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・ László Rédei
・ László Régi
・ László Répási
・ László Salamon
・ László Schäffer
・ László Sebestyén
・ László Sepsi
・ László Seregi
・ László Simari
・ László Sinkó
・ László Skultéty
・ László Sombori
・ László Horváth (footballer, born 1988)
・ László Horváth (modern pentathlete)
・ László Horváth (politician)
László Hudec
・ László Hunyady de Kéthely
・ László Háry
・ László Háy
・ László Hódi
・ László Hódi (diver)
・ László Iván
・ László Jakabházy
・ László Jeney
・ László Jánovszki
・ László Jávor
・ László Kalmár
・ László Kamuti
・ László Kapolyi
・ László Karakó


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László Hudec : ウィキペディア英語版
László Hudec

László Ede Hudec or Ladislav Hudec ((ハンガリー語:Hugyecz László Ede))〔 (Besztercebánya, January 8, 1893 – Berkeley, October 26, 1958) was a Hungarian - Slovak〔 architect active in Shanghai from 1918 to 1945 and responsible for some of that city's most notable structures. Major works include the Park Hotel, the Grand Theater, the Joint Savings and Loan building, the combined Baptist Publications and Christian Literature Society buildings, and the post-modern "Green House". Hudec's style evolved during his active period, from the eclectic neo-classicism popular in the early 20th century to art deco and modern buildings toward the later part of his career. Although some of his buildings have been lost in the intervening decades, many survive.
==Biography==

Hudec was born in 1893 in Besztercebánya, Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary (now Banská Bystrica, Slovakia).〔 His father, György Hugyecz was a wealthy magyarized〔Originally Juraj Hudec, he changed his Slovak name "Hudec" to the Hungarian form "Hugyecz" in 1890. ()〕 Slovak〔〔Peter G. Rowe, Seng Kuan, ''Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China'', MIT Press, 2004, p.58〕〔''Modern Chinese literature and culture'', vol.18-19, Foreign Language Publications, 2006, p.45〕 architect, born in the nearby village of Felsőmicsinye (now Horná Mičiná), while his mother, Paula Skultéty was an ethnic Hungarian〔 from Košice. He studied architecture at Budapest University from 1911 to 1914.〔Warr, Anne: ''Shanghai Architecture'', The Watermark Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-949284-76-1〕 As a patriotic Austro-Hungarian citizen, Hudec volunteered to join the army after outbreak of World War I, but was captured by the Russian Army in 1916 and was sent to a prison camp in Siberia.〔 While being transferred, he jumped from a train near the Chinese border and made his way to Shanghai, where he joined the American architectural office R.A. Curry.〔
In 1925 he opened his own practice,〔 and was responsible for at least 37 buildings up to 1941.
After the Munich Agreement, (1938) Hudec lost his Czechoslovak citizenship and applied to become Hungarian citizen.〔 In 1941 he obtained a Hungarian passport and was appointed Honorary Consul of Hungary in Shanghai.〔
Hudec's masterpiece is usually considered to be the 22-story Park Hotel Shanghai, on Nanjing Road across from People's Square. Built in 1934, it was the tallest building in the city until the 1980s, and is still a local landmark.
After leaving Shanghai in 1947 Hudec moved to Lugano and later to Rome. In 1950 he moved to Berkeley where he taught at the University of California. He died from heart-attack during an earth quake in 1958. In 1970 his remains were buried in an evangelic cemetery in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=EXPO 2010 Slovakia Pavilion Official website )

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