Csaba
Csaba (Hungarian: [ˈt͡ʃɒbɒ]) is a Hungarian given name for males. Csaba is the native Hungarian name for Ernak, the youngest son of Attila the Hun.[1]
Individuals with the given name include:
- Csaba Almási (born 1966), Hungarian long jumper
- Csaba Ferenc Asztalos (born 1974), Romanian politician of Hungarian ethnicity
- Csaba Balog (born 1972), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Balogh (born 1987), Hungarian chess grandmaster
- Csaba Bernáth (born 1979), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Csáki, Hungarian physicist
- Csaba Csere, a former technical director and editor-in-chief of Car and Driver magazine
- Csaba Csizmadia (born 1985), Hungarian football manager and former player
- Csaba Czébely, former member of the Hungarian heavy metal band Pokolgép
- Csaba Elthes (1912–1995), Hungarian fencing master
- Csaba Fehér (born 1975), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Gera (born 1977), Hungarian judoka
- Csaba Hende (born 1960), Hungarian politician and former Defense Minister of Hungary
- Csaba Horváth (canoeist) (born 1971), Hungarian flatwater canoeist
- Csaba Horváth (chemical engineer) (1930–2004), Hungarian-American chemical engineer
- Csaba Hüttner (born 1971), Hungarian sprint and marathon canoer
- Csaba Kuttor (born 1975), Hungarian triathlete
- Csaba Köves (born 1966), Hungarian fencer
- Csaba Kuzma (born 1954), Hungarian boxer
- Csaba László (disambiguation), multiple people
- Csaba Madar (born 1974), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Mérő (born 1979), Hungarian amateur Go player
- Csaba Őry (born 1952), Hungarian politician
- Csaba Pintér (born 1967), bass player of the Hungarian heavy metal band Pokolgép since 1996
- Csaba Pléh (born 1945), Hungarian psychologist and linguist
- Csaba Regedei (born 1983), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Szatmári (born 1973), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Szatmári (footballer, born 1994), Hungarian footballer
- Csaba Székely, Hungarian playwright
- Csaba Szigeti, Hungarian singer, Eurovision Song Contest 1995 participant
- Csaba Tabajdi (born 1952), Hungarian politician
- Csaba Vastag (born 1982), Hungarian musician and X-Faktor 2010 winner
References
- Gesta Hungarorum, Simon Keza, Edited and translated by Laszlo Veszpremy and Frank Schaer with a study by Jeno Szucs, Central European University Press, 1999. Pp. 67, 69, 71, 73
See also
- All pages with titles beginning with Csaba
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