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Croatian Encyclopedia (Hrvatska enciklopedija) – general and national encyclopedia in 11 volumes (1999–2009) The Miroslav Krleža Encyclopedia ( Krležijana ) – in 3 volumes (1993) Encyclopedia of Croatian Art ( Enciklopedija hrvatske umjetnosti ) – 1st ed. in 2 volumes (1995–96); 2nd ed. in 8 volumes (2005) as Croatian Art ...
The free-access online edition of the Croatian Encyclopedia has been available since 2013. Paper volumes are no longer published. [2] [3]Since 2021, the Encyclopedia, available at enciklopedija.hr, is managed by new, fourth editor-in-chief, Bruno Kragić, with the team of 14 editors, and updated on the weekly basis.
This page was last edited on 26 October 2007, at 17:59 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Proleksis Encyclopedia (Croatian: Proleksis enciklopedija) is the first Croatian general and national online encyclopedia. [2]Proleksis Encyclopedia features more than 62,000 articles and more than 17,000 photographs, illustrations and maps.
Ujević was born in Krivodol (part of Podbablje near Imotski) in the Kingdom of Dalmatia (present-day Croatia).He received his secondary education in Sinj and Split and studied literature in Zagreb.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 31 December 2024. Speedometer Suspension bridge Fingerprints are used in dactyloscopy Torpedo Tungsten filament for electric light bulbs This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items. (January 2017) Croatian inventions and discoveries are objects, processes or techniques invented or ...
Hrvatska opća enciklopedija, sv. X, LZMK, Zagreb, 2008. ISBN 978-953-6036-40-0; Galović, Tomislav (2017). "Evangeliarium Spalatense / Splitski evangelijar – najstarija i najsvetija knjiga u Hrvata (tematski uvodnik)". Hrvatska revija (in Croatian). No. 4. Matica hrvatska
According to his will, a foundation Frangepaneum was established after his death in Zagreb. [2] It was geared to secure education towards poor students "of Illyrian or Croatian nation" [3] for the benefit of "our people".