He was born in Kétegyháza, Kingdom of Hungary to Albert Mudin, a hatmaker, who is originally from France, and Róza Hécsel. Imre was the youngest of six siblings, with two sisters and three brothers. Except István, all of his siblings died before reaching the adulthood. Mudin attended the elementary school in his hometown, before moving to Arad to earn civil and teaching qualifications. He graduated as a teacher in 1911 in Budapest and got a position by a boys' school in Nagyatád.
Athletics career
Mudin, a member of the Magyar Atlétikai Club since he was 18, began to practice shot put under the guidance of his brother. He soon excelled with his performances, having broken the Hungarian national record at an Olympic test event in June 1908 with 12.88 metres. At the 1908 Olympic Games he took the seventh place in the freestyle javelin throw and also participated in the Greek discus throw competition and in the discus throw event, however, his final ranking is unknown in both competitions. Four years later, yet as the competitor of Nagyatádi Atlétkiai Club, he finished sixth in the shot put competition. Among his successes were nine national titles in the shot put, and two each in the discus throw and the javelin throw. Beside competing in athletics, Mudin was also a mathematics, physics and natural history teacher in Nagyatád. Upon arriving to the school in 1911, he augmented the insect collection with 200 prepared butterflies. As a sportsman he called for an active sporting life and had imperishable role in the developing of the community sports activities in Somogy County. In 1912 he organized the first sports competition for boys' schools in the county, which later turned into a traditional contest. In 1913 Mudin relocated from Nagyatád to Kaposvár where he taught in the local school that today bears the name of Dániel Berzsenyi. He joined World War I a year later.
Death and legacy
Mudin was assigned to the 101st Infantry Regiment of the Austro-Hungarian Army in sub-lieutenant rank. He began the armed service on August 11, 1914. For his commitments on the battlefield he was awarded the Silver Medal of Bravery1st Class in 1915. He did not stop to practice athletics while in the army, and in 1916 and 1917 he got permission to leave for the period of the Hungarian Athletics Championships, winning a treble in 1916 and a double in the following year. In May 1918 Mudin was promoted to first lieutenant. He died on October 23, 1918 in the battle of Monte Grappa. He was shot by a marksman while retreating and fell into an abyss. Mudin's body was not found and was declared missing. Mudin left behind a widow, Melina Pavlovlits, an opera singer. The two married in 1915 and had no children. Pavlovits never married again and died in Budapest in 1991. Today the stadium of Nagyatád bears the name of Imre Mudin, and the sports hall of Kétegyháza was named in the honor of the Mudin brothers and known as Mudin Sports Hall since 2008.