Archbishop of Canterbury | Archbishop | Archbishop of York | archbishop | Archbishop of Dublin | Esztergom | Archbishop of Cashel | Archbishop of Glasgow | Archbishop of Armagh | Archbishop of Cologne | Archbishop of Tuam | The Archbishop Lanfranc School | Archbishop of Santiago | György Lukács | Archbishop of Uppsala | Archbishop of Melbourne | Archbishop of Dublin (Roman Catholic) | William Temple (archbishop) | Joscius, Archbishop of Tyre | Death Comes for the Archbishop | Archdiocese of Esztergom | Archbishop of Westminster | Archbishop of Dublin (Church of Ireland) | Archbishop of Bremen | Archbishop of Birmingham | Ado (archbishop) | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Esztergom-Budapest | Richard Palmer (archbishop) | Poppo (Archbishop of Trier) | Lukács |
He was associated with some of the most important European writers and intellectuals, such as Sartre, Brecht, Barthes and Lukács.
In 1161, inspired by the new Archbishop of Esztergom, Lukács, Géza not only acknowledged the legitimacy of Pope Alexander III instead of Antipope Victor IV, who had been supported by Emperor Frederick I, but he also renounced the right of investiture.
EP President Martin Schulz, former German foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, President János Áder, former presidents László Sólyom and Pál Schmitt, Archbishop Péter Erdő and former parliamentary speaker Katalin Szili were also in attendance, as well as representatives of the Socialist party, Fidesz, Christian Democrats, PM and DK, among others.
László Lékai (12 March 1910 – 30 June 1986) was Archbishop of Esztergom and a Cardinal.
László Lukács (1850–1932), a Hungarian politician who served as prime minister from 1912 to 1913
Gonzalez worked together with conductors such as Georges Prêtre, Iván Fisher, Gianluigi Gelmetti, Ervin Lukács, Kuijken, Will Humburg, W. Gönnenwein, and with directors as Gianfranco de Bosio, Pierluigi Pizzi, etc.
Pál Kadosa: Concertino for Viola and Orchestra – Pál Lukács (viola); Miklós Erdélyi (conductor); Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra; Hungaroton (LP) SLPX 11859 (1977)
In 2010 he organised the Spirit and Sound and String and Spirit performer nights with such musicians like Bea Palya, Ági Szalóki, Miklós Lukács, Kálmán Balogh, Rózsa Farkas, and the Miklós Lukács Quintet.
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Since 2003 and 2006 he plays in such multi-faceted formations like Mitsoura (Mónika Miczura, András Monori, Márk Moldvai, Miklós Lukács, Éva Mandula), the Miklós Lukács Quintet (Miklós Lukács, Mátyás Szandai, András Dés, Kristóf Bacsó), the M. Trio (Evelin Tóth, Dániel Kardos) and the Rubái Trió (Szabolcs Szőke and Evelin Tóth), etc.
Lukács was an important influence on Lucien Goldmann's Towards a Sociology of the Novel, Alan Swingewood's discussion of the sociology of the novel in Part 3 of Laurenson and Swingewood's The Sociology of Literature and Franco Moretti's Signs Taken for Wonders.