Its official name was Allgemeine Elektricitäts‐Gesellschaft AEG‐Telefunken. It was the second largest general electrical manufacturer in West Germany with 140 subsidiaries both at home and abroad, but due to a slump in the home appliance division and a delay in technological innovation, it effectively went bankrupt in August 1982, one year before its 100th anniversary. It began in 1883 when E. Rathenau bought the patent for the incandescent light bulb from inventor Thomas Edison and founded the Deutsche Edison‐Gesellschaft für angewandte Elektricität (German Edison Applied Electricity Company). Source: Heibonsha World Encyclopedia, 2nd Edition Information |
正式名称はAllgemeine Elektricitäts‐Gesellschaft AEG‐Telefunken。国内,海外に140の子会社を擁する西ドイツ第2位の総合電機メーカーであったが,家電部門の不振や技術革新の立遅れなどが原因で,創業100周年を1年後に控えた1982年8月,事実上倒産した。1883年,E.ラーテナウが発明王エジソンの白熱電球の特許を買ってDeutsche Edison‐Gesellschaft für angewandte Elektricität(ドイツ・エジソン応用電気会社)を設立したことに始まる。
出典 株式会社平凡社世界大百科事典 第2版について 情報 |
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