Mór Jellinek

Mór Jellinek

Mór Jellinek, (in places Móric Jellinek or Jelinek) (Uherský Brod (Magyarbród), 1823 - Budapest, 13 June 1883) was an economist, wholesaler, president of the grain warehouse, and general manager of the Budapest Road Railway Company. Father of Arthur Jellinek, lawyer and Member of Parliament, uncle of Emil Jellinek, one of Daimler's investors.

 

Her life story

He studied at the Universities of Prague and Leipzig. He took an active part in the Austrian revolutionary movements of 1848 and founded a libertarian newspaper in Brno and later in Krems to promote them. Through his brother, Dr. Armin Jellinek, who was sentenced to death together with Blum and Messenhauser, he was in contact with the Vienna revolutionary leaders. In the early 1850s, he went to Pest, where he worked on economic literature. Later he opened a wholesale business and became president of the grain exchange, in which capacity he initiated the establishment of the stock exchange court. In 1864 he initiated the horse-drawn railway, from which time on he devoted all his activities to it; he became the general manager of the railway. Until his death, he remained General Manager of the Pesti and later Budapest Railway Company.

Written by

Articles in the Illustriertes Israelitisches Jahrbuch (I. 1859. Die Israeliten Ungarns auf ökonomischem Gebiete), in Gazdasági Lapok (1860. Hungarian grain exports to Germany and England, Purification of grain, 1861. A data for the statistics of Hungarian grain trade, On the matter of raising export trade. The Hungarian milling industry in our country), Honban (in 1861-62 he headed the national economics column; he launched a successful movement for the Hungarianization of trade and wrote expert studies on grain prices, the organization of national statistics, 1863. and following nos. Additions to statistics and articles on national economy under J-K, no. 100.

Works by

  • program for a combinatorial field economic trust business. Pest, 1861.
  • Low cereal prices. Pest and Vienna, 1865.

Sources

  • Mór Jelliner. In József Szinnyei: Lives and works of Hungarian writers. Bp., 1891-1914. Hornyánszky, Viktor.
  • Mór Jellinek. In Hungarian Jewish lexicon. Ed. Péter Ujvári. Bp., Jewish Lexicon, 1929.

Source: wikipedia

Born: 1823

Place of birth: Uherský Brod

Date of death: 1883.06.13

Place of death: Budapest

Occupation: economist, wholesaler

Parents: Isaac Löw Jellinek, Sara Back

Spouses:

Children: Arthur Jellinek, Henrik Jellinek

Author:

Born: 1823

Place of birth: Uherský Brod

Date of death: 1883.06.13

Place of death: Budapest

Occupation: economist, wholesaler

Parents: Isaac Löw Jellinek, Sara Back

Spouses:

Children: Arthur Jellinek, Henrik Jellinek

Author:

Mór Jellinek

Mór Jellinek, (in places Móric Jellinek or Jelinek) (Uherský Brod (Magyarbród), 1823 - Budapest, 13 June 1883) was an economist, wholesaler, president of the grain warehouse, and general manager of the Budapest Road Railway Company. Father of Arthur Jellinek, lawyer and Member of Parliament, uncle of Emil Jellinek, one of Daimler's investors.

 

Her life story

He studied at the Universities of Prague and Leipzig. He took an active part in the Austrian revolutionary movements of 1848 and founded a libertarian newspaper in Brno and later in Krems to promote them. Through his brother, Dr. Armin Jellinek, who was sentenced to death together with Blum and Messenhauser, he was in contact with the Vienna revolutionary leaders. In the early 1850s, he went to Pest, where he worked on economic literature. Later he opened a wholesale business and became president of the grain exchange, in which capacity he initiated the establishment of the stock exchange court. In 1864 he initiated the horse-drawn railway, from which time on he devoted all his activities to it; he became the general manager of the railway. Until his death, he remained General Manager of the Pesti and later Budapest Railway Company.

Written by

Articles in the Illustriertes Israelitisches Jahrbuch (I. 1859. Die Israeliten Ungarns auf ökonomischem Gebiete), in Gazdasági Lapok (1860. Hungarian grain exports to Germany and England, Purification of grain, 1861. A data for the statistics of Hungarian grain trade, On the matter of raising export trade. The Hungarian milling industry in our country), Honban (in 1861-62 he headed the national economics column; he launched a successful movement for the Hungarianization of trade and wrote expert studies on grain prices, the organization of national statistics, 1863. and following nos. Additions to statistics and articles on national economy under J-K, no. 100.

Works by

  • program for a combinatorial field economic trust business. Pest, 1861.
  • Low cereal prices. Pest and Vienna, 1865.

Sources

  • Mór Jelliner. In József Szinnyei: Lives and works of Hungarian writers. Bp., 1891-1914. Hornyánszky, Viktor.
  • Mór Jellinek. In Hungarian Jewish lexicon. Ed. Péter Ujvári. Bp., Jewish Lexicon, 1929.

Source: wikipedia