Béla Borsody Bevilaqua was born in the town of
Miskolc in Borsod county, in 1885. He was the great-grandson of Conte Joannis Petri Bevilaqua, who continued the Ramus Hungaricus branch of the Bevilaqua family. Borsody, Béla's middle name referred to the county in which he was born. His father, Rezső (Rudolf) Bevilaqua (1849-1896) was a teacher, lawyer, and postmaster general of Upper Hungary, who moved with his family to Buda in 1888, when Béla was three years old, with two elder sisters. The family first lived at an estate at 44 Iskola utca, but they soon moved to a larger estate on Szagényház utca (today's Varsányi Irén utca). Béla's mother was Mária Szentessy, sister of the poet
Gyula Szentessy. Their father, Béla Borsody's grandfather,
Daniel Szentessy (1805-1895), was a sword-forging master from the ruling family of the city of
Szentes, who participated in the
1848 Hungarian Revolution, and was one of the Globetrotters that Béla Borsody wrote about in his book,
Regi Magyar Vilagjrok (
Hungarian Old World Travellers). Béla Borsody Bevilaqua went to the Piarist elementary school in
Pest, and the Evangelical grammar school in
Késmárk. The costs of his education at this boarding school were covered by his foster-father, lawyer Lajos Nagy from Kossoncz, husband of his elder sister Hilda. Until the age of 12, Béla Bevilaqua always spent the whole year in Víziváros, then as a student in Késmárk, he spent every summer there. Béla Borsody Bevilaqua finished his studies at the arts faculty of
Pest University in 1908: his graduation paper, on the Rhetoric of Alexandros, was supervised by the classical philologist
István Hegedűs. His doctoral thesis was completed in 1911. Béla Borsody's first job was as a museum assistant in the National Museum, and he became an under-keeper. He worked in Hungary's number one public collection from 1911 to 1914 in the library which became the predecessor of the
National Széchenyi Library. He was called to front service in the autumn of 1914: he was garrisoned in
Kraków in 1916, and had served in
Albania and
Bosnia by 1918. Returning home from the war, he opened an antiquity shop in one of the Károlyi houses in the town centre, at 25 Veres Pálné utca. He lived at 65 Váci utca; but when he was an under-keeper, he was a tenant at 41 Liget utca in Kőbánya, and later at 14 Fortuna utca in Buda. He was trying to make a business of the antiquity shop until 1925, but without success. He subsequently found a job in the National Military Museum, and he worked there until 1931 in the position of a first assistant. He also attended medical university as a student in 1930 but did not complete his degree. ==Writing career==