Stefania Ruzsits Jha (2002), Reconsidering Michael Polanyi's Philosophy, p. 7. "In the Hungarian part of the monarchy non-Hungarian ethnic people were encouraged to adopt Hungarian surnames and to learn the Hungarian language in addition to the several others they were already speaking."
Pieter M. Judson, Marsha L. Rozenblit (2005), Constructing nationalities in East Central Europe, p. 41. "While some people with German names translated them directly into Hungarian (hence the draftsman Nikolaus Liebe—in English, Nicholas Love—became Miklos Szerelmey), others were more inventive in their choice of Hungarian surnames.
This page lists people with the
surnameBuchholz. If an
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Stefania Ruzsits Jha (2002), Reconsidering Michael Polanyi's Philosophy, p. 7. "In the Hungarian part of the monarchy non-Hungarian ethnic people were encouraged to adopt Hungarian surnames and to learn the Hungarian language in addition to the several others they were already speaking."
Pieter M. Judson, Marsha L. Rozenblit (2005), Constructing nationalities in East Central Europe, p. 41. "While some people with German names translated them directly into Hungarian (hence the draftsman Nikolaus Liebe—in English, Nicholas Love—became Miklos Szerelmey), others were more inventive in their choice of Hungarian surnames.
This page lists people with the
surnameBuchholz. If an
internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that
link by adding the person's
given name(s) to the link.