PSYCHOLOGIST

Léopold Szondi

1893 - 1986

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Léopold Szondi (Hungarian: Szondi Lipót [ˈsondi ˈlipoːt]; March 11, 1893 – January 24, 1986) was a Hungarian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, psychopathologist and Professor of psychology. Founder of the concept of fate analysis. He is known for the now-discredited psychological tool that bears his name, the Szondi test. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Léopold Szondi is the 146th most popular psychologist (down from 139th in 2019), the 70th most popular biography from Slovakia and the most popular Slovak Psychologist.

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Among PSYCHOLOGISTS

Among psychologists, Léopold Szondi ranks 146 out of 235Before him are Franz Alexander, J. P. Guilford, Serge Moscovici, Edvard Moser, Brian Weiss, and Roberto Assagioli. After him are Ulric Neisser, George Kelly, Françoise Dolto, David Ausubel, Kurt Goldstein, and Robert D. Hare.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1893, Léopold Szondi ranks 110Before him are Alexander Korda, Ernst Marischka, Kathryn Adams, Mikheil Gelovani, Israel Joshua Singer, and Dorothy Parker. After him are Clas Thunberg, Beatrice Wood, Władysław Strzemiński, Madeleine Astor, Sükhbaataryn Yanjmaa, and Miloš Crnjanski. Among people deceased in 1986, Léopold Szondi ranks 99Before him are Moses Finley, Judith Resnik, Liu Bocheng, Ding Ling, Hermann Gmeiner, and Dick Scobee. After him are Oscar Zariski, Moderato Wisintainer, Phil Lynott, Elisabeth Bergner, Cheikh Anta Diop, and Michael, Prince of Montenegro.

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In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Léopold Szondi ranks 70 out of 418Before him are Stefan Vojislav (990), Johann Andreas Segner (1704), Teréz Brunszvik (1775), Ányos Jedlik (1800), Adolf Scherer (1938), and Vladimír Clementis (1902). After him are Anton Ondruš (1950), Jozef Vengloš (1936), Ondrej Nepela (1951), Martina Hingis (1980), Titus Buberník (1933), and Andrej Kvašňák (1936).

Among PSYCHOLOGISTS In Slovakia

Among psychologists born in Slovakia, Léopold Szondi ranks 1