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Frigyes Riedl (September 12, 1856 in Ladomér – August 7, 1921 in Budapest) was a prominent Hungarian essayist, critic and literary historian. His most famous work is Arany János (1887), the earliest study of poet János Arany.[1][2] He is also noted for his books on eighteenth- and nineteeth-century Hungarian literature, and for A History of Hungarian Literature (1906), which was intended as a primer for English-speaking audiences unfamiliar with Hungarian literature.[3] He was a professor of Hungarian literature at the University of Budapest[citation needed] and a regular contributor to the literary review Budapesti Szemle.[4] With other Hungarian literary figures, especially Jenõ Péterfy, he tried to establish unique criteria for Hungarian literary criticism.[5]
^Neubauer, John; Cornis-Pope, Marcel, eds. (2004). History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe. J. Benjamins. pp. 252–253. ISBN9789027234520.
^Szili, József (1997). "The global comparatist (A few 'do it'-s)". Neohelicon. 24 (2): 71–78.