The native form of this personal name is Schulek Frigyes. This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals.
Frigyes Schulek
Frigyes Schulek (ca. 1896)
Born
Friedrich Schuleck
(1841-11-19)19 November 1841
Pest, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire
Died
(1919-09-05)5 September 1919
Balatonlelle, Hungarian Republic
Nationality
Hungarian
Alma mater
Technical University of Budapest (1857–1860) Academy of Fine Arts Vienna (1861–1867)
Occupation
Architect
Spouse
Johanna Schulek
Children
János Margit Márta Irén Klára Paula Erika
Parent(s)
Ágoston Schulek Auguszta Zsigmondy
Practice
Technical University of Budapest
Hungarian University of Fine Arts
Buildings
Elizabeth Lookout Fisherman's Bastion Matthias Church
Bust of Frigyes Schulek, sculpted by Alajos Stróbl
Frigyes Schulek (19 November 1841 – 5 September 1919) was a Hungarian architect,[1] a professor at József Technical University and a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Magyar Tudományos Akadémia).
^Schulek Frigyes, Hungarian Electronic Library, retrieved 15 May 2012 (in Hungarian)
FrigyesSchulek (19 November 1841 – 5 September 1919) was a Hungarian architect, a professor at József Technical University and a member of the Hungarian...
1874 and 1896, a major rebuilding took place, under the architect FrigyesSchulek, which restored the original image of the building. The stone carving...
Sciences. Around the end of the 19th century, along with Miklós Ybl and FrigyesSchulek, Steindl was the most significant architect within the lands of the...
was named after Empress Elisabeth, wife of Emperor Franz Joseph I. FrigyesSchulek was the architect. The tower is near Budapest's District XII, and may...
and inventor) Ernő Rubik (Architect, inventor of mechanical puzzles) FrigyesSchulek (Architect of the Fisherman's Bastion) Erzsébet Simonyi (1915–1993)...
position in Göttingen in early March. He was a cousin of the architect FrigyesSchulek, whose mother was Auguszta Zsigmondy. He is also related to the violinist...
behind that is the Fisherman's Bastion, built in 1905 by the architect FrigyesSchulek, the Fishermen's Bastions owes its name to the namesake corporation...
Crafts" architect and furniture designer (born 1864) 5 September – FrigyesSchulek, Hungarian architect (born 1841) 15 October – Adolf W. Edelsvärd, Swedish...
Franz Heinrich Schwechten, German architect (died 1924) November 19 – FrigyesSchulek, Hungarian architect (died 1919) October 9 – Karl Friedrich Schinkel...
Exchange buildings in Vienna. After returning to Budapest he worked with FrigyesSchulek on the Matthias Church in Buda and later in the offices of Alajos Hauszmann...
Flóris Korb Kálmán Giergl Béla Lajta Samu Pecz J. Ferenc Raichle [hu] FrigyesSchulek After he died on March 23, 1900, his son Miklós Zsolnay took over the...
(1813–1874) Gyula Rochlitz (1825–1886) Albert Schickedanz (1846–1915) FrigyesSchulek (1841–1919) Imre Steindl (1839–1902) Miklós Ybl (1814–1891) Károly...
and model to many younger architects, including Friedrich Grünanger, FrigyesSchulek, Imre Steindl, and Karl Troll. A bronze statue of him has been placed...
Opera House, Vámház körút; Gusztáv Petschacher and Alajos Hauszmann). FrigyesSchulek (1841-1919) and Imre Steindl (1839-1902) were involved in resurrecting...
Zsigmondy's theorem is named after him. He was a cousin of the architect FrigyesSchulek, whose mother was Auguszta Zsigmondy. 1879 - Ascent of Feldkopf (3...
not complete their one-year term. 1872–73 — Áron Berde 1873–74 — Vilmos Schulek, Béla Machik 1874–75 — Henrik Finály 1875–76 — Géza Entz 1876–77 — Gusztáv...
from the original on 21 October 2022. Retrieved 21 October 2022. "V von Schulek". The Nobel Prize. April 2020. Archived from the original on 21 October...
Kaszás (1989–1990) Dr. Ágoston Schulek (1991–2001) Barna Héder (2001–2002) Gusztáv Rábold (2002–2007) Dr. Ágoston Schulek (2x) (2008–2009) Miklós Gyulai...