Imre Farkas de Boldogfa (16 November 1811 – 25 May 1876), jurist, landowner, chief magistrate of the district of Zalaegerszeg (főszolgabíró).
[1] His paternal grandparents were János Farkas de Boldogfa (1741-1788), jurist, lawyer, landowner, Prothonotary of the county of Zala, president of the Supreme court of Zala County (Latin: "Inclyti Sedis Iudiciaria Comitatus Szaladiensis Praeses") and Judit Sümeghy de Lovász et Szentmargitha (1754-1820).
As the chief magistrate of the district of Zalaegerszeg he was the responsible to contain any riots and keep security and order in the city during these times and also assisted obtaining materials for the construction of weapons for the fights.
[3] On 31 December of 1848 the Austrian armies led by the Baron Johan Buits successfully occupied the city of Zalaegerszeg, forcing Lajos Csillagh de Csáford, president of the revolutionary committee and alispán of Zala to escape to Zalaapáti.
Imre Farkas de Boldogfa was commissioned to negotiate the surrendering of the independent Hungarian revolutionaries that fought the Austrian armies for almost a year.