Gyula III, the gyula who was defeated by King Stephen I of Hungary around 1003
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Gyula II, the gyula who was baptized in Constantinople around 950
Gyula Horn | Gyula | Gyula O. H. Katona | Gyula Nagy | Gyula Katona | Gyula Illyés | Gyula Y. Katona | Gyula Trebitsch | Gyula Szentessy | Gyula Sax | Gyula Pártos | Gyula Kosice | Gyula Kornis | Gyula III | Gyula II | Gyula Grosics | Gyula Andrássy |
In 1991 he graduated from Juhász Gyula Teacher Training College of Szeged as a teacher of Hungarian language, literature, history.
His memorials include Ferenc Erkel Memorial in Gyula, Lajos Kossuth Memorial in Makó and Hódmezővásárhely, György Bessenyei Memorial in Nyíregyháza, Dániel Irányi Memorial, Mihály Vörösmarty Memorial in Nyíregyháza (together with Ede Telcs in 1908) and Ferenc Kölcsey Memorial (1939) in Budapest.
Gyula Bezerédi (1858–1925) was a prolific Hungarian sculptor, best remembered in the United States for his 1906 statue of George Washington in Budapest.
Gyula Y. Katona, Hungarian mathematician and son of Gyula O. H. Katona
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Gyula O. H. Katona, Hungarian mathematician and father of Gyula Y. Katona
Gyula Krajczár (1953–1998) was a Hungarian politician, who served as mayor of Komárom between 1990 and 1998.
Gyula Sax participated twice in a row in the Candidates Tournament after qualifying at the Subotica Interzonal in 1987 and at the Manila Interzonal in 1990 respectively but was eliminated in the Candidates in 1988 by Nigel Short (+0=3−2) and in 1991 after extra-time by then sixty years old Viktor Korchnoi (+1=6-1; +0 =1-1 rapid chess).
Gyula Szentessy (b. Oradea, 18 December 1870 - d. Budapest, 30 October 1905) was a Hungarian poet.
Gyula Tornai (Görgő, 1861 - Budapest, 1928) was a Hungarian painter, now featured in the Hungarian National Gallery.
Gyula Y. Katona (born December 4, 1965) is a Hungarian mathematician, the son of mathematician Gyula O. H. Katona.
Subsequently, he was an assistant at the private observatory of Miklos von Konkoly-Thege in O'Gyula, Hungary (now Hurbanovo, Slovakia).
She married Count Gyula Andrássy de Csíkszentkirály et Krasznahorka in Paris, on 9 July 1856, when Andrássy lived in emigration after defeat of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848.
The board of editorial advisors include David Oderberg, Paul Richard Blum, David Clemenson, Rolf Darge, Petr Dvořák, Costantino Esposito, Edward Feser, James Franklin, Michael Gorman, Jorge J.E. Gracia, Daniel Heider, Rafael Hüntelmann, Gyula Klima, Sven K. Knebel, Simo Knuutila, Ulrich G. Leinsle, Pavel Materna, Uwe Meixner, Roberto Hoffmeister Pich, Edmund Runggaldier, Stanislav Sousedik, Jacob Schmutz, and others.