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Franz Burda (24 February 1903 – 30 September 1986) was a German publisher. He inherited his father's publishing business, which he developed into what is now the Hubert Burda Media conglomerate. [1]
Franz Burda senior war ein deutscher Verleger, der Gründer des Burda-Verlags und Nationalsozialist. Er erbte die Druckerei und das Verlagsgeschäft seines Vaters, aus dem sich in den Nachkriegsjahrzehnten der Medienkonzern Hubert Burda Media entwickelte.
Often referred to as "the senator," Dr. Franz Burda II (1903 - 1986) was the last great patriarch of the German press industry and a driving force behind rebuilding postwar Germany. He grew his father's three-man print shop in Offenburg into one of the country's largest printing and publishing companies.
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In 1903, Franz Burda I laid the foundations for the family company in Philippsburg; five years later he relocated its headquarters to Offenburg. His son, Franz Burda II, evolved the three-man plant into one of Germany's largest printing and publishing houses.
Senator Dr. Franz Burda (1903 – 1986) war der letzte große Patriarch des deutschen Pressewesens und eine der Gründer-Persönlichkeiten der deutschen Nachkriegszeit. Aus der Drei-Mann-Druckerei seines Vaters in Offenburg schuf er eines der größten Druck- und Verlagshäuser der Bundesrepublik.
Aenne and Franz Burda, 9 July 1931. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, dueling scars were seen as a badge of honor in Germany and Austria, making their owners "good husband material". Dueling scars (German: Schmisse) have been seen as a "badge of honour" since as early as 1825.