ERNEST (ERNÓ) LEVINY
Town/City | Castlemaine, Victoria |
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First name | ERNEST (ERNÓ) |
Last name | LEVINY |
Country of Origin | HUNGARY (Now Slovakia) |
Date of Birth | 1818 |
Year of Arrival in Australia | 1853 |
Submitted by | Attila Urmenyhazi |
Story
Ernest Leviny was born at Szepes-Szombat ( now Spisska Sobota of Slovakia) near the Tatra Mountains in 1818. He was ethnic Hungarian but citizen of the Austrian Empire ruling at the time in today\’s Slovakia. To improve his skill as a silversmith he went to Paris in the early 1840’s.
In October1846 he left France and settled down in London, opening a silversmith and jewellery business with a partner.
Although he lived in England while the Hungarian war for independence from Austria raged back home in 1948-49, his heart was with his compatriot revolutionaries. After the collapse of the revolutionary war and capitulation, Hungarian countrymen exiles began to arrive in London. Leviny, already an established and well-to-do businessman there, befriended them and helped them in many ways.
Leviny sailed to Australia in 1853, bringing with him machinery for gold digging, as well as four hired labourers. These however defected when the ship reached Adelaide, and Leviny continued his journey to Melbourne on his own. It appears that he went almost straight to Castlemaine where he began working, often with the help of hired men, on the goldfields. Leviny was successful and was able to combine mining with his silver and goldsmithing work as well as his jewellery and watchmaking business.
Leviny lived in Castlemaine until his death in 1905 at the age of eighty-seven. During his half century there he completed many outstanding pieces of artistic gold and silver work. He won numerous distinctions and medals in various colonial exhibitions as well as at the London International Exhibition of 1862.
Leviny easily gathered friends and admirers. He had set standards of excellence in his craft to the extent that some pieces of his silverwork are held by the National Gallery of Victoria. An elegant mansion built over a good location was his home at 42 Hunter Street, Castlemaine. It has a wide courtyard reminiscent of old Hungarian country houses and sports not only the typically green Hungarian shutters on its windows, but a wistful name on the gate: ‘ BUDA’. This mansion is now heritage listed under the care of the National Trust of Australia.
Submitted by : Attila J. Ürményházi
Hobart, 28 July 2008