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Biography

Sámuel Teleki de Szék, Chancellor of Transylvania, was born 17 November 1739 in Gornești, Mureș County, Romania to Sándor Teleki de Szék (1679-1754) and Zsuzsanna Nagy de Petek (c1705-1748) and died 7 August 1822 Vienna, Austria of unspecified causes. He married Zsuzsanna Bethlen de Iktár (1754-1797) 13 November 1769 in Dragu, Sălaj County, Romania.

Count Sámuel Teleki de Szék (17 November 1739, Gornești – 7 August 1822, Vienna), Chancellor of Transylvania, famous book collector, founder of the Teleki Library in Târgu Mureş (Marosvásárhely), Transylvania. He was the great-grandfather of the explorer Sámuel Teleki.[1]

Biography

Count Sámuel Teleki de Szék was born in the village of Gornești, Mureș County on 17 November 1739. A crucial time of his years of preparation was the four-year study tour he performed in Europe (1759–1763), the most important stops of which were in Basel, Utrecht, Leiden, and Paris. His impressions triggered the idea to found a library; few people knew more about books at the time.

During his university years, he made up a well-devised plan to build out a book-supplying network. Arriving home he settled on his Dumbrăvioara Hungarian: Sáromberke estate near the village in which he was born. This is where he started his activity toward the reformation of Transylvanian Protestant public education. He funded scientific and cultural activities, provided financial aid for writers, scholars as well as Transylvanian students studying abroad. After twenty years of intensive research, in 1784 he published the most complete edition of Janus Pannonius’ works.

He entered public service in 1774 as főispan of Küküllő County and later of Bihar County and Máramaros County . In 1787, he was summoned to Vienna and appointed Chancellor-Assistant of Transylvania by Emperor Joseph II. From 1791 until his death, Sámuel Teleki was Chancellor of Transylvania. Teleki's moving to Vienna brought him closer to the European book-trade and diversified his sources of supply. According to the accounts and book orders available, Teleki purchased books from as many as twenty-five European cities. During six decades of systematic collection, Teleki managed to acquire many significant works published since the advent of printing.

Sámuel Teleki died in Vienna, on 7 August 1822. He was buried in Dumbrăvioara, in the family crypt.

References

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Children


Offspring of Sámuel Teleki de Szék and Zsuzsanna Bethlen de Iktár (1754-1797)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Domokos Teleki de Szék (1773-1798)
Mária Teleki de Szék (aft1769-)
Ferenc Teleki de Szék (1787-1861) 26 February 1787 Oradea, Romania 11 December 1861 Dumbrăvioara, Mureș County, Romania Erzsébet Bánffy de Losoncz (1794-1853)






Footnotes (including sources)

‡ General


This page uses content from the English language Wikipedia. The original content was at Sámuel Teleki de Szék (1739-1822). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with this Familypedia wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
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