Antal K. Bejczy (January 16, 1930 – June 25, 2015) was a Hungarian scientist and a national of the
United States known for his contributions to
robotics.
Dr.
Sándor Gombos (1895–1968), saber fencer, Olympic champion
Gyula Grosics, goalkeeper for Golden Magyar soccer team undefeated from 1950 to 1954
Béla Guttmann (1900–1981), midfielder, national team football player, international coach; forced laborer in the Holocaust
Andrea Gyarmati, Olympic swimmer silver (100-meter backstroke) and bronze (100-meter butterfly); world championships bronze (200-meter backstroke), International Swimming Hall of Fame
Dezső Gyarmati, water polo player (triple Olympic champion)
Alfréd Hajós (born Arnold Guttmann; 1878–1955), swimmer three-time Olympic champion (100-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle relay, 1,500-meter freestyle), International Swimming Hall of Fame
Endre Kabos (1906–1944), saber fencer, three-time Olympic champion, bronze; killed while a forced laborer in the Holocaust
Janos Kajdi (1939-1992), Hungarian-born boxer who competed at the 1964, 1968 and 1972 Olympics in the lightweight, light-welterweight and welterweight divisions, he won a Silver medal in 1972.
Garry Kallos (born 1956), Hungarian-born Canadian wrestler and sambo competitor
Béla Károlyi (born 1942), premier gymnastics coach (ethnic Hungarian, lived in Romania, now a US citizen)
Károly Kárpáti (also known as Károly Kellner), Olympic champion wrestler (freestyle lightweight), silver
Ágnes Keleti (born 1921), five-time Olympic gymnastics champion[8]
List of Hungarians who were born outside present-day Hungary
The borders of Hungary have changed substantially in the past century. Many places once part of Hungary now belong to neighboring countries. The list is organised by country of birth and those listed have the name of their birthplace (in parentheses) as it is currently named.
^Crowley, David; Kromschröder, Jan; Muskovics, Gyula (2017). Muskovics, Gyula; Soós, Andrea (eds.).
Tamás Király '80s. Translated by Erőss, Nikolett; Jones, Lucy; Laki, Júlia; Soós, Andrea. Budapest:
Tranzit.hu.
ISBN978-615-80566-3-2.
^Csipes, Antal; Fabényi, Julia; Hermann, Veronika; Keszeg, Anna; Horváth, Zsolt K.; Király, Iliász; Muskovics, Gyula; Soós, Andrea; Timár, Katalin (2020). Timár, Katalin (ed.).
Tamás Király. Out of the box. Budapest:
Ludwig Museum [
hu].
ISBN978-963-9537-74-3. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
Antal K. Bejczy (January 16, 1930 – June 25, 2015) was a Hungarian scientist and a national of the
United States known for his contributions to
robotics.
Dr.
Sándor Gombos (1895–1968), saber fencer, Olympic champion
Gyula Grosics, goalkeeper for Golden Magyar soccer team undefeated from 1950 to 1954
Béla Guttmann (1900–1981), midfielder, national team football player, international coach; forced laborer in the Holocaust
Andrea Gyarmati, Olympic swimmer silver (100-meter backstroke) and bronze (100-meter butterfly); world championships bronze (200-meter backstroke), International Swimming Hall of Fame
Dezső Gyarmati, water polo player (triple Olympic champion)
Alfréd Hajós (born Arnold Guttmann; 1878–1955), swimmer three-time Olympic champion (100-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle relay, 1,500-meter freestyle), International Swimming Hall of Fame
Endre Kabos (1906–1944), saber fencer, three-time Olympic champion, bronze; killed while a forced laborer in the Holocaust
Janos Kajdi (1939-1992), Hungarian-born boxer who competed at the 1964, 1968 and 1972 Olympics in the lightweight, light-welterweight and welterweight divisions, he won a Silver medal in 1972.
Garry Kallos (born 1956), Hungarian-born Canadian wrestler and sambo competitor
Béla Károlyi (born 1942), premier gymnastics coach (ethnic Hungarian, lived in Romania, now a US citizen)
Károly Kárpáti (also known as Károly Kellner), Olympic champion wrestler (freestyle lightweight), silver
Ágnes Keleti (born 1921), five-time Olympic gymnastics champion[8]
List of Hungarians who were born outside present-day Hungary
The borders of Hungary have changed substantially in the past century. Many places once part of Hungary now belong to neighboring countries. The list is organised by country of birth and those listed have the name of their birthplace (in parentheses) as it is currently named.
^Crowley, David; Kromschröder, Jan; Muskovics, Gyula (2017). Muskovics, Gyula; Soós, Andrea (eds.).
Tamás Király '80s. Translated by Erőss, Nikolett; Jones, Lucy; Laki, Júlia; Soós, Andrea. Budapest:
Tranzit.hu.
ISBN978-615-80566-3-2.
^Csipes, Antal; Fabényi, Julia; Hermann, Veronika; Keszeg, Anna; Horváth, Zsolt K.; Király, Iliász; Muskovics, Gyula; Soós, Andrea; Timár, Katalin (2020). Timár, Katalin (ed.).
Tamás Király. Out of the box. Budapest:
Ludwig Museum [
hu].
ISBN978-963-9537-74-3. Retrieved 31 July 2023.