Robotnik
Encyclopedia
Robotnik can refer to:
  • a newspaper of the Polish Socialist Party, published in various places and times, with breaks, from 1894 to 2003. Most known versions include:
    • Robotnik (1894–1939)
      Robotnik (1894–1939)
      Robotnik was the bibuła newspaper published by the Polish Socialist Party , and distributed in most major cities and towns in Poland under Partitions.....

      , a newspaper of Piłsudski's Polish Socialist Party
    • Robotnik (1896-1917), a newspaper published in New York by Polish-American adherents of the Polish Socialist Party
    • Robotnik (1983–1990)
      Robotnik (1983–1990)
      Robotnik was the name of an underground newspaper published by Solidarity resistance movement in the People's Republic of Poland during the period of martial law in Poland, between the years 1983 and 1990. It was named after a pre-war publication of the same name....

      , an underground newspaper published by the left wing of the Solidarity movement and later by the reborn Polish Socialist Party
  • The Robotnik Family from Sonic the Hedgehog video game series
    • Doctor Ivo Robotnik
      Doctor Eggman
      , also known by his alias , is a fictional video game character, the main antagonist of the Sonic the Hedgehog series created by Sega. Dr. Eggman is a rotund, mad scientist with an IQ of 300 who plans to conquer the world in order to build his Eggman Empire and is the archenemy of Sonic the Hedgehog...

      , also known by the alias Doctor Eggman, the main antagonist of the Sonic the Hedgehog
    • Professor Gerald Robotnik, the grandfather of Doctor Eggman
    • Maria Robotnik, the granddaughter of Gerald Robotnik, and the cousin of Doctor Eggman
  • Peasants in the Czech lands
    Czech lands
    Czech lands is an auxiliary term used mainly to describe the combination of Bohemia, Moravia and Czech Silesia. Today, those three historic provinces compose the Czech Republic. The Czech lands had been settled by the Celts , then later by various Germanic tribes until the beginning of 7th...

     (at the time a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire) who revolted against rich landowners in the late 19th century were called "robotniks," derived from the Czech words for "work" and "forced labor" and an older Slavic term for "slave."
  • The word for "worker" in Czech, Polish, and Slovak languages.
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