Erzsébet Andics

From the longer Hungarian Wikipedia page

Erzsébet Andics (born May 26, 1902, Budapest, 2 April 1986) Soviet-Hungarian historian, communist politician and university professor is a regular member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. From 1949 to 1958 she was the president of the Hungarian Historical Society.

Between 1946 and 1953 she worked at the Party College of the MDP, in 1953-1954 she became the first deputy of the Minister of Education, between 1954 and 1956 she was the head of the Cultural Department of the MDP KV.

On October 28, 1956, she was transported to Moscow with her husband Andor Berei and other politicians. Andics and Berei returned to Szolnok on November 5, where the Free People was formed as leaders of the information group of the Hungarian Revolutionary Workers' Peasant Government (first János Kádár government). On November 16, 1956, with Ander Berei, they migrated to the Soviet Union, where they returned home in April 1958. During their absence, in 1957, they were included in the MSZMP from the MDP, but the first Kádár government classified them as fallen cancerists and deprived them of their parliamentary mandate and all other public office positions at the same time they were "excluded" by them. No significant political or public office could be obtained anymore. The decision did not affect their professional careers.

Andics was president of the Hungarian Historical Society between 1949-1958 and chairman of the National Peace Council in 1950-56. From 1950 to 1974 she was head of department at the Budapest University of Science. She also published in Russian, German and French.