Page 16
Info Eduard - October 2010
Page 16
HISTORY
Info Eduard - říjen 2010
Eleméri és ittebei Kiss
Ernö was the owner of an
estate in Eleméri in what
is today Vojvodina in
Serbia. He achieved
the rank of General,
but during Hungarian
uprising in 1848, he opposed
the Habsburgs. After the
quashing of the uprising, he was
executed and his estate was confiscated. Despite this,
his grandson Josef Kiss enthusiastically fought for the
Austrian Emperor.
Because he joined the army as a volunteer to the
Bratislava Infantry Regiment No.72, even before
finishing secondary education, he couldn’t, according to
regulations, become a reserve officer, something he very
much wished for. The only option was to be promoted for
extreme merit in the field, which was under the vigorous
rules of the Austro-Hungarian army next to impossible.
Josef Kiss was finally promoted to Leutnant in der
Reserve - posthumously.
Notes:
- Flik: Fliegerkompagnie - Aviation Company, basic
operational unit of Austro-Hungarian Air Force
- Flek: Fliegerersatzkompagnie - Aviation Replacement
Company, training unit.
Josef Kiss
Flik 55/J pilots had their
pictures taken on May 10th,
1918 with Albatros 153.186.
Among them was Josef Kiss,
who was, with nineteen kills,
the most successful pilot to
hail from the Hungarian portion
of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. Because the aircraft
carried a large letter ‘K’ on the
fuselage with a representation
resembling a medal below it,
it has been widely assumed
that the plane was assigned to
Kiss. However, from at least the
middle of May, Kiss flew Phonix
The execution of Eleméri és ittebei Kiss Ernö in 1849 for the uprising against the Habsburgs.
(Author János Thorma, source: Wikipedia)
D.IIa 422.10, in which he ultimately died. Kiss’s personal
marking on this machine was a white stripe on the rear
of the airplane. Similarly, none of Kiss’s other mounts are
known to carry anything resembling the markings seen
on Albatros 153.186. It is therefore possible, that the
aircraft belonged to another Flik 55/J pilot that verifiably
flew the aircraft - Josef Kos or Oto Kullas. Neither of them
ever gained the success of Josef Kiss; in fact, neither
scored a kill, but, unlike their more famous colleague,
they survived the war.
The Albatros in question also did not survive the war.
On August 5th, 1918, the plane went in the drink during
practice attacks on surface targets, and the pilot Karl
Greischberger was killed. It’s possible that the light
blue underside color extended quite a bit further up the
fuselage sides, and even may have encompassed the
tail surfaces. It was onto this surface that the camouflage
colors were applied.
Although aircraft 153.186 may not have been Josef Kiss’s
personal aircraft, it is worth noting a few tidbits illustrating
the diversity and contradictions of life in the Danube
monarchy. Even though Kiss is often credited with being
the most successful Hungarian pilot of the First World
War in terms of nationality, it is more accurate to refer
to him as a Hungarian pilot in terms of region of birth.
His father was Hungarian, and his mother was Slovak, and
he spoke both languages fluently. Although he came from
a poor family (his father was a gardener at a Bratislava
Cadet school), he had roots in nobility. His grandfather,
Albatros D.III (Oef), 153.186, Flik
55/J, Pergine, May, 1918.
Strana 12
BUY Albatros D.III Oeffag 153 1/48 (8241)