Milan Hodza
Milan Hodza was born in Suany, Slovak Socialist Republic, Slovakia on February 1st, 1878 and is the Politician. At the age of 66, Milan Hodza biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Milan Hoda (1 February 1878 – 27 June 1944) was a Slovak politician and journalist who served from 1935 to 1938 as the Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia.
He was known for his attempts to establish a democratic federation of Central European states as a promoter of regional integration. His uncle was Fedor Hoda (a politician) and he was Michal Miloslav Hoda's nephew, a politician and poet.
Early life
Milan Hoda was born in the Lutheran parish of Szucsány in Hungary's Turóc County (present-day Sucsány, Slovakia). At the time of the Ottomans' conquest and reign, his surname (meaning master or tutor in Turkish) was given to his ancestors.
He studied gymnasiums in Besztercebánya (today Banská Bystrica, Slovakia), from 1890 to 1890 in Sopron, Nagyszeben (today Sibiu, Romania), where he passed graduation exams in 1896 before attending universities in Budapest and Vienna. In 1897, he began his career as a journalist in Budapest. He edited and founded Slovensk (1900-1911) and the weekly Slovensk (no. 1914). He was editor of the Austrian press office in Vienna from 1916 to 1918.
Political career until 1918
From 1905 to 1910, he served as a deputy in the government of Hungary's parliament. He became the ideological leader and founder of Slovak agrarianism as a member of the Slovak National Party, Austria-Hungarian's only Slovak National Party. He served as Vice Chairman of the Slovak National Party from 1906 to 1914. Since the party did not endorse his agrarian programme, he planned to form his own political party but was halted by World War I.
After the 1910 elections, Milan Hoda, a close aide to Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the successor to the Austrian and Hungarian thrones. He sent the Archduke a detailed plan to convert Hungary's Kingdom into a federative monarchy, which also included a separate Slovak Republic. The Archduke hoped that federalization would strengthen the links between the oppressed non-Magyar countries and the monarchy, but the Hungarian political elite opposed his proposal.
Milan Hoda was involved in the preparations for the establishment of Czecho-Slovakia during World War I. He served on the 1918–1919 Slovak National Council as a signatory to the Declaration of the Slovak Nation, which was the first signatory to the Slovak Republic's establishment in 1918.