Politician, Minister of Justice of the first Hungarian Government,
the main organiser of the Austrian-Hungarian Compromise
He
came of a medium-landowner family from Zala county. His mother
died at his birth, his father died early too. First, he was bred
by relatives, later by his elder brother and sister. Between 1817
and 1821 he studied law and philosophy in Gyôr. From 1821 he worked
as an articled clerk in Pest, he qualified as lawyer in 1823.
He worked as a county solicitor, as a clerk of the chancery,
as a chairman of the chancery, and a judge of the County Court.
In 1832 he temporarily substituted his
brother, Antal, the Lord Lieutenants Deputy, who was then elected
a parlimentary delegate. When his brother resigned from his post
of a delegate in 1833, Ferenc was sent into the parliament instead
of him (1832 36).
He soon gained great respect among the politicians at the diet,
he spoke in
connection with several cases: eg.: the case of peasantry, freedom
of religion and speech, the case of the Hungarian language, the
situation of the Polish. Especially, he played an important role
in the negotiations of the case of the peasantry. Hence in Zala
county Deák was the correspondent of the Municipal Reports issued
by Kossuth, the
director of the royal legal affairs wanted to take action against
him. Deák played an
important part in the compromise made with the court at the Diet
of 1839/40, which
released the illegally imprisoned people. He participated in
the work of the committee that the diet established to present
a Bill about a new criminal code. They came forward with several
improvements: the abolishment of manorial court and death penalty,
the establishment of juries and law court of experts etc. Unfortunately,
their
recommendations were not codified by the Diet of 1843/44.
At the Diet of 1847/48 he did not even stand as a candidate;
his illness that started to become serious from 1845, and his
inner problems took part in it (his travels to Switzerland and
to Batavia were to cure his diseases). He was also interested
in
economic problems, in his speech in Szentgrót in 1845 he called
upon the population to support home industry. The efforts at
parting the opposition failed because of him in the 1840s. The
Declaration of the Opposition that aimed the union of the different
wings of the opposition was written by him.
Nevertheless, he took part in the work of the last feudal diet
(from 20th March 1848), this way he could participate in making
the April Laws. He accepted the offered post of the Minister
of Justice of the first Hungarian Government. The results of
his work as a minister were the order about the press jury and
the parliamentary decision about the abolishment of paying tithe
on grapes. His further plans to prepare the new civil and penal
code, and to abolish the feudal remainings could not be carried
out in times of war. At the end of August with the help of Batthyány
he tried to solve the
conflicts in Vienna without any success. He resigned from his
post as a minister after the Croatian attack in September. He
was appointed into the first representative
parliament as a deputy, which post he kept after the September
of 1848 as well.
He was left out of the retorsions, nevertheless in spring in
1850 the Army Court of Pécs took action against him, but it was
squashed because he did not participate at the diet that announced
the dethronement. In 1850 the Minister of Justice of the empire,
Schmerling invited him to a common law conference, he rejected
the offer. With this, he set an example of not cooperating with
the Austrian government, he became the leading figure of the
passive resistance. In the 1850s the importance of his personality
increased a lot, because other great politicians of the reform
era were executed, imprisoned, or had to emigrate. After selling
his properties he moved to Pest. The importance of his personality
was proved by his getting an invitation into the court at the
very end of 1860, his meeting with Joseph Francis did not succeed
this time. He rejected the post of the Lord Chief Justice that
was offered to him, on the other hand he participated at the
meeting of the Lord Chief Justice at the beginning of 1861. The
inner district of Pest elected him a representative for the Diet
of 1861, he was the leader of the Representation Party against
the Decision Party of László Teleki. His party won, his
second decision Bill was unanimously accepted by the parliament.
He took a great part in that the Austrian-Hungarian Compromise
was finally made in 1867. The important part of his tactics were
the use of reasons of legal history and
endeavours to an agreement. He was an excellent rhetor and tactician.
His famous Easter Article issued in 1865 had a great importance
in speeding up the Compromise negotiations. He tried to reconcile
the union of the empire with the Hungarian aim of
independence (with the base of 1848), so allowances had to be
made concerning the common affairs. The negotiations were directed
by him all along, he suggested Gyula Andrássy to be the Prime
Minister, he did not overtake a minister post in the Government
of Andrássy set in 1867. He did not accept titles and awards
either.
He rejected to participate in the crowning ceremony.
At the diet he was held to be the leader of his party from that
time as well. He did a lot to pass the 1868 Act of the nationalities.
Nevertheless, he did not manage to achieve the set up of the
state court (constitutional court). In his last parliamentary
speech he spoke for the division of the Church and for the civil
marriage. He looked on the
political life with a critical eye: the disintegration of his
party, financial and personal
interests coming to the front, the rapidly changing governments.
A magnificient funeral was organized for this puritan man, later
a mausoleum was built for him, and in 1887 his statue was erected
on the bank of the Danube.