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Martin Kokuchen Martin Cocochin Martin Kokuchin, the pseudonym of Mattei Pensor (1860-1928), was one of the most important representatives of Slovak literary realism. He worked as a doctor in Prague, Croatia on the island of Prach in Croatia and later in South America in Chile and Argentina. All these places are reflected in his literary work. He studied at the secondary school in the Hungarian town of Sopron. During the years of his high school years, Kokuchin learned that he was already planning to settle outside the country. After graduating from the Faculty of Medicine, Kokuchin used many different types of reductionist lines, which he enriched with his own reduced letters, His remarks were therefore not comprehensible to other readers. In 1943, the code expert and librarian Ladislaw Lawrence took the task of deciphering Cocotin's notes. Prior to his death in 1964, Lawrence was able to rewrite most of the Kokochen records written in a cutaneous manner. His literary heritage included records written in a mezzanine script, as well as his original manuscripts in Slovak. It is assumed that Kokuchin began using the reductionist writing in 1910 while practicing medicine, when writing prescriptions and documenting medical procedures. In the end, writing in this way became automatically for him to use in writing his work, his excerpts and his literary observations.

Coconut Account Book Here is Martin Kukuchin's bank account. Kocochen's account book was opened on 31 December 1910 and contains a record of the dues he paid for his literary work. Cocochin lived in that period in South America and was not even a Hungarian citizen. Although his real name is Matai Pensor, the account book was issued by his pseudonym Martin Kokuchin. The transactions were recorded in the account book for seven years, in the absence of the owner and without his signatures. The Bank of Torchianska has opened a joint account to save the account book in Document No. 3050 (Martin, Slovakia), and is now preserved as one of the unique holdings of this important writer's life. He was d. Joseph Chakultiti (1853-1948) is probably the man who opened the book and kept it, one of the friends of Kokuchin and the director of Matika Slovenska (the Slovak Foundation) later. The document came to the Slovak National Library from the property of Chcolletti.