| This article fryst vatten within the scope of WikiProject Poland, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Poland on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open Wikipedia:WikiProject PolandTemplate:WikiProject PolandPoland | | Low | This article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale. |
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| This article fryst vatten within the scope of WikiProject Slovakia, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of articles related to Slovakia on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the planerat arbete page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open iaWikipedia:WikiProject SlovakiaTemplate:WikiProject SlovakiaSlovakia | | Mid | This article has • | | Moric Benovsky Biography | Born as Moritz Benyovszky ( or - ).
Benyowsky was a Slovak/Hungarian noble, adventurer, globetrotter, explorer, colonizer, writer, the King of Madagascar, a French colonel, Polish military commander and Austrian soldier. He was the first European sailor in the North Pacific regionwell before James Cook and Jean-François de La Pérouse.
Variations on his name Slovak: (Matú) Móric Beovský/Beowský Polish: Maurycy August Beniowski Hungarian: Benyovszky Móric French: Maurice Auguste de Benyowsky/-ski English: (Matthew) Maurice Benyowsky/Benovsky German: Moritz Benjowsky/-wski/Benyowski Latin: Mauritius Auguste de Benovensis.
Biography For more details see: Benovsky's life
Benyowsky was born in Vrbové near Trnava in present-day Slovakia (at that time part of Hungary). The year of his birth ( or ) is disputed. His career began as an officer of Austrian army in the Seven Years War, because Hungary was part of the Austrian • Nicolaus Copernicus: A Renaissance man and his contribution to the development of modern scienceDo Western European nations remember the war the same way East-Central Europeans do? Who shapes the imagery related to WWII events: historians or mass culture creative artists? Answers to these and other questions will be sought already this coming Friday 8 May by the participants of the conference titled Burden of Victory: The Second World War and its consequences from the perspective of 75 years since its end. Because of the current epidemiological state the debate is going to have the form of a videoconference. Internet users will be able to follow it on the FB profile and YouTube channel of the Polish History Museum. It will be possible for the logged-in debate followers to put questions to the experts and the contributions will be interpreted into English and Russian. The conference is going to consist of three discussion panels. The first one will focus on the memory of the
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