
Zapisi o životu i običajima Slavonaca
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The book One Thousand Eight Hundred and Eight (first edition 1934, second 1973) by Josip Horvat is a detailed account of the revolutionary year 1848 in Croatia, a key moment in the shaping of national identity and political consciousness.
The work focuses on priority investment programs in agriculture, especially the development of plant production, including the cultivation of medicinal herbs and dried vegetables.
Josip Mihaljević's book analyzes the relationship between the government and the individual in communist Croatia (1958–1972), through repressive mechanisms, ideological pressures, and restrictions on personal freedom in the socialist system.
Zdenka Lechner, the first ethnologist at the Museum of Slavonia (1951–1965), made significant contributions to the study of the traditional culture of Slavonia, including the use of pokljuc – earthen lids for baking bread and pastries on the hearth.
The book collects short biographies of thirty Croatians who, through their work in various fields of science, art and society, have made a contribution to European history.
The book is deeply rooted in the local history and culture of Osijek, with an emphasis on cemetery motifs that serve as a metaphor for memory, death, and disappearance.