Újság (in Hungarian).
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (18 July 1925). "Ahol a XX. magyar dalosversenyt rendezik: Strauss János, a keringőkirály magyar polgársága". Magyarság (in Hungarian).
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (1925). "Canova magyar mecénásai". Magyar Művészet (in Hungarian): 131.
- ^ "Ma délelőtt lesz dr. Csatkai Endre kulturdélelőttje". Sopronvármegye (in Hungarian). 4 October 1925. p. 5.
- ^ "Der Oedenburger Kunstverein". Oedenburger Zeitung (in German). 10 September 1925.
- ^ "Csatkai Endre dr. állandó munkatársa lett egy nagy fővárosi lapnak". Soproni Hírlap (in Hungarian). 25 December 1935. p. 2a.
- ^ "Tagfelvételek a Sajtókamarában". Függetlenség (in Hungarian). 1 September 1939. p. 6.
- ^ a b c d Szalai, Erzsébet (2012). "A Soproni Múzeum és a tudós Csatkai Endre" (PDF). Technikatörténeti Szemle (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ "Kegyeletes ünnep Kismartonban". Soproni Hírlap (in Hungarian). 8 July 1931. p. 4.
- ^ "Das Landesmuseum in Eisenstadt". Neue Eisenstädter Zeitung (in German). 19 September 1926.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (2014). "Irodalmi tevékenységem története" (PDF). Soproni Szemle (in Hungarian). 68 (2): 193–221. Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ "Burgenland-Vierteljahrshefte für Landeskunde, Heimatschutz und Denkmalpflege". Der Freie Burgenländer (in German). 22 December 1929.
- ^ "Burgenländische Heimatblätter". Der Freie Burgenländer (in German). 17 April 1932.
- ^ "Liszt-Gedenkheft der Burgenländischen Heimatblätter". Burgenländisches Volksblatt (in German). 2 May 1936.
- ^ "Dr. Csatkai Endre: Oedenburgs Goldschmiede im Zeitraum 15. bis 19. Jahrhundert". Neue Eisenstädter Zeitung (in German). 24 May 1931. p. 10.
- ^ "Sopronvármegye az alispáni jelentés tükrében". Soproni Hírlap (in Hungarian). 27 May 1934.
- ^ a b c Törő, László Dávid (13 August 2021). "Művészettörténet határhelyzetben – Csatkai Endre munkássága a két világháború között". Újkor.hu (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 June 2026.
- ^ Csatkai, Endre (1935). "Elssler Fanny Kismartonban". Színházi Élet (in Hungarian).
- ^ "Wolf-múzeum Kismartonban (Eisenstadt)". Múlt és Jövő (in Hungarian). 1935. pp. 258–259.
- ^ "Feierliche Eröffnung eines Haydn-Museums in Eisenstadt". Neue Eisenstädter Zeitung (in German). 30 June 1935. p. 3.
- ^ "Wolf Sándor gyüjteménye". Magyar Zsidók Lapja (in Hungarian). 9 March 1939.
- ^ Anna Zádor; István Genthon, eds. (1965). "Csatkai Endre". Művészeti lexikon (in Hungarian). Vol. 1. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 456–457.
Further reading
[edit]- Környei, Attila; G. Szende, Katalin, eds. (1996). Tanulmányok Csatkai Endre emlékére. A Soproni Múzeum kiadványai (in Hungarian). Vol. 2. Sopron.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Varga, Imréné (1996). ""...öt évtizeden át támogatóm és pártfogóm voltál...": Két tudós ember, Házi Jenő és Csatkai Endre barátságának kialakulása levelezésük tükrében". In: Tanulmányok Csatkai Endre emlékére (in Hungarian): 443–456.
- Szita, Szabolcs (1984). "Csatkai Endre munkaszolgálata". Soproni Szemle (in Hungarian).
Category:1896 births
Category:1970 deaths
Category:Hungarian art historians
Category:Hungarian music historians
Category:Hungarian museologists
Category:Hungarian museum directors
Category:Hungarian journalists
Category:Hungarian writers
Category:Kossuth Prize recipients
Category:People from Sopron
Category:People from Burgenland
Category:People from Eisenstadt


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