Talk:Franjo Hanaman
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Bullshit...
Hanaman Ferenc and Just Sándor were Hungarians working for a Hungarian company, and their patent is Hungarian Patent 34541.
Peace treaties can steal our land, but you cannot steal our history.
The original patent. Croatian Patent? No. Franjo? No, u can see he was Ferenc. just like Just, who wasnt a slovenian Alexander, but a Hungarian Sándor.
http://www.mszh.hu/anim/HUht-34541.pdf
http://www.tungsram.hu/tungsram/downloads/tungsram/tu_short_history_1896-1996.pdf
So pls correct the Article's name...
Btw, i am really pissed off with nationalists in our neighboring countries, who try to counterfeit history. U got our land. Now u want our heros?
Just as rumanias are trying to make Mathias Rex a rumanian...
Sad and ridiculous. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.99.125.90 (talk) 15:00, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
Franjo Hanaman was a Croat
The only bullshit was that he is Hungarian just because he worked in Hungary for some time. That was the time of
http://www.hep.hr/hep/publikacije/vjesnik/132.pdf
Danas je od različitih vrsta električne rasvjete najviše u upotrebi električna žarulja s metalnom niti, no malo je poznata činjenica da je u samim začecima razvoja takve žarulje sudjelovao i Hrvat - prof. dr. Franjo Hanaman.
Of many kinds of electric lighting today is the most popular electric bulb with tungsteen fillament, but it is little known fact that in the very beginnings of this bulb's development one Croat took part - prof. dr. Franjo Hanaman.
Njegovi roditelji, otac Gjuro(1847-1921)i majka Emilija rođena Mandušić(1954-1939), potjecali su iz trgovačkih obitelji, te se i otac bavio trgovinom. Baš radi trgovine boravio je kratko vrijeme u Drinovcima i tu mu se rodio drugi sin Franjo.
His parents, father Gjuro (1847-1921) and mother Emilija born Mandušić (1954-1939), originated from merchant families, so father was in that business too. Just because of that he spend some time in Drinovci where his other son Franjo was born.
That is the translation of one part of the Croatian text in the link above. It is cristally clear that there are no Hungarians here. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sulejman (talk • contribs) 23:24, 9 February 2008 (UTC)
Where from?
I may be unfamiliar with the subject, but there is alot of old "Kingdoms" in the lead. Can this be resolved to say only one thing? They both took up the same space at times. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.134.130.184 (talk) 17:16, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
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