Ipolyi had a lifelong interest in history, particularly art history. He was a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, as well as a number of different learned Societies at home and abroad. He was one of the founders and at first vice-president, then president of the
Hungarian Historical Society. His first publication was his 1854
Ungarische Mythologic, on the
ancient religion of Hungary. Although the work won the prize offered by the
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Ipolyi afterwards withdrew it from the press. His other writings covered topics including history, art history, archaeology, and Christian art. They include: •
Ungarische Mythologic (1854) •
Biography of Michael Veresmarti, an author of the seventeenth century (Budapest, 1875) •
Codex epistolaris Nicolai Oláh, in the
Monumenta Hungariae Historica: Scriptorum, XXV (Budapest, 1876) •
Biographie der Christina Nyáry von Bedez (Budapest, 1887), in Hungarian •
Historische und kunsthistorische Beschreibung der ungarischen Kronisignien (Budapest, 1886), in Hungarian. Ipolyi gave sixty paintings to the
Hungarian National Gallery. He bequeathed the rest of his collection to Nagyvárad (today Oradea, Romania), for the purpose of founding a museum. ==Bibliography==