Milan Kolibiar
0 sources
Milan Kolibiar
Summary
Milan Kolibiar is a human[1]. Born in Detvianska Huta[2], he… he was born on February 14, 1922[3]. He died in Bratislava[4]. He died on July 9, 1994[5]. He worked as a mathematician[6] and university teacher[7]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[8]
Key Facts
- Milan Kolibiar's place of birth was Detvianska Huta[2].
- Milan Kolibiar passed away in Bratislava[4].
- Milan Kolibiar was born on February 14, 1922[3].
- Milan Kolibiar died on July 9, 1994[5].
- Milan Kolibiar held citizenship in Slovakia[9].
- Milan Kolibiar's professions included mathematician[6].
- Milan Kolibiar worked as a university teacher[7].
- Milan Kolibiar's field of work was mathematics[10].
- Milan Kolibiar's field of work was algebra[11].
- Milan Kolibiar's field of work was lattice[12].
- Milan Kolibiar was educated at Comenius University[13].
- Milan Kolibiar is recorded as male[14].
- Milan Kolibiar's instance of is recorded as human[15].
- Milan Kolibiar supervised Jarmila Hedlíková as a doctoral student[16].
- Milan Kolibiar supervised Stanislav Jakubec as a doctoral student[17].
- Milan Kolibiar supervised Alfonz Haviar as a doctoral student[18].
- Milan Kolibiar supervised Zuzana Ladzianska as a doctoral student[19].
- Milan Kolibiar's given name is recorded as Milan[20].
- Milan Kolibiar's given name is recorded as Martin[21].
- Milan Kolibiar's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as Slovak[22].
- Milan Kolibiar's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[23].
Body
Origins and Family
Milan Kolibiar was born in Detvianska Huta[2]. He was born on February 14, 1922[3].
Education
Milan Kolibiar's education included a stint at Comenius University[13].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include mathematician[6] and university teacher[7]. Fields of work include mathematics[10], an academic discipline[24]; algebra[11], a branch of mathematics[25]; and lattice[12]. Doctoral students include Jarmila Hedlíková[16]; Stanislav Jakubec[17]; Alfonz Haviar[18], a mathematician[26], b. 1939[27], of Slovakia[28]; and Zuzana Ladzianska[19], a mathematician[29].
Death and Burial
Milan Kolibiar died on July 9, 1994[5]. He died in Bratislava[4].
Why It Matters
Milan Kolibiar ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[8]
FAQs
Where was Milan Kolibiar born?
Milan Kolibiar's place of birth was Detvianska Huta[2].
Where did Milan Kolibiar die?
Milan Kolibiar passed away in Bratislava[4].
What did Milan Kolibiar do for work?
Milan Kolibiar worked as mathematician[6] and university teacher[7].
Where did Milan Kolibiar go to school?
Milan Kolibiar was educated at Comenius University[13].