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Early career[edit]

Wesselényi entered politics in 1818, taking minor positions at numerous County Diets, as was
customary with the upper nobility his family belonged to. He went on a grand tour of Western Europe
with his friend, Count István Széchenyi in 1821 and 1822. Realizing their native Hungary's need to
catch up with the development of other European states, they become leading figures of the
progressive opposition in the Upper House, promoting a program of reform and economic and national
development.[3] Hungary was under the foreign rule of the Habsburg emperors, who treated any native
reform movement with deep suspicion. The Habsburg government, fearing unrest and independence
efforts, took increasingly oppressive measures to curb the nationalist movement.

Accomplishments[edit]
Wesselényi abolished several feudal laws and customs on his own estates, freed his serfs, built and ran
schools on his own money, and organized lectures on modern agriculture for his former subjects. He
established a printing press in Kolozsvár to promote his ideas.
In 1833 he published a political book titled Prejudices (Balítéletek),[2] which was immediately banned by
the Habsburg government.[3]
In the Diet of 1834, he became one of the political leaders of the opposition. He held several speeches
on current topics attacking feudal institutions, and printed and distributed the minutes of the Diet in
order to give publicity to the debates.[3] For these activities, the government took him to trial for inciting
unrest, operating a printing press without royal permission, and also for one of his speeches, where he
called for general land-redemption. His long-lasting trials (two at the same time) became a focal point of
the country's political life and reform movement. His legal representative was Ferenc Kölcsey.
During the 1838 Pest Flood, he saved many lives by rowing about the flooded city and rescuing people
from rooftops, gaining nationwide admiration.

Prison[edit]
Finally his trials ended and he was sentenced to 3 years in prison. After serving 2 months in the
casemates of the Buda castle, he started to suffer from a serious eye ailment, and he was permitted to
travel to Gräfenberg (now Lázně Jeseník) in Silesia with his family in order to cure his illness. He
returned in 1843, almost completely blind and a wreck of his former self. He moved back to Zsibó, and
served in minor positions within the local county government. Subsequently, he did much for
agriculture, children's homes and the introduction and extension of the silk industry in Hungary.[2]

Last years[edit]

Wesselényi Monument, built 1902 in Zalău by János Fadrusz


Seriously ill, he still took part in the initial stages of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, and had a key
role in persuading the Transylvanian Diet to proclaim union with Hungary, one of the important goals of
the Revolution. Seeing the development and radicalization of the events, similar to his friend, Count
Széchenyi, and also many from the reform-minded aristocracy, he also became disillusioned. In
September 1848 he left the country under the pretext of continuing his medical treatment in Gräfenberg.
He stayed there, accompanied by his wife, Anna Lux, who faithfully supported and tended him through
his illness.
Wesselényi died in 1850, while returning to Hungary from Gräfenberg.
Among his other accomplishments, he is remembered for his support of the development of Hungarian
agriculture, the introduction and extension of the silk industry, and his support for children's homes and
child care. He was elected to the Board of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1830, and in 1831 he
received honorary membership of the institution.
From 1902, a statue of Wesselényi by artist János Fadrusz has stood in the center of Zalău.

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