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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 ...
5 August: Hungarian nobles opposed to Sigismund crowned Ladislaus King. 1406: Hermann II, Count of Celje became Ban of Croatia. 1408: Hermann left office. 1409: Ladislaus sold his rights on Dalmatia to Venice. [25] 1437: 9 December: Sigismund died. 1438: 1 January: Sigismund's son-in-law Albert II of Germany was crowned King of Hungary and ...
The Kingdom of Croatia (Modern Croatian: Kraljevina Hrvatska, Hrvatsko Kraljevstvo; Latin: Regnum Croatiæ), and since 1060 known as Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia (Latin: Regnum Croatiae et Dalmatiae), was a medieval kingdom in Southern Europe comprising most of what is today Croatia (without western Istria, some Dalmatian coastal cities, and the part of Dalmatia south of the Neretva River ...
Hrvatska povijest (Croatian History) Pregled povijesti hrvatskog naroda (Overview of the History of the Croatian People) Povijest Hrvata u vrijeme narodnih vladara (History of the Croats Under Home Rule), Zagreb, 1925; Povijest Hrvata za kraljeva iz doma Arpadovića (1102.-1301.) (History of the Croats under the Arpad Kings (1102–1301 ...
1662 – Zrinski palace built [5] 1669 – Jesuit Academy established. 1670 – Fran Krsto Frankopan, poet and conspirator, visits the city in order to secure support from the citizens during the Magnate conspiracy [6] 1695 – Pavao Ritter Vitezović starts writing and publishing pamphlets, poetic, historiographical works on Saint Mark's Square
The Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (Croatian: Kraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija; Hungarian: Horvát-Szlavónország or Horvát–Szlavón Királyság; German: Königreich Kroatien und Slawonien) was a nominally autonomous kingdom and constitutionally defined separate political nation [9] [10] within the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
The non-native name of Croatia (Croatian: Hrvatska) derives from Medieval Latin Croātia, itself a derivation of the native ethnonym of Croats, earlier *Xъrvate and modern-day Croatian: Hrvati. The earliest preserved mentions of the ethnonym in stone inscriptions and written documents in the territory of Croatia are dated to the 8th-9th ...
Tomislav (pronounced, Latin: Tamisclaus) was the first king of Croatia.He became Duke of Croatia c. 910 and was crowned king in 925, reigning until 928. During Tomislav's rule, Croatia forged an alliance with the Byzantine Empire against Bulgaria.