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Augsburg

Index Augsburg

Augsburg (Augschburg) is a city in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany. [1]

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FC Lichtenfels, 100-Mosques-Plan, 1013, 106th Cavalry Regiment, 1117 Verona earthquake, 1269th Engineer Combat Battalion (United States), 1270s, 1276, 13th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion (United States), 1475, 15 BC, 1500s in music, 1505 in science, 1514, 1516, 1527, 1531 in literature, 1552, 1556, 1558 in science, 1559 in science, 1591 in music, 1596 in music, 1601 in music, 1612 in music, 1726 in art, 1731 in science, 17th Panzer Division (Wehrmacht), 1889 in art, 1897 in science, 1931 in aviation, 1931 in science, 1938 in aviation, 1942 in aviation, 1944 in aviation, 1956–57 FK Partizan season, 1957 DFB-Pokal Final, 1957 German football championship, 1957 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, 1958 German football championship, 1958–59 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 1959 German football championship, 1961 F-84 Thunderstreak incident, 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification, 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA – Group 3), 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA), 1963 German football championship, 1968 Cup of the Alps, 1968 DFB-Pokal Final, 1971 Davis Cup, 1971–72 VfL Bochum season, 1972 in architecture, 1972 Summer Olympics, 1972–73 FC Bayern Munich season, 1972–73 VfL Bochum season, 1973–74 VfL Bochum season, 1974–75 Tennis Borussia Berlin season, 1974–75 VfL Bochum season, 1977–78 VfL Bochum season, 1979 Davis Cup Europe Zone, 1979–80 VfL Bochum season, 1981 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, 1983–84 VfL Bochum season, 1984 in hammer throw, 1985 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, 1988 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 1988–89 FC Bayern Munich season, 1989 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 1990 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, 1990 World Sports Acrobatics Championships, 1993–94 DFB-Pokal, 1994–95 FC Bayern Munich season, 1995–96 FC Bayern Munich season, 1996 European Canoe Slalom Championships, 1996 World Cup of Hockey rosters, 1997 DFB-Ligapokal, 1997–98 Borussia Dortmund season, 1997–98 FC Bayern Munich season, 1999 DFB-Ligapokal, 1999 in Germany, 1999 Pentecost flood, 1st Brigade, 24th Infantry Division (United States), 2000 DFB-Ligapokal, 2000 UEFA European Under-18 Championship, 2000–01 FC Bayern Munich season, 2001 DFB-Ligapokal, 2001 NBA Finals, 2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup, 2001–02 FC Bayern Munich season, 2002 NBA Finals, 2002–03 DFB-Pokal, 2003 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, 2003–04 DFB-Pokal, 2004–05 FK Partizan season, 2005–06 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2005–06 VfL Bochum season, 2007 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2008 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2008–09 DEL season, 2008–09 DFB-Pokal, 2008–09 FC Bayern Munich season, 2009 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2009 in American soccer, 2009–10 1. FC Nürnberg season, 2009–10 2. Bundesliga, 2009–10 Bundesliga, 2009–10 DEL season, 2009–10 DFB-Pokal, 2009–10 in German football, 2010 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2010 DFL-Supercup, 2010 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup, 2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, 2010 in American soccer, 2010–11 2. Bundesliga, 2010–11 DEL season, 2010–11 DFB-Pokal, 2010–11 FC Bayern Munich season, 2010–11 VfL Bochum season, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage, 2011 in Australia, 2011 WTA Tour, 2011–12 1. FC Köln season, 2011–12 1. FC Nürnberg season, 2011–12 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, 2011–12 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, 2011–12 Borussia Dortmund season, 2011–12 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2011–12 Bundesliga, 2011–12 DEL season, 2011–12 FC Augsburg season, 2011–12 FC Schalke 04 season, 2011–12 Hamburger SV season, 2011–12 Hannover 96 season, 2011–12 Hertha BSC season, 2011–12 in German football, 2011–12 SC Freiburg season, 2011–12 SV Werder Bremen season, 2011–12 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, 2012 European Canoe Slalom Championships, 2012 Munich artworks discovery, 2012–13 1. FC Nürnberg season, 2012–13 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, 2012–13 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, 2012–13 Bayernliga, 2012–13 Borussia Dortmund season, 2012–13 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2012–13 Bundesliga, 2012–13 DEL season, 2012–13 DFB-Pokal, 2012–13 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2012–13 FC Augsburg season, 2012–13 FC Bayern Munich season, 2012–13 FC Schalke 04 season, 2012–13 Fortuna Düsseldorf season, 2012–13 Hamburger SV season, 2012–13 Hannover 96 season, 2012–13 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, 2012–13 SC Freiburg season, 2012–13 SpVgg Greuther Fürth season, 2012–13 SV Werder Bremen season, 2012–13 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, 2012–13 VfB Stuttgart season, 2012–13 VfL Wolfsburg season, 2013 in aquatic sports, 2013–14 1. FC Nürnberg season, 2013–14 Borussia Dortmund season, 2013–14 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2013–14 Bundesliga, 2013–14 DEL season, 2013–14 DFB-Pokal, 2013–14 Eintracht Braunschweig season, 2013–14 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2013–14 FC Augsburg season, 2013–14 FC Bayern Munich season, 2013–14 FC Schalke 04 season, 2013–14 Hamburger SV season, 2013–14 Hannover 96 season, 2013–14 Málaga CF season, 2013–14 SV Werder Bremen season, 2013–14 VfB Stuttgart season, 2014 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2014 in aquatic sports, 2014–15 1. FC Köln season, 2014–15 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, 2014–15 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, 2014–15 Borussia Dortmund season, 2014–15 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2014–15 Bundesliga, 2014–15 DEL season, 2014–15 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2014–15 FC Augsburg season, 2014–15 Hamburger SV season, 2014–15 Hannover 96 season, 2014–15 Hertha BSC season, 2014–15 SC Freiburg season, 2014–15 SC Paderborn 07 season, 2014–15 SV Werder Bremen season, 2014–15 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, 2014–15 VfB Stuttgart season, 2014–15 VfL Wolfsburg season, 2015 Deutschland Cup, 2015–16 1. FC Köln season, 2015–16 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, 2015–16 Athletic Bilbao season, 2015–16 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, 2015–16 Borussia Dortmund season, 2015–16 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2015–16 Bundesliga, 2015–16 DEL season, 2015–16 DFB-Pokal, 2015–16 DFB-Pokal (women), 2015–16 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2015–16 FC Augsburg season, 2015–16 FC Schalke 04 season, 2015–16 FK Partizan season, 2015–16 Hamburger SV season, 2015–16 Hannover 96 season, 2015–16 in German football, 2015–16 Liverpool F.C. season, 2015–16 SV Darmstadt 98 season, 2015–16 SV Werder Bremen season, 2015–16 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, 2015–16 UEFA Europa League group stage, 2015–16 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, 2015–16 VfB Stuttgart season, 2015–16 VfL Wolfsburg season, 2016 Deutschland Cup, 2016–17 1. FC Köln season, 2016–17 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, 2016–17 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, 2016–17 Borussia Dortmund season, 2016–17 Borussia Mönchengladbach season, 2016–17 Bundesliga, 2016–17 DEL season, 2016–17 Eintracht Frankfurt season, 2016–17 FC Augsburg season, 2016–17 FC Bayern Munich season, 2016–17 FC Ingolstadt 04 season, 2016–17 FC Schalke 04 season, 2016–17 Hamburger SV season, 2016–17 Hertha BSC season, 2016–17 RB Leipzig season, 2016–17 SC Freiburg season, 2016–17 SV Darmstadt 98 season, 2016–17 SV Werder Bremen season, 2016–17 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, 2016–17 VfL Wolfsburg season, 2017 Deutschland Cup, 2017 in aquatic sports, 2017–18 Bundesliga, 2017–18 DEL season, 2017–18 FC Augsburg season, 2017–18 PSV Eindhoven season, 2018 Canoe Slalom World Cup, 2018 in sports, 2018–19 Bundesliga, 2018–19 FC Augsburg season, 24th Infantry Division (United States), 2nd Brigade, 24th Infantry Division (United States), 2nd Cavalry Regiment (United States), 2nd Royal Bavarian Division, 3rd Infantry Division (United States), 413th Flight Test Squadron, 431, 453d Electronic Warfare Squadron, 511th Parachute Infantry Regiment (United States), 549th Engineer Light Ponton Company, 70th Armor Regiment, 7th Portuguese India Armada (Almeida, 1505), 86th Operations Group, 926, 952, 953, 955, 96th Test Wing. Expand index (2549 more) »

A-Town

Places known as A-Town include.

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Abendzeitung

The Abendzeitung ("Evening Paper"), sometimes abbreviated to AZ, is a liberal morning tabloid newspaper from Munich, Germany.

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Abraham Genoels

Abraham Genoels II or Abraham Genouil (nickname: Archimedes) (25 May 1640, Antwerp – 10 May 1723, Antwerp) was a Flemish Baroque painter, draughtsman, engraver and tapestry designer.

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Abraham of Augsburg

Abraham of Augsburg (died 21 November 1265) was a German proselyte to Judaism.

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Abraham Ortelius

Abraham Ortelius (also Ortels, Orthellius, Wortels; 14 April 1527 – 28 June 1598) was a Brabantian cartographer and geographer, conventionally recognized as the creator of the first modern atlas, the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Theatre of the World).

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Abul-Abbas

Abul-Abbas (also Abul Abaz or Abulabaz) was an Asian elephant given to Carolingian emperor Charlemagne by the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid.

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Abundius and Irenaeus

Abundius and Irenaeus (died 258) were Roman martyrs during the reign of Roman Emperor Valerian (253-260).

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Academy of Sciences Leopoldina

The Leopoldina is the national academy of Germany.

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Accademia dei Lincei

The Accademia dei Lincei (literally the "Academy of the Lynx-Eyed", but anglicised as the Lincean Academy) is an Italian science academy, located at the Palazzo Corsini on the Via della Lungara in Rome, Italy.

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Achilles Gasser

Achilles Pirmin Gasser (3 November 1505 – 4 December 1577) was a German physician and astrologer.

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Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships

The Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships are the World Championships for acrobatic gymnastics.

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Action (piano)

The piano action mechanism (also known as the key action mechanismPressing, Jeffrey Lynn, PhD (1946–2002), (1992), p. 124. or simply the action) of a piano or other musical keyboard is the mechanical assembly which translates the depression of the keys into rapid motion of a hammer, which creates sound by striking the strings.

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Adam Darr

Adam Darr (29 September 1811 – 2 October 1866) was a German classical guitarist, singer, zither player and composer.

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Adam Haslmayr

Adam Haslmayr (c. 1560, Bozen, South Tyrol – ca. 1630, Augsburg) was a South Tyrolian writer, who was the first commentator of the Rosicrucian Manifestos.

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Adam Pietrasik

Adam Pietrasik is a former Polish slalom canoeist who competed in the mid-to-late 1980s.

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Adelhida Talbot, Duchess of Shrewsbury

Adelhida Talbot (née Palliotti; 24 July 1660 – 29 June 1726) was a British court official and noble, the wife of Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury.

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Adelsried

Adelsried is a municipality in the district of Augsburg in Bavaria in Germany.

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Adler (locomotive)

The Adler (German for "Eagle") was the first locomotive that was successfully used commercially for the rail transport of passengers and goods in Germany.

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Administrative divisions of Nazi Germany

The Gaue (Singular: Gau) were the de facto administrative sub-divisions of Nazi Germany, eclipsing the de jure Länder (states) of Weimar Germany in 1934.

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Adolf Fredrik's Music School

Adolf Fredrik's Music School (Adolf Fredriks Musikklasser) is a general municipal junior high school (grundskola) in Stockholm, Sweden with a focus on choral music, and highly competitive admission based on audition in singing and musical ability.

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Adolf Stachel

Adolf Stachel (born 28 February 1913 in Augsburg, died 1971 in Frankfurt am Main) was a German chemist, researcher and inventor, who worked as a researcher at the chemical and pharmaceutical company Cassella (now Sanofi) in Frankfurt-Fechenheim for much of his career.

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Adolf von Bomhard

Adolf von Bomhard (6 January 1891 in Augsburg – 19 July 1976) was an SS-Gruppenführer and Generalleutnant of the Ordnungspolizei (Orpo; order police) in Nazi Germany.

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Adriaen de Vries

Adriaen de Vries (c.1556–1626) was a Northern Mannerist sculptor born in the Netherlands, whose international style crossed the threshold to the Baroque; he excelled in refined modelling and bronze casting and in the manipulation of patina and became the most famous European sculptor of his generation.

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Affing

Affing is a municipality near (10 km) Augsburg in Aichach-Friedberg district, in Swabia - Bavaria, southern Germany.

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AGLA

AGLA is a notariqon (kabbalistic acronym) for Atah Gibor Le-olam Adonai,"You, O Lord, are mighty forever." It is said daily in the second blessing of the Amidah, the central Jewish prayer.

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Ahoi Tour

Ahoi Tour was the fourth concert tour by German Industrial Metal band Rammstein, in support of their fourth studio album Reise, Reise.

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Aichach

Aichach is a town in Germany, located in the Bundesland of Bavaria and situated just northeast of Augsburg.

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Aichach-Friedberg

Aichach-Friedberg is a ''Landkreis'' (district) in Bavaria, Germany.

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Aitrang

Aitrang is a municipality in the district of Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.

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Akaki Gogia

Akaki Gogia (აკაკი გოგია; born 18 January 1992) is a German professional footballer of Georgian descent who plays as a midfielder for Union Berlin.

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Alamannia

Alamannia or Alemannia was the territory inhabited by the Germanic Alemanni after they broke through the Roman limes in 213 CE.

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Albert Döderlein

Albert Sigmund Gustav Döderlein (5 July 1860, Augsburg – 10 December 1941, Munich) was a German obstetrician and gynecologist.

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Albert III, Duke of Bavaria

Albert III the Pious of Bavaria-Munich (27 March 1401 – 29 February 1460), since 1438 Duke of Bavaria-Munich.

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Albert Rehm

Albert Rehm (August 15, 1871 (in Augsburg)- July 31, 1949 (in Munich)) was a German philologist best known for his work on the Antikythera mechanism - he was the first to propose that it was an astronomical calculator.

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Albert Roßhaupter

Albert Roßhaupter (8 April 1878 – 14 December 1949) was a Bavarian politician of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and editor of several newspapers.

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Albert Traeger

Christian Gottfried Albert Traeger (12 June 1830 in Augsburg, Germany – 26 March 1912 in Charlottenburg) was a German privy councillor and parliamentarian of the Progressive People's Party.

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Aldobrandini Tazze

The Aldobrandini Tazze are a set of 12 silver-gilt standing cups in the shallow tazza shape (plural tazze), sometimes described as bowls or dishes.

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Alessandro Farnese (cardinal)

Alessandro Farnese (5 October 1520 – 2 March 1589), an Italian cardinal and diplomat and a great collector and patron of the arts, was the grandson of Pope Paul III (who also bore the name Alessandro Farnese), and the son of Pier Luigi Farnese, Duke of Parma, who was murdered in 1547.

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Alessandro Scalzi

Alessandro Scalzi (died c. 1596, Munich) was an Italian painter.

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Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes

Alexander Graham Bell c.1918–1919 Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes include honours bestowed upon him and awards named for him.

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Alexander Grau

Alexander Grau (born February 17, 1973 in Augsburg) is a German racing driver.

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Alexander Grimm

Alexander Grimm (born 6 September 1986 in Augsburg) is a German slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 2002.

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Alexander Petkovic

Alexander Petkovic (born 31 May 1980, Munich, Germany) is a German professional boxer of Serbian descent.

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Alexander Rosen

Alexander Rosen (born 10 April 1979 in Augsburg) is a German former football player.

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Alexander Schmidt (football manager)

Alexander Schmidt (born 23 October 1968) is a German football manager who last managed SSV Jahn Regensburg.

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Alexander Sigismund von der Pfalz-Neuburg

Alexander Sigismund von der Pfalz-Neuburg (1663–1737) was the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1690 to 1737.

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Alexander Wesselsky

Alexander "Alexx" Wesselsky (born 18 November 1968) is the lead singer of the German band Eisbrecher.

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Alfons Rebane

Alfons Vilhelm Robert Rebane, known simply as Alfons Rebane (June 24, 1908 – March 8, 1976) was an Estonian military commander.

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Alfred Biehle

Alfred Biehle (15 November 1926 in Augsburg – 29 October 2014 in Karlstadt am Main) was a German politician, representative of the Christian Social Union of Bavaria.

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Algernon Sidney

Algernon Sidney or Sydney (14 or 15 January 1623 – 7 December 1683) was an English politician and member of the middle part of the Long Parliament.

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Allan Simonsen

Allan Rodenkam Simonsen (born 15 December 1952) is a Danish former footballer and manager.

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Allgäu Railway (Bavaria)

The Bavarian Allgäu railway (Bayerische Allgäubahn) is a railway line in the German state of Bavaria, running from Munich to Lindau via Buchloe, Kaufbeuren and Kempten.

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Allgemeine Zeitung

The Allgemeine Zeitung was the leading political daily journal in Germany in the first part of the 19th century.

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Almadén

Almadén is a town and municipality in the Spanish province of Ciudad Real, within the autonomous community of Castile-La Mancha.

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Aloysius Bellecius

Aloysius Bellecius (15 February 1704, Freiburg im Breisgau — 27 April 1757, Augsburg) was a Jesuit ascetic author.

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Alpine regiments of the Roman army

The Alpine regiments of the Roman army were those auxiliary units of the army that were originally raised in the Alpine provinces of the Roman Empire: Tres Alpes, Raetia and Noricum.

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Alpine route

An alpine route is a trail or climbing route through difficult terrain in high mountains such as the Alps, sometimes with no obvious path.

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Althorp

Althorp is a Grade I listed stately home, estate in civil parish of Althorp, in Daventry District, Northamptonshire, England of about.

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Alto of Altomünster

Alto, O.S.B., (died ca. 760) was a Benedictine abbot active in the Duchy of Bavaria during the mid-8th century.

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Altomünster

Altomünster is a municipality in the district of Dachau in Bavaria in Germany.

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Amagasaki

is an industrial city located in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.

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Amalia Streitel

Amalia Streitel (24 November 1844 – 6 March 1911) was a German Roman Catholic nun.

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Ambrosius Holbein

Ambrosius Holbein (c. 1494 – c. 1519) was a German and Swiss artist in painting, drawing and printmaking.

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Ammersee Railway

The Ammersee Railway (German: Ammerseebahn) is a 54 km long single-tracked main line in the provinces of Swabia and Upper Bavaria in southern Germany.

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Amper

The Amper, called the Ammer upstream of the Ammersee, through which it runs, is the largest tributary of the Isar in southern Bavaria, Germany.

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An Wasserflüssen Babylon

"An Wasserflüssen Babylon" (By the rivers of Babylon) is a Lutheran hymn by Wolfgang Dachstein, which was first published in Strasbourg in 1525.

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Anajo

Anajo was an indie pop band from Augsburg, Germany that was active between 1999 and 2014.

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Anarchism in Germany

German individualist philosopher Max Stirner became an important early influence in anarchism.

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András Mechwart

András Mechwart de Belecska (or András Mechwart, born as Andreas Mechwart, Schweinfurt, 6 September 1834 – Budapest, 14 June 1907) was a German-born Hungarian-German mechanical engineer, chief executive of the Ganz Works, and a pioneer in the Hungarian mechanical and electrical engineering.

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Andreas Benedict Feilmoser

Andreas Benedict Feilmoser (born 8 April 1777, in Hopfgarten, Tyrol; d. Tübingen, 20 July 1831) was a theologian and Biblical scholar.

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Andreas Bourani

Andreas Bourani (né Stiegelmair; born 2 November 1983) is a German singer-songwriter.

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Andreas Christoph Graf

Andreas Christoph Graf (1701 in Augsburg – 1776 in Augsburg) was a German teacher, poet and writer of the etiquette book "The polite student" "Der höfliche Schüler" (1745).

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Andreas Eigner

Andreas Eigner (1801–1870), who was born at Diedldorf, Upper Palatinate, distinguished himself as a painter and a restorer of old pictures.

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Andreas Farny

Andreas Farny (born September 17, 1992) is a German professional ice hockey player.

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Andreas Fugger

Andreas Fugger (1406 or 1397, Augsburg - 1457, Augsburg), known as "der Reiche", was a German businessman.

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Andreas Hellmann

Andreas Hellmann (born 18 April 1952) is a German former swimmer.

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Andreas Karlstadt

Andreas Rudolph Bodenstein von Karlstadt (1486 in Karlstadt, Bishopric of Würzburg in the Holy Roman Empire24 December 1541 in Basel, Canton of Basel in the Old Swiss Confederacy), better known as Andreas Karlstadt or Andreas Carlstadt or Karolostadt, or simply as Andreas Bodenstein, was a German Protestant theologian, University of Wittenberg chancellor, a contemporary of Martin Luther and a reformer of the early Reformation.

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Andreas Kübler

Andreas Kübler (born 1963) is a former West German-German slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s.

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Andreas Lehnert

Andreas Lehnert is a German clarinetist.

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Andreas Mand

Andreas Mand (born December 14, 1959) is a German contemporary author of novels, short stories and essays and a playwright.

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Andreas Stöberl

Andreas Stöberl (ca. 1464 Grössing, Helmuth: "Stiborius, Andreas", p. 261f. in Henschel, Christine; Jahn, Bruno (eds.): Killy Literaturlexikon Vol 11: Si–Vi, 2nd ed.; de Gruyter 2011,. in Pleiskirchen near Altötting – September 3, 1515 in Vienna), better known by his latinised name Andreas Stiborius (Boius), was a German humanist astronomer, mathematician, and theologian working mainly at the University of Vienna.

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Andreas Voßkuhle

Andreas Voßkuhle (born 21 December 1963 in Detmold) is a German legal scholar and the president of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.

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Andrej Pazman

Andrej Pázman (born 1938) is a Slovak mathematician working in the area of optimum experimental design and in the theory of nonlinear statistical models.

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Andriy Livytskyi

Andriy Mykolaiovych Livytskyi (Андрій Миколайович Лівицький; April 9, 1879 in Lyplyavo, the Russian Empire (now Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine) – January 17, 1954) was a Ukrainian politician, diplomat, statesman, and lawyer.

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Andrzej Wójs

Andrzej Wójs (born 5 December 1979 in Nowy Sącz) is a Polish slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1995 to 2005.

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Angèle Durand

Angèle Caroline Liliane Josette Marie-José DeGeest (Antwerp 23 October 1925 - Augsburg 22 December 2001) was a Belgian singer and actress.

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Animatronics

Animatronics refers to the use of robotic devices to emulate a human or an animal, or bring lifelike characteristics to an otherwise inanimate object.

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Ann Catrin Apstein-Müller

Ann Catrin Apstein-Müller (also Ann Catrin Bolton) born 13 April 1973 in Gräfelfing) is a German poet and translator. She lives and works in Augsburg.

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Anna Barbara Gignoux

Anna Barbara Gignoux (1725-1796), was a German business person.

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Anna Maria Mozart

Anna Maria Walburga Mozart (née Pertl; December 25, 1720 – July 3, 1778) was the mother of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Maria Anna Mozart.

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Anna Nemetz-Schauberger

Anna Nemetz-Schauberger (born 4 January 1944, Ciacova) is a Romanian-born former handball player, a member of the team that won the World Championship in 1962.

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Anna Rügerin

Anna Rügerin (d. after 1484), is considered to be the first female typographer to inscribe her name in the colophon of a book, in the 15th century.

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Anna Rosmus

Anna Rosmus, also known as Anja Rosmus-Wenninger, is a German author and researcher born in 1960 in Passau, Bavaria.

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Anna von Mildenburg

Anna von Mildenburg (November 29, 1872 – January 27, 1947) was an eminent Wagnerian soprano of Austrian nationality.

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Anneliese Seidel

Anneliese Seidel is a retired East German slalom canoeist who competed in the late 1950s.

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Annemarie Wendl

Annemarie Wendl (26 December 1914, Trostberg, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria – 3 September 2006, Munich, Bavaria, Germany) was a German actress.

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Anthony McDowell

Anthony Leguinn McDowell is a former professional American football player who played running back for three seasons for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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Antoine Augustin Calmet

Antoine Augustin Calmet, O.S.B. (26 February 167225 October 1757), a French Benedictine monk, was born at Ménil-la-Horgne, then in the Duchy of Bar, part of the Holy Roman Empire (now the French department of Meuse, located in the region of Lorraine).

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Antoine Claire Thibaudeau

Antoine Claire, Comte Thibaudeau (23 March 17658 March 1854) was a French politician.

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Antoine Godeau

Antoine Godeau (24 September 1605, Dreux – 21 April 1672, Vence) was a French bishop, poet and exegete.

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Antoine-Éléonor-Léon Leclerc de Juigné

Antoine-Éléonor-Léon Leclerc de Juigné (2 November 1728, Paris – 19 March 1811, Paris) was a French prelate and politician of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

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Anton Burger

Anton "Toni" Burger (19 November 1911 – 25 December 1991) was a Hauptsturmführer (Captain) in the German Nazi SS, Judenreferent in Greece (1944) and Lagerkommandant of Theresienstadt concentration camp.

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Anton Dereser

Anton Dereser (also known as Thaddaeus a Sancto Adamo, OCD) (3 February 1757, Fahr, Franconia –15 or 16 June 1827, Breslau) was a Discalced Carmelite professor of hermeneutics and Oriental languages.

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Anton Eichleiter

Anton Eichleiter (Eichleiter Antal, Augsburg, 1 March 1831 – Rorschach, 31 May 1902) was a German iron manufacturer, manager of the Ganz Works.

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Anton Günther

Anton Günther (17 November 1783, Lindenau, Bohemia (now part of Cvikov, Czech Republic) – 24 February 1863, Vienna) was an Austrian Roman Catholic philosopher whose work was condemned by the church as heretical tritheism.

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Anton Graff

Anton Graff (18 November 1736 – 22 June 1813) was an eminent Swiss portrait artist.

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Anton Mang

Anton ("Toni") Mang (born 29 September 1949 in Inning (Starnberg) at the Ammersee) is a former five-time world champion in Grand Prix motorcycle racing from Germany.

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Anton Margaritha

"Anton Margaritha" (also known as Antony Margaritha, Anthony Margaritha, Antonius Margarita, Antonius Margaritha) (born ca. 1500) was a sixteenth-century Jewish Hebraist and convert to Christianity.

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Anton Peffenhauser

Anton Peffenhauser (1525 – 1603) was an armourer from Augsburg.

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Anton Walter

Gabriel Anton Walter (5 February 1752 – 11 April 1826) was a builder of pianos.

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Antonio de Montesinos

Antonio de Montesinos or Antonio Montesino (Spain, c. 1475 - Venezuela, 1545) was a Spanish Dominican friar who was a missionary on the island of Hispaniola (now the Dominican Republic and Haiti).

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Antonio Denzio

Antonio Denzio (23 September 1689 – after 1763) was an Italian impresario, tenor, and librettist.

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Antonio Ponzano

Antonio Ponzano, Ponzoni or Bonzone (died 1602, Munich) was an Italian Mannerist painter active in the 16th century.

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Antonius von Steichele

Antonius von Steichele (22 January 1816 – 9 October 1889) was Bishop, and later Archbishop of the Archdiocese of München und Freising from 1878 until 1889.

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Apocryphon Tour

The Apocryphon Tour was a worldwide concert tour by American heavy metal band The Sword, in promotion of the band's 2012 fourth studio album Apocryphon.

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Apostolic Nunciature to Bavaria

The Apostolic Nunciature to Bavaria was an ecclesiastical office of the Roman Catholic Church in Bavaria.

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Apostolic Nunciature to Cologne

The Apostolic Nunciature to Cologne (also Nunziatura di Germania inferiore, i.e. Nunciature of Lower Germany) was an ecclesiastical office of the Roman Catholic Church established in 1584.

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Apple Maps

Apple Maps (or simply Maps) is a web mapping service developed by Apple Inc. It is the default map system of iOS, macOS, and watchOS.

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April 1967

The following events occurred in April 1967.

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Aquamanile

In modern usage, an aquamanile (plural aquamanilia or simply aquamaniles) is a ewer or jug-type vessel in the form of one or more animal or human figures.

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Arcadia Olenska-Petryshyn

Arcadia Olenska-Petryshyn (June 19, 1934 – May 6, 1996) was a Ukrainian-born American artist, art critic and editor.

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Archbishopric of Magdeburg

The Archbishopric of Magdeburg was a Roman Catholic archdiocese (969–1552) and Prince-Archbishopric (1180–1680) of the Holy Roman Empire centered on the city of Magdeburg on the Elbe River.

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Architekturmuseum der Technischen Universität München

Architekturmuseum der Technischen Universität München is a architectural history research museum belonging to the Technical University of Munich in Munich, Bavaria, Germany.

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Archival science

Archival science, or archival studies, is the study and theory of building and curating archives, which are collections of recordings and data storage devices.

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Arenenberg

Arenenberg is an estate with a small chateau, Schloss Arenenberg, in the municipality of Salenstein at the shore of Lake Constance in Thurgau, Switzerland that is famous as the final domicile of Hortense de Beauharnais.

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Armin Veh

Armin Veh (born 1 February 1961) is a German former football midfielder and current manager.

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Army of Sambre and Meuse

The Army of Sambre and Meuse (Armée de Sambre-et-Meuse) was one of the armies of the French Revolution.

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Army of the Danube order of battle

The Army of the Danube was a field army of the French First Republic.

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Army of the Rhine and Moselle

The Army of the Rhine and Moselle (Armée de Rhin-et-Moselle) was one of the field units of the French Revolutionary Army.

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Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik

The Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik (Arnold Jung Locomotive Works) was a locomotive manufacturer, in particular of Feldbahn locomotives, in Kirchen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany.

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Arnoldstein

Arnoldstein (Podklošter, Oristagno) is a market town in the district of Villach-Land in the Austrian state of Carinthia.

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Arthur Brauss

Arthur Brauss (born 24 July 1936) is a German actor, perhaps best known for his work in Sam Peckinpah's Cross of Iron.

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Artificial whitewater

An artificial whitewater course (AWWC) is a site for whitewater canoeing, whitewater kayaking, whitewater racing, whitewater rafting, playboating and slalom canoeing with artificially generated rapids.

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Artificio de Juanelo

The Artificio de Juanelo was the name of two devices built in Toledo in the 16th century by Juanelo Turriano.

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Artur Lauinger

Artur Lauinger (born 23 August 1879 in Augsburg; died 15 October 1961 in Frankfurt am Main) was a German business journalist of Jewish descent.,.

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Aruba

Aruba (Papiamento) is an island and a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the southern Caribbean Sea, located about west of the main part of the Lesser Antilles and north of the coast of Venezuela.

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Association des États Généraux des Étudiants de l'Europe

AEGEE, stands for Association des États Généraux des Étudiants de l'Europe, and it is known as European Students' Forum in English.

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Assyrian–Chaldean–Syriac diaspora

The Assyrian–Chaldean–Syriac diaspora (Syriac: ܓܠܘܬܐ, Galuta, "exile") refers to Assyrians living in communities outside their ancestral homeland.

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Außerfern

Außerfern refers to the district of Reutte in the Austrian federal state of Tyrol.

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Aubin Olivier

Aubin Olivier, depicted by Léonard Gaultier Aubin Olivier was a French engineer who introduced use of the screw press coin minting technique to France.

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Auerbach (Horgau)

Auerbach is a village in the municipality Horgau near Augsburg (13 km) in the district of Augsburg, in Swabia - Bavaria, southern Germany.

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Augsburg (disambiguation)

Augsburg is a city in Germany.

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Augsburg (district)

Augsburg is a ''Landkreis'' (district) in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg Airport

Augsburg Airport is a regional airport in Affing, 7 km northeast of the city of Augsburg, the third largest city in the German state of Bavaria.

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Augsburg Airways

Augsburg Airways was a regional airline from Germany.

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Augsburg Arena

Augsburg Arena, currently known commercially as the WWK Arena (officially stylised as WWK ARENA) is a football stadium in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg Cathedral

The Cathedral of Augsburg (German: Dom Mariä Heimsuchung) is a Roman Catholic church in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany, founded in the 11th century in Romanesque style, but with 14th-century Gothic additions.

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Augsburg Confession

The Augsburg Confession, also known as the Augustan Confession or the Augustana from its Latin name, Confessio Augustana, is the primary confession of faith of the Lutheran Church and one of the most important documents of the Lutheran Reformation.

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Augsburg derby

The Augsburg derby historically refers to the association football games between TSV Schwaben Augsburg and BC Augsburg and, it more recent times, to the games between Schwaben Augsburg and FC Augsburg, all three clubs based in the Bavarian city of Augsburg.

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Augsburg Eiskanal

The Augsburg Eiskanal is an artificial whitewater river in Augsburg, Germany, constructed as the canoe slalom venue for the 1972 Summer Olympics in nearby Munich.

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Augsburg Haunstetterstraße station

Augsburg Haunstetterstraße station is a station south of central Augsburg in the German state of Bavaria.

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Augsburg Hauptbahnhof

Augsburg Hauptbahnhof is the main railway station in the Bavarian city of Augsburg, situated in southern Germany.

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Augsburg Hospital

Augsburg Hospital (Klinikum Augsburg) is one of the largest medical centers in Germany located in Augsburg.

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Augsburg Messe station

Augsburg Messe station is a railway station in the town of Augsburg, located in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg Morellstraße station

Augsburg Morellstraße station is a station on the Augsburg–Buchloe railway in the German state of Bavaria.

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Augsburg Protestant Cemetery

The Protestant cemetery in Augsburg (Protestantischer Friedhof Augsburg) on Haunstetter road in Hochfeld district of Augsburg was established in 1534 by the City of Augsburg.

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Augsburg raid

The Augsburg Raid, also referred to as Operation Margin, was a bombing raid made by the RAF on the MAN U-boat engine plant in Augsburg undertaken during the daylight hours of 17 April 1942.

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Augsburg Railway Park

The Augsburg Railway Park (Bahnpark Augsburg) is a railway museum in Augsburg on part of the former Augsburg locomotive shed owned by the Deutsche Bahn.

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Augsburg textile and industry museum

The Augsburg textile and industry museum, known by its acronym tim, is a museum in Augsburg a city in the south-west of Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg Town Hall

The Town Hall of Augsburg (German: Augsburger Rathaus) is the administrative centre of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany, and one of the most significant secular buildings of the Renaissance style north of the Alps.

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Augsburg Township, Marshall County, Minnesota

Augsburg Township is a township in Marshall County, Minnesota, United States.

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Augsburg University

Augsburg University is a private university in Minneapolis, Minnesota that is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

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Augsburg University of Applied Sciences

Augsburg University of Applied Sciences (Hochschule Augsburg – University of Applied Sciences or simply Hochschule Augsburg) is a German university located in Augsburg.

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Augsburg Victory Altar

The Augsburg Victory Altar (Augsburger Siegesaltar) is the name given to a Roman altar of the victory goddess Victoria, which was set up on the occasion of the victory of a Roman army over the tribe of the Juthungi near the Rhaetian provincial capital Augusta Vindelicorum.

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Augsburg Western Woods Nature Park

The Augsburg-Western Woods Nature Park (Naturpark Augsburg-Westliche Wälder) is one of the two nature parks in Bavarian Swabia.

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Augsburg Zoo

Augsburg Zoo is a zoo located in the city of Augsburg in Bavaria, Germany, and with over 600,000 visitors annually, the zoo belongs to the 20 largest Zoos in Germany.

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Augsburg, Arkansas

Augsburg is an unincorporated community in Pope County, Arkansas, United States.

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Augsburg-Bärenkeller

Bärenkeller is one of the seventeen highest level civic divisions, or Planungsräume (Singular: Planungsraum, English: planning district), of the city of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Firnhaberau

Firnhaberau is the 28th Stadtbezirk, or city district, of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Göggingen

Göggingen is one of the 17 ''Planungsräume'' (English: Planning district, singular Planungsraum) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Hammerschmiede

Augsburg-Hammerschmiede is one of the seventeen highest-level civic divisions, or planning districts, (German: Planungsräume) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Haunstetten

Augsburg-Haunstetten, also known as Haunstetten-Siebenbrunn is one of the seventeen Planungsräume (English: Planning district, singular: Planungsraum) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Hochzoll

Augsburg Hochzoll - the district of Hochzoll lies in the east of the city of Augsburg.

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Augsburg-Hochzoll station

Augsburg-Hochzoll station is a station in the Hochzoll district east of central Augsburg in the German state of Bavaria.

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Augsburg-Inningen

Inningen is one of the 17 Planungsräume (English: Planning District) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Oberhausen

Oberhausen is one of the seventeen Planungsräume (English: Planning district, singular Planungsraum) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg-Oberhausen station

Augsburg-Oberhausen station is a station in the northwest of the central Augsburg in the suburb of Oberhausen in the German state of Bavaria.

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Augsburg-Stadt (electoral district)

Augsburg-Stadt (Augsburg City) is one of the 299 single member constituencies used for the German parliament, the Bundestag.

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Augsburg-Universitätsviertel

Augsburg-Universitätsviertel, (English: University Quarter) is one of the 17 Planungsräume (English: Planning district, singular Planungsraum) of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augsburg–Welden railway

The Augsburg–Welden railway (also referred to in German as the Weldenbahn or "Welden railway") was a branch line in southern Germany that ran from the city of Augsburg to Welden.

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Augsburger

The Augsburger is an endangered German breed of domestic chicken.

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Augsburger (disambiguation)

Augsburger may refer to.

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Augsburger Allgemeine

The Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung is a major German regional daily newspaper published since 1945.

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Augsburger Panther

The Augsburger Panther are a professional ice hockey team in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.

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Augsburger Puppenkiste

The Augsburger Puppenkiste is a marionette theater in Augsburg, Germany.

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Augsburger Straße (Berlin U-Bahn)

Augsburger Straße is a Berlin U-Bahn station on the line.

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Augsburger Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund

The Augsburger Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund (German for Augsburg Transport and Tariff Association) or AVV is the transit authority of the city of Augsburg, located in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Augstgau

Augstgau is the name for one of two medieval counties (gau being an old German word for county).

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August Becker (author)

August Becker (27 April 1828 in Klingenmünster – 23 March 1891 in Eisenach) was a German author.

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August Daniel von Binzer

August Freiherr von Binzer (born May 30, 1793 in Kiel, † March 20, 1868 in Neisse, Silesia) was a German poet, journalist, and Urburschenschafter.

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August Frank

August Franz Frank (5 April 189821 March 1984) was a German SS functionary in the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office, generally known by its German initials WVHA.

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August Philip of Limburg Stirum

August Philipp Karl of Limburg Stirum (1721–1797), count of Limburg Stirum and Bronckhorst, was the son of Otto Leopold Count von Limburg Styrum und Bronckhorst, Lord of Gemen and Raesfeld (1688–1754) and Anna Elisabeth countess of Schönborn (1686–1757).

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August Querfurt

August Querfurt (1696–1761) was an Austrian painter.

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August Schmidhuber

August Schmidhuber (8 May 1901 – 19 February 1947) was an SS-Brigadeführer of the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen from 20 January 1944 to 8 May 1945, and the 21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Skanderbeg (1st Albanian) from May 1944 onwards.

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August von Parseval

August von Parseval (5 February 1861, in Frankenthal (Pfalz) – 22 February 1942, in Berlin) was a German airship designer.

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Augusta

Augusta may refer to.

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Augusta Raurica

Augusta Raurica is a Roman archaeological site and an open-air museum in Switzerland located on the south bank of the Rhine river about 20 km east of Basel near the villages of Augst and Kaiseraugst.

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Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church

The Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church (previously the Augustana Lutheran Synod and also Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Augustana Synod in North America and Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Augustana Synod in North America) was a Lutheran church body in the United States that was one of the churches that merged into the Lutheran Church in America (LCA) in 1962.

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Auguste Piccard

Auguste Antoine Piccard (28 January 1884 – 24 March 1962) was a Swiss physicist, inventor and explorer, known for his record-breaking helium-filled balloon flights, with which he studied Earth's upper atmosphere and cosmic rays, and for his invention of the first bathyscaphe, FNRS-2, with which he made a number of unmanned dives in 1948 to explore the ocean's depths.

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Augustin Heckel

Augustin Heckel (1690–1770) was a painter, watch case engraver and draughtsman and also a flower painter in watercolours and gouache.

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Augustin Hirschvogel

Augustin Hirschvogel (1503 – February 1553) was a German artist, mathematician, and cartographer known primarily for his etchings.

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Augustus George, Margrave of Baden-Baden

Augustus George, Margrave of Baden-Baden (August Georg Simpert; 14 January 1706, Rastatt, Margraviate of Baden – 21 October 1771) was the ruling Margrave of Baden-Baden from 1761 till his death in 1771.

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Aulzhausen

Aulzhausen is a village in the municipality Affing near Augsburg (8 km) in the district of Aichach-Friedberg, in Swabia - Bavaria, southern Germany.

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Auricular style

The auricular style or lobate style (Dutch: Kwabstijl, German:Ohrmuschelstil) is a style of ornamental decoration, mainly found in Northern Europe in the first half of the 17th century, bridging Northern Mannerism and the Baroque.

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Aurochs

The aurochs (or; pl. aurochs, or rarely aurochsen, aurochses), also known as urus or ure (Bos primigenius), is an extinct species of large wild cattle that inhabited Europe, Asia, and North Africa.

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Australia at the FIFA Women's World Cup

The Australia women's national association football team has represented Australia at the FIFA Women's World Cup on six occasions in 1995, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2015 and have qualified for the 2019 tournament.

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Australia women's national soccer team results (2010–19)

The Australia women's national soccer team results for the period 2010 to 2019.

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Austria men's national junior ice hockey team

The Austrian men's national under 20 ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team in Austria.

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Austrian Crown Jewels

The Austrian Crown Jewels (Insignien und Kleinodien) is a term denoting the regalia and vestments worn by the Holy Roman Emperor, and later by the Emperor of Austria, during the coronation ceremony and other state functions.

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Autobahnsee Augsburg

Autobahnsee Augsburg is a lake in Augsburg, Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Avro Lancaster

The Avro Lancaster is a British four-engined Second World War heavy bomber.

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Axel Köhler

Axel Köhler (born 1959 in Schwarzenberg, Saxony) is a German countertenor and opera director.

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Étienne Marie Antoine Champion de Nansouty

Étienne-Marie-Antoine Champion, comte de Nansouty (30 May 1768 – 12 February 1815) was a French cavalry commander during the French Revolutionary Wars who rose to the rank of General of Division in 1803 and subsequently held important military commands during the Napoleonic Wars.

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Überlingen

Überlingen is a German city on the northern shore of Lake Constance (Bodensee).

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İbrahim Aydemir

İbrahim Aydemir (born 19 May 1983 in Augsburg, West Germany) is a Turkish footballer.

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Ľuboš Šoška

Ľuboš Šoška (born 21 December 1977 in Žilina) is a Slovak slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1994 to 2006.

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Babenhausen, Bavaria

Babenhausen is a municipality in the district of Unterallgäu in Bavaria, Germany.

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Back for Good Tour

Back for Good Tour was the first worldwide concert tour by Modern Talking.

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Bad Aibling Station

The Bad Aibling Station (abbreviated BAS, also known as Field station 81, which had an official designation as the 18th United States Army Security Agency Field Station, or as the pseudonym Hortensie III) is a satellite tracking station operated by the German intelligence agency Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND) in Bad Aibling, Bavaria.

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Bad Radkersburg

Bad Radkersburg (Radgona; archaic Regede) is a spa town in the southeast of the Austrian state of Styria, in the district of Südoststeiermark.

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Bad Sankt Leonhard im Lavanttal

Bad Sankt Leonhard im Lavanttal (Sveti Lenart v Labotu) is a spa town in the district of Wolfsberg in the Austrian state of Carinthia.

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Bajram Sadrijaj

Bajram Sadrijaj (born 10 August 1986) is a Kosovar footballer for Türkiyemspor Krumbach.

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Balthasar Friedrich Leizelt

Balthasar Friedrich Leizelt (also spelled Leizel, active 1750–1800) was a German artist and copperplate engraver working from Augsburg.

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Balthasar Hubmaier

Balthasar Hubmaier, also Hubmair, Hubmayr, Hubmeier, Huebmör, Hubmör, Friedberger, Pacimontanus (c. 1480 in Friedberg, Duchy of Bavaria in the Holy Roman Empire 10 March, 1528 in Vienna, Archduchy of Austria in the Holy Roman Empire) was an influential German Anabaptist leader.

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Balthasar Siberer

Balthasar Siberer (1679–1757) was an Austrian-born German gymnasium teacher, known for having been an early organ instructor of both Johann Ernst Eberlin and Leopold Mozart.

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Barbara Fugger

Barbara Fugger (1419 – July 23, 1497) was a German businessperson and banker.

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Barbara Nadalin

Barbara Nadalin (22 December 1972 in San Vito al Tagliamento - 14 July 2012 in Udine) was an Italian slalom canoeist who competed from the late 1980s to the early 2000s.

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Barbara Schöneberger

Barbara Schöneberger (born 5 March 1974) is a German actress, singer, and TV host.

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Barbara van Beck

Barbara van Beck (16 February 1629 1668?) was an entrepreneur and celebrity who lived with a condition whereby her face and much of her body were covered with hair.

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Baroque architecture

Baroque architecture is the building style of the Baroque era, begun in late 16th-century Italy, that took the Roman vocabulary of Renaissance architecture and used it in a new rhetorical and theatrical fashion, often to express the triumph of the Catholic Church.

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Barthélemy Hervart

Barthélemy Hervart or Herwart (16 August 1607 - 22 October 1676) was a Huguenot banker.

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Bartholomäus Kilian

Bartholomäus Kilian (1630–1696), was a German engraver and member of the Kilian family of engravers.

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Bartholomäus Metlinger

Bartholomäus Metlinger (born in Augsburg - died c.1491) was a German physician of the late Middle Ages.

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Bartholomeus V. Welser

Prince Bartholomeus Welser (25 June 1484 in Memmingen – 28 March 1561 in "Amberg im Unterallgäu") was a German banker.

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Bartholomew Holzhauser

Venerable Bartholomew Holzhauser (August 24, 1613 – May 20, 1658) was a German priest, a founder of a religious community, and a visionary and writer of prophecies.

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Bartolommeo Tutiani

Bartolommeo Tutiani was an Italian engraver on wood of the Renaissance period.

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Basilica of SS. Ulrich and Afra, Augsburg

The Basilica of SS.

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Bastien Damiens

Bastien Damiens (18 January 1995 – 6 September 2015) was a French slalom canoeist who competed at the interantional level from 2011 until his death in 2015.

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Battle of Blenheim

The Battle of Blenheim (German:Zweite Schlacht bei Höchstädt; French Bataille de Höchstädt), fought on 13 August 1704, was a major battle of the War of the Spanish Succession.

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Battle of Dürenstein

The Battle of Dürenstein (Schlacht bei Dürnstein; also known as Dürrenstein, Dürnstein and Diernstein), on 11 November 1805, was an engagement in the Napoleonic Wars during the War of the Third Coalition.

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Battle of Elchingen

The Battle of Elchingen, fought on 14 October 1805, saw French forces under Michel Ney rout an Austrian corps led by Johann Sigismund Riesch.

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Battle of Fürth

The Battle of Fürth was fought on September 3, 1632 between the Catholic forces of Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II and the Protestant forces of King Gustavus II (Gustav Adolph) of Sweden during the period of Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years War.

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Battle of Friedberg (Bavaria)

The Battle of Friedberg was fought on 24 August 1796 between a First French Republic army led by Jean Victor Marie Moreau and a Habsburg Austrian army led by Maximilian Anton Karl, Count Baillet de Latour.

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Battle of Günzburg

The Battle of Günzburg on 9 October 1805 saw General of Division Jean-Pierre Firmin Malher's French division attempt to seize a crossing over the Danube River at Günzburg in the face of a Habsburg Austrian army led by Feldmarschall-Leutnant Karl Mack von Lieberich.

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Battle of Höchstädt (1800)

The Battle of Höchstädt was fought on 19 June 1800 on the north bank of the Danube near Höchstädt, and resulted in a French victory under General Jean Victor Marie Moreau against the Austrians under Baron Pál Kray.

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Battle of Kehl (1796)

During the Battle of Kehl (23–24 June 1796), a Republican French force under the direction of Jean Charles Abbatucci mounted an amphibious crossing of the Rhine River against a defending force of soldiers from the Swabian Circle.

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Battle of Lake Constance

The Battle of Lake Constance (Lacus Brigantinus) was a small naval battle between Roman forces and Celtic tribes in the spring of 15 BC.

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Battle of Lechfeld (910)

The Battle of Lechfeld in 910, was an important victory by a Magyar army over Louis the Child's united Frankish Imperial Army.

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Battle of Lechfeld (955)

The Battle of Lechfeld (10 August 955) was a decisive victory for Otto I the Great, King of East Francia, over the Hungarian harka Bulcsú and the chieftains Lél (Lehel) and Súr.

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Battle of Monte Cassino

The Battle of Monte Cassino (also known as the Battle for Rome and the Battle for Cassino) was a costly series of four assaults by the Allies against the Winter Line in Italy held by Axis forces during the Italian Campaign of World War II.

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Battle of Neuburg (1800)

The Battle of Neuburg occurred on 27 June 1800 in the south German state of Bavaria, on the southern bank of the Danube river.

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Battle of Ostrach

The Battle of Ostrach, also called the Battle by Ostrach, occurred on 20–21 March 1799.

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Battle of Pressburg

The Battle of Pressburg (Schlacht von Pressburg) or Battle of Pozsony (Pozsonyi csata), or Battle of Bratislava (Bitka pri Bratislave) was a three-day-long battle, fought between 4–6 July 907, during which the East Francian army, consisting mainly of Bavarian troops led by Margrave Luitpold, was annihilated by Hungarian forces.

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Battle of Rastatt (1796)

The Battle of Rastatt (5 July 1796) saw part of a Republican French army under Jean Victor Marie Moreau clash with elements of a Habsburg Austrian army under Maximilian Anton Karl, Count Baillet de Latour which were defending the line of the Murg River.

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Battle of Schellenberg

The Battle of Schellenberg, also known as the Battle of Donauwörth, was fought on 2 July 1704 during the War of the Spanish Succession.

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Battle of Teugen-Hausen

The Battle of Teugen-Hausen or the Battle of Thann was an engagement that occurred during the War of the Fifth Coalition, part of the Napoleonic Wars.

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Battle of Ulm

The Battle of Ulm on 16–19 October 1805 was a series of skirmishes, at the end of the Ulm Campaign, which allowed Napoleon I to trap an entire Austrian army under the command of Karl Freiherr Mack von Leiberich with minimal losses and to force its surrender near Ulm in the Electorate of Bavaria.

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Battle of Wertingen

In the Battle of Wertingen (8 October 1805) Imperial French forces led by Marshals Joachim Murat and Jean Lannes attacked a small Austrian corps commanded by Feldmarschall-Leutnant Franz Xaver von Auffenberg.

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Battle of Willstätt

The Battle of Willstätt was fought during the Swedish phase of the Thirty Years' War near the Free city of Strasbourg, in the Holy Roman Empire.

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Battle of Zusmarshausen

The Battle of Zusmarshausen was fought on 17 May 1648 between the Holy Roman Empire and Sweden and France (led by Henri de la Tour d'Auvergne, Vicomte de Turenne) in the modern Augsburg district of Bavaria, Germany.

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Bavaria

Bavaria (Bavarian and Bayern), officially the Free State of Bavaria (Freistaat Bayern), is a landlocked federal state of Germany, occupying its southeastern corner.

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Bavarian A I

Bavarian A I engines were German steam locomotives in service with the Royal Bavarian State Railways (Königlich Bayerische Staatsbahn) from 1841 to 1871.

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Bavarian Army

The Bavarian Army was the army of the Electorate (1682–1806) and then Kingdom (1806–1919) of Bavaria.

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Bavarian branch lines

Bavarian branch lines comprised nearly half the total railway network in Bavaria, a state in the southeastern Germany that was a kingdom in the days of the German Empire.

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Bavarian D IX

The D IX steam locomotive was manufactured by the firm of Maffei between 1888 and 1899 for the Royal Bavarian State Railways (Königlich Bayerische Staatsbahn).

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Bavarian football derbies

The most famous league derbies in Bavarian football are the games between FC Bayern Munich and 1. FC Nürnberg, with the Bayern versus TSV 1860 Munich matchups coming a close second.

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Bavarian goods wagon classes

The Royal Bavarian State Railways had, at different times, three different goods wagon classification systems that roughly correspond to the early, middle and late period of the state railway era in Bavaria.

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Bavarian Group Administration

The Bavarian Group Administration or Gruppenverwaltung Bayern was a largely autonomous railway administration within the Deutsche Reichsbahn (German Imperial Railways) between the two world wars.

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Bavarian Maximilian Railway

The Bavarian Maximilian’s Railway (German: Bayerische Maximiliansbahn) was as an east-west line built between the Bavarian border with Württemberg at Neu-Ulm in the west via Augsburg, Munich and Rosenheim to the Austrian border at Kufstein and Salzburg in the east as part of the Royal Bavarian State Railways.

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Bavarian National Museum

The Bavarian National Museum (Bayerisches Nationalmuseum) in Munich is one of the most important museums of decorative arts in Europe and one of the largest art museums in Germany.

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Bavarian S 2/6

The Royal Bavarian State Railways' sole class S 2/6 steam locomotive was built in 1906 by the firm of Maffei in Munich, Germany. It was of 4-4-4 wheel arrangement in the Whyte notation, or 2'B2' h4v in the UIC classification scheme, and was a 4-cylinder, von Borries, balanced compound locomotive. It was initially assigned No. 3201. The inspiration was partly the two Prussian S 9 cab forward 4-4-4s of two years previously. Unlike those locomotives, the S 2/6 was strictly conventional in all respects apart from wheel arrangement, driving wheel size and streamlining. Many aspects of the design were borrowed from the earlier Maffei design of the Baden IId 4-4-2 class; Anton Hammel was the chief designer for both. The locomotive was designed and built in only 4 months.

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Bavarian State Painting Collections

The Bavarian State Painting Collections (Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen), based in Munich, oversees the collections of artworks held by the Free State of Bavaria.

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Bavarian State Police

The Bavarian State Police (Bayerische Polizei) has approximately 33,500 armed officers and roughly 8,500 other civilian employees and is therefore the biggest police force in Germany.

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Bayerischer Rundfunk

Bayerischer Rundfunk (Bavarian Broadcasting, BR) is a public-service radio and television broadcaster, based in Munich, capital city of the Free State of Bavaria in Germany.

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Bayreuth

Bayreuth (Bavarian: Bareid) is a medium-sized town in northern Bavaria, Germany, on the Red Main river in a valley between the Franconian Jura and the Fichtelgebirge Mountains.

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Bärenreiter

Bärenreiter (Bärenreiter-Verlag) is a German classical music publishing house based in Kassel.

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Bölzlschiessen

Bölzlschiessen was a form of domestic recreation that involved shooting darts at decorated targets with an air gun.

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Bönnigheim

Bönnigheim is a town in the German administrative district (Kreis) of Ludwigsburg which lies at the edge of the areas known as Stromberg and Zabergäu.

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BC Augsburg

BC Augsburg was a German football club based in Augsburg, Bavaria.

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Beeldenstorm

Beeldenstorm in Dutch, roughly translatable to "statue storm", or Bildersturm in German ("image/statue storm"), also the Great Iconoclasm or Iconoclastic Fury, is a term used for outbreaks of destruction of religious images that occurred in Europe in the 16th century.

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Beethoven and Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had a powerful influence on the work of Ludwig van Beethoven.

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Benedictus Appenzeller

Benedictus Appenzeller (between 1480 and 1488 – after 1558) was a Franco-Flemish singer and composer of the Renaissance, active in Bruges and Brussels.

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Benny Greb

Benny Greb (born 13 June 1980 in Augsburg, Germany) is a prolific German drummer and clinician.

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Bentley Kassal

Bentley Kassal (born February 28, 1917) is an attorney and litigation counsel with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in New York City.

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Ber Ulmo

Rabbi 'Ber Ulmo' (Hebrew: בער בן יונה אלמו, also known as Bernhard Ber Ullmann, (1751 in Pfersee – 21 March 1837 in Pfersee) son of Jonas Ulmo and from 1781 until his death in 1837 his successor as head of the renowned Jewish community of Pfersee (near Augsburg). He also was circumciser, medical practitioner and discount broker in Augsburg. From 1770 he studied in Prague, among others at the yeshivah of Yechezkel Landau. His first marriage with Feigele daughter of physician Yona Jeitteles, where he studied medicine in Prague, was childless. His illegitimate daughter Chava Lea was the mother of Ferdinand Wertheimer (1817–1883). With his second wife Sofie (died 1832), daughter of rabbi Moses Löb of Sulzbach he had six children. On Friday evening before Yom Kippur in 1803 Ber Ulmo was arrested in the synagogue of Pfersee charged with forgery of Austrian bank notes. Along with him in Pfersee, as well as in many other places in Southern Germany over hundred members of Jewish communities were arrested in the same night. Although the charges were false and a pack of lies, the arrested Jews were detained under “Kafakesque” conditions in the iron houses of Günzburg and Donauwörth. Only after 216 days in spring 1804 they were released, some without being interrogated at all. In the time of Ulmo’s custody the famous “Pfersee handwriting” of the Babylonian Talmud (Cod. Hebr. 95), which is regarded as oldest surviving almost complete handwriting of the Talmud and today is in the possession of the Bavarian State Library in Munich, went astray. Ber Ulmo after his detention wrote a unique handwritten report on his arrest and imprisonment, which about 1861 by his son was translated in Yiddish and in 1928 by his grandson Carl Jonas Ulmann was translated in English. In 2012 a German translation following the handwriting of the Hebrew original was published with many explanatory notes. Ber Ulmo died on the evening of the Purim festival in 1837 and was buried at the old Jewish cemetery of Pfersee and Kriegshaber, near Augsburg, where many of his ancestors rest. Among his descendants are the American photographer Doris Ulmann and Richard Willstätter, who in 1915 won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

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Berengar II of Italy

Berengar II (c. 9004 August 966) was the King of Italy from 950 until his deposition in 961.

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Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe

Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe is a landscape park in Kassel, Germany.

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Berlin Potsdamer Bahnhof

The Potsdamer Bahnhof is a former railway terminus in Berlin, Germany.

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Bernardino Ochino

Bernardino Ochino (1487–1564) was an Italian, who was raised a Roman Catholic and later turned to Protestantism and became a Protestant reformer.

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Bernd Schuster

Bernhard "Bernd" Schuster (born 22 December 1959) is a German football manager in charge of Dalian Yifang and a former player who played as a midfielder.

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Bernhard Joachim Hagen

Bernhard Joachim Hagen (April 1720 in or near Hamburg (?) – 9 December 1787 in Ansbach) was a German composer, lutenist and violinist.

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Bernhard Langer

Bernhard Langer (born 27 August 1957) is a German professional golfer.

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Bernhard Strigel

Bernhard Strigel (c. 1461 – 4 May 1528) was a German portrait and historical painter of the Swabian school, the most important of a family of artists established at Memmingen.

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Bernhard Vogel (engraver)

Bernhard Vogel (19 December 1683 – 13 October 1737) was a German engraver whose main interests were genre scenes and portraits.

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Berthold von Henneberg

Bertold von Henneberg-Römhild (1442–1504) was Archbishop of Mainz and Prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire from 1484, imperial chancellor from 1486, and leader of the reform faction within the Empire.

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Bertolt Brecht

Eugen Berthold Friedrich Brecht (10 February 1898 – 14 August 1956), known professionally as Bertolt Brecht, was a German theatre practitioner, playwright, and poet.

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Bertolt-Brecht-Literaturpreis

Bertolt-Brecht-Literaturpreis ("Bertolt Brecht Literature Prize") is a literary award in Augsburg, Germany, birthplace of Bertolt Brecht.

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Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern

The Bezirksoberliga Oberbayern was the seventh tier of the German football league system in the Bavarian Regierungsbezirk of Upper Bavaria (Oberbayern).

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Biber glaciation

The Biber glaciation (Biber-Kaltzeit), Biber Glacial (Biber-Glazial), Biber Complex (Biber-Komplex) or Biber Ice Age (Biber-Eiszeit) is the oldest glacial period of the Pleistocene epoch.

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Biberach an der Riss

Biberach is a town in the south of Germany.

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Bible translations into German

German language translations of the Bible have existed since the Middle Ages.

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Big Week

Big Week or Operation Argument was a sequence of raids by the United States Strategic Air Forces (USSTAF) from 20 to 25 February 1944, as part of the European strategic bombing campaign against Nazi Germany.

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Binsfeld

Binsfeld near Wittlich in the Eifel is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Biodiesel

Biodiesel refers to a vegetable oil- or animal fat-based diesel fuel consisting of long-chain alkyl (methyl, ethyl, or propyl) esters.

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Blackletter

Blackletter (sometimes black letter), also known as Gothic script, Gothic minuscule, or Textura, was a script used throughout Western Europe from approximately 1150 to well into the 17th century.

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Blau gas

Blau gas (Blaugas) was an artificial illuminating gas similar to propane, named after its inventor, Hermann Blau of Augsburg, Germany.

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Blümcke Knoll

Blümcke Knoll is a small steep-sided feature protruding through the ice of northern Adelaide Island, about southwest of Mount Velain.

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Blindheim

Blindheim (in English also known as Blenheim) is a municipality in the Bavarian district of Dillingen in southern Germany, consisting of several villages.

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Block book

Block books, also called xylographica, are short books of up to 50 leaves, block printed in Europe in the second half of the 15th century as woodcuts with blocks carved to include both text and illustrations.

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Blockade of Germany (1939–1945)

The Blockade of Germany (1939–1945), also known as the Economic War, was carried out during World War II by the United Kingdom and France in order to restrict the supplies of minerals, metals, food and textiles needed by Nazi Germany - and later Fascist Italy - in order to sustain their war efforts.

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Blockbuster bomb

A blockbuster bomb or cookie was any of several of the largest conventional bombs used in World War II by the Royal Air Force (RAF).

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BMK Group

The BMK Group is a leading German electronics manufacturing services company with headquarter in Augsburg.

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Bob Boetticher

Robert Michael "Bob" Boetticher Sr. (born August 23, 1946) is an American funeral director, best known for the planning and implementation of memorial services for celebrities and notable individuals.

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Bobingen

Bobingen (Swabian: Boobenge) is a town in Bavaria, Germany.

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Body worn video (police equipment)

In policing equipment, body worn video (abbreviated to BWV, and also known as a body camera, body-worn camera, wearable camera, or Portable Digital Recording Device (abbreviated to PDRD) is a wearable audio, video, or photographic recording system used to record events in which police officers or other law enforcers are involved. They are typically worn on the torso of the body on the officer’s uniform. Because so many officers forget to activate their camera during interactions with the public, features such as the camera will automatically activate and record when an officer activates the emergency lights and sirens on his patrol car or when an officer deploys his Taser or firearm have all been instituted. Body worn cameras for policing are often similar to other body worn video equipment used by members of the public, commercially, or by the military, but are designed to address specific requirements related to law enforcement.

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Bolzano

Bolzano (or; German: Bozen (formerly Botzen),; Balsan or Bulsan; Bauzanum) is the capital city of the province of South Tyrol in northern Italy.

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Bombing of Augsburg in World War II

The bombing of Augsburg in World War II included two British RAF and one USAAF bombing raids against the German city of Augsburg on 17 April 1942 and 25/26 February 1944.

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Bombing of Stuttgart in World War II

The bombing of Stuttgart in World War II was a series of 53 air raids that formed part of the strategic air offensive of the Allies against Germany.

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Borgo Valsugana

Borgo Valsugana (Burg im Suganertal) is a comune (municipality) in Trentino in the northern Italian region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, located about east of Trento.

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Botanischer Garten Augsburg

The Botanischer Garten Augsburg (10 hectares) is a municipal botanical garden located at Dr.-Ziegenspeck-Weg 10, Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Bourges

Bourges is a city in central France on the Yèvre river.

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Braunau am Inn

(German for Braunau on the Inn) is a town in Upper Austria.

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Breitspurbahn

The Breitspurbahn (translation: broad-gauge railway) was a planned broad-gauge railway, proposed by Adolf Hitler during the Nazi regime in Germany, supposed to run on 3-metre gauge track with double-deck coaches between major cities of Grossdeutschland, Hitler's expanded GermanyPuffert, Douglas J. (2009).

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Brenner Pass

Brenner Pass (Brennerpass; Passo del Brennero) is a mountain pass through the Alps which forms the border between Italy and Austria.

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Brewing right

In Medieval times, the brewing right or gruit right was one of the privileges granted by the land owner or territorial ruler.

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Briefzentrum (Deutsche Post)

A Briefzentrum (English: Letter center) is a district center for the processing of letters for Deutsche Post.

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Brigitte Magnus

Brigitte Magnus is a retired East German slalom canoeist who competed in the mid-to-late 1950s.

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Brigitte Schmidt

Brigitte Schmidt is a retired East German slalom canoeist who competed in the mid-to-late 1950s.

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Bronze and brass ornamental work

The use of bronze dates from remote antiquity.

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Brotherhood of St. Mark

The Marx brothers (German Marxbrüder), or Brotherhood of Saint Mark was the name of the most important organization of German swordsmen in the 16th century.

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Bruneck

Bruneck (Brunico or Ladin: Bornech or Burnech; Branecium or Brunopolis) is the largest town in the Puster Valley in the Italian province of South Tyrol.

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Brunnenbach (Lochbach)

In earlier centuries, from at least 1412, the Brunnenbach supplied the city of Augsburg with drinking water.

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Bruno Weil

Bruno Weil (born 24 November 1949, Hahnstätten) is a symphonic conductor.

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Bundesautobahn 8

is an autobahn in southern Germany that runs 497 km (309 mi) from the Luxembourg A13 motorway at Schengen via Neunkirchen, Pirmasens, Karlsruhe, Stuttgart, Ulm, Augsburg and Munich to the Austrian West Autobahn near Salzburg.

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Bundesautobahn 91

was a planned autobahn in Germany, supposed to connect Feuchtwangen with Füssen.

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Bundesfinanzdirektion

The Bundesfinanzdirektionen was the German federal funding agencies with responsibility to the Federal Ministry of Finance that operated between 2008-2015.

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Bundesliga

The Bundesliga (lit. "Federal League", sometimes referred to as the Fußball-Bundesliga or 1. Bundesliga) is a professional association football league in Germany and the football league with the highest average stadium attendance worldwide.

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Bundesstraße 10

The Bundesstraße 10 (abbr. B10) is a German federal highway.

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Bundesstraße 2

The Bundesstraße 2 (abbr. B2) is Germany's longest federal highway, running some 1000 kilometres from the Polish border near Gartz to the Austrian border near Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

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Bundesstraße 23

Bundesstraße 23 (abbreviated to B 23) is a German federal highway (German: Bundesstraße) in Bavaria that runs from Peiting to the Austrian border near Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

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Bundesstraße 300

The Bundesstraße 300 or B 300 is one of the German federal highways crossing southern Bavaria from Memmingen in direction to Regensburg via Krumbach (Swabia), Augsburg und Aichach.

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Buoyancy compensator (aviation)

The static buoyancy of airships in flight is not constant.

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Burchard II (bishop of Halberstadt)

Burchard of Veltheim (also Burckhardt, Bucco, or Buko; – 7 April 1088) was a German cleric and Bishop of Halberstadt (as Burchard II) from 1059 until his death.

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Burgau

Burgau is a town in the district of Günzburg in Swabia, Bavaria.

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Burgenland

Burgenland (Őrvidék; Gradišće; Gradiščanska; Hradsko; is the easternmost and least populous state of Austria. It consists of two statutory cities and seven rural districts, with in total 171 municipalities. It is long from north to south but much narrower from west to east (wide at Sieggraben). The region is part of the Centrope Project.

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Burgraviate of Nuremberg

The Burgraviate of Nuremberg (Burggrafschaft Nürnberg) was a state of the Holy Roman Empire from the early 12th to the late 15th centuries.

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Cabinet of curiosities

Cabinets of curiosities (also known in German loanwords as Kunstkabinett, Kunstkammer or Wunderkammer; also Cabinets of Wonder, and wonder-rooms) were encyclopedic collections of objects whose categorical boundaries were, in Renaissance Europe, yet to be defined.

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Call a Bike

Call a Bike is a dockless bike hire system run by Deutsche Bahn (DB) in several German cities.

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Campaigns of 1796 in the French Revolutionary Wars

The French Revolutionary Wars continued from 1795, with the French in an increasingly strong position as members of the First Coalition made separate peaces.

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Campbell Barracks

Campbell Barracks, in Heidelberg, Germany, was the location of the Headquarters of the United States Army in Europe and Seventh Army (HQ USAREUR/7A), as well as V Corps and the headquarters of NATO’s Component Command-Land Headquarters, Heidelberg.

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Canadian Forces Military Police

The Canadian Forces Military Police (CFMP) contribute to the effectiveness and readiness of the Canadian Armed Forces (CF) and the Department of National Defence (DND) through the provision of professional police, security and operational support services worldwide.

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Canoe slalom

Canoe slalom (previously known as whitewater slalom) is a competitive sport with the aim to navigate a decked canoe or kayak through a course of hanging downstream or upstream gates on river rapids in the fastest time possible.

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Canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Men's slalom C-1

These are the results of the men's C-1 slalom competition in canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

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Canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Men's slalom C-2

These are the results of the men's C-2 slalom competition in canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

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Canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Men's slalom K-1

These are the results of the men's K-1 slalom competition in canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

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Canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Women's slalom K-1

These are the results of the women's K-1 slalom competition in canoeing at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

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Canoeing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Qualification

This article details the Canoeing at the 2012 Summer Olympics qualifying phase.

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Carl Ehrenberg

Carl Emil Theodor Ehrenberg (5 April 1878 – 26 February 1962) was a German composer.

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Carl Gustaf Pilo

Carl Gustaf Pilo (5 March 1711 – 2 March 1793) was a Swedish-born artist and painter, one of many 18th-century European artists who had to leave their own country in order to make a living.

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Carl Maria von Weber

Carl Maria Friedrich Ernst von Weber (18 or 19 November 1786 5 June 1826) was a German composer, conductor, pianist, guitarist and critic, and was one of the first significant composers of the Romantic school.

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Carl Stamitz

Carl Philipp Stamitz ('Karel Stamic'; baptized 8 May 17459 November 1801), who changed his given name from Karl, was a German composer of partial Czech ancestry.

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Carl von Effner

Carl von Effner, also Karl von Effner, Carl Joseph von Effner and Carl Effner (the younger) (10 February 1831 – 22 October 1884) was gardener to the Bavarian court, later Königlich Bayerischer Hofgärtendirektor ("Royal Bavarian Court Director of Gardens"), and landscape gardener.

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Carl Wilhelm Welser von Neunhof

Carl Wilhelm Welser von Neunhof (31 December 1663 - 1 February 1711 Nuremberg), was a mayor of Nuremberg.

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Carlmann Kolb

Carlmann Kolb (29 January 1703 – 15 January 1765) was a German priest, organist, and composer.

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Carltheo Zeitschel

Carltheo Zeitschel also Carl Theo, (13 March 1893, Augsburg – possibly April 1945, Schmölln was a German physician, diplomat, and Nazi functionary. Among other things, he is known to have been instrumental in the Holocaust in France. As a Judenreferent at the German Embassy in France, he organized the deportation of Jews from occupied France.

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Carnia

Carnia (Cjargne or Cjargna/Cjargno in local variants, Ciargna, Karnien) is a historical-geographic region in the northeastern Italian area of Friuli.

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Carniola

Carniola (Slovene, Kranjska; Krain; Carniola; Krajna) was a historical region that comprised parts of present-day Slovenia.

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Carnival

Carnival (see other spellings and names) is a Western Christian and Greek Orthodox festive season that occurs before the liturgical season of Lent.

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CashPool

CashPool is a cooperation of a multitude of smaller or virtual German private banks, in which they mutually waive ATM usage fees for their customers.

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Casimir, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth

Casimir (or Kasimir) of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (27 December 1481 – 21 September 1527) was Margrave of Bayreuth or Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach from 1515 to 1527.

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Caspar Aquila

Caspar Aquila (sometimes Kaspar or Gaspar Aquila; 7 August 1488 – 12 November 1560), born Johann Kaspar Adler, was a German Lutheran theologian and reformer.

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Caspar Neher

Caspar Neher (born Rudolf Ludwig Caspar Neher; 11 April 1897 – 30 June 1962) was an Austrian-German scenographer and librettist, known principally for his career-long working relationship with Bertolt Brecht.

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Caspar Wolf

Caspar Wolf (Muri, Aargau, 3 May 1735 – Heidelberg, 6 October 1783) was a Swiss painter, known mostly for his dramatic paintings of Alps.

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Castaing machine

The Castaing machine is a device used to add lettering and decoration to the edge of a coin.

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Catherine Bush

Catherine Bush is a Canadian novelist.

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CDU donations scandal

The CDU donations scandal was a political scandal resulting from the illegal forms of party financing used by the German Christian Democratic Union (CDU) during the 1990s.

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Cellarius

Cellarius is the Latin form of cellarer, an office within a medieval Benedictine abbey.

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Cenodoxus

Cenodoxus is one of several miracle plays by Jacob Bidermann, an early 17th-century German Jesuit and prolific playwright.

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CENTAG wartime structure in 1989

The Central Army Group (CENTAG) was a NATO military formation comprising four Army Corps from two NATO member nations comprising troops from Canada, Germany and the United States.

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Cesare Vecellio

Cesare Vecellio (c. 1530 – c. 1601) was an Italian engraver and painter of the Renaissance, active in Venice.

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Chariot clock

A chariot clock is a type of mantel/table figural clock in the form of a chariot whose dial is set into the wheel or elsewhere, its origins date back to the second half of the 16th century southern Germany.

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Charles III Philip, Elector Palatine

Charles III Philip, Elector Palatine (Neuburg, 4 November 1661 – Mannheim, 31 December 1742) was a ruler from the house of Wittelsbach.

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Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury

Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury, KG, PC (24 July 1660 – 1 February 1718) was an English politician who was part of the Immortal Seven group that invited William III, Prince of Orange to depose James II of England as monarch during the Glorious Revolution.

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Charles Thomas, Prince of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort

Charles Thomas, 3rd Prince of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort (7 March 1714 – 6 June 1789) was from 1735 to 1789 the third Prince of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort.

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Charles Whitworth, 1st Baron Whitworth

Charles Whitworth, 1st Baron Whitworth (14 October 1675 – 23 October 1725) was a British diplomat.

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Charles, Margrave of Burgau

Charles, Margrave of Burgau, also known as Charles of Austria, (22 November 1560 at Křivoklát Castle in Bohemia – 30 October 1618 in Überlingen), was the son of Archduke Ferdinand II of Austria and his first morganatic marriage to Philippine Welser.

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Château de Ferrette

The Château de Ferrette is a ruined castle in the commune of Ferrette in the Haut-Rhin département of France.

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Château de Saint-Ulrich

The Château de Saint-Ulrich (also known as the Château de Grand-Ribeaupierre) is one of three castles (with the Girsberg and the Haut-Ribeaupierre) which overlooks the commune of Ribeauvillé in the Haut-Rhin département of France.

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China women's national football team results (2000–09)

This article lists the results for the China women's national football team between 2000 and 2009.

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Christian Berkel

Christian Berkel (born 28 October 1957) is a German actor, internationally most known for Downfall and Valkyrie.

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Christian Cappek

Christian Cappek (born 25 July 1990) is a German footballer who plays as a forward for Wehen Wiesbaden.

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Christian Erbach

Christian Erbach (ca. 1568 – 14 June 1635) was a German organist and composer.

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Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart

Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart (24 March 1739 – 10 October 1791), was a German poet, organist, composer, and journalist.

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Christian Friedrich Freyer

Christian Friedrich Freyer (25 August 1794, Wassertrüdingen – 11 November 1885 Augsburg) was a German entomologist mainly interested in Lepidoptera.

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Christian Hochstätter

Christian Hochstätter (born 19 October 1963 in Augsburg) is a retired German football player.

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Christian von Mechel

Christian von Mechel (4 April 1737 in Basel; † 11 April 1817 in Berlin) was a Swiss engraver, publisher and art dealer.

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Christian Weis

Christian Weis (born 20 June 1968) is a former professional tennis player from Germany.

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Christian Wilhelm Berger

Christian Wilhelm Berger (born 13 June 1964 in Bucharest) is a Romanian composer, organist, and a Lecturer at the Bucharest Academy.

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Christianity in the 15th century

Bibliothèque Nationale de France --> The 15th century in Christianity is part of the High Middle Ages, the period from the coronation of Charlemagne in 800 to the close of the 15th century, which saw the fall of Constantinople (1453), the end of the Hundred Years War (1453), the discovery of the New World (1492), and thereafter the Protestant Reformation (1515).

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Christmas market

A Christmas market, also known as Christkindlmarkt (literally: Baby Jesus Market), Christkindlesmarkt, Christkindlmarket, Christkindlimarkt, and Weihnachtsmarkt, is a street market associated with the celebration of Christmas during the four weeks of Advent.

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Christoff Schissler

Christoff Schissler (c 1531 -. 14 September 1608) was a German builder of high precision scientific instruments.

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Christoph Amberger

Christoph Amberger (c. 1505 – 1562) was a painter of Augsburg in the 16th century, a disciple of Hans Holbein, his principal work being the history of Joseph in twelve pictures.

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Christoph Christian Sturm

Christoph Christian Sturm (1740–1786) was a German preacher and author, best known for his Reflections on the Works of God in Nature.

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Christoph Froschauer

Christoph Froschauer (ca. 1490 – 1 April 1564) was the first printer in Zurich, notably for printing the Froschauer Bible, the Zwinglian Bible translation.

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Christoph I, Margrave of Baden-Baden

Christopher I of Baden (13 November 1453 – 19 April 1527) was the Margrave of Baden from 1475 to 1515.

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Christoph Langenmantel

Christoph Langenmantel or Christoph Langenmantel vom Sparren (1488, Augsburg - 17 May 1538, Ingolstadt) was a nobleman, Carmelite monk, canon of Freising and a supporter of Martin Luther.

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Christoph Schwarz

Christoph Schwartz, Schwarz, or Schovarts (c. 1545 in München – April 15, 1592) was a German court painter.

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Christoph Thomas Scheffler

Christoph Thomas Scheffler (sometimes written Schäffler, December 20, 1699 – January 25, 1756) was a German painter of the rococo period.

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Christoph von Schmid

Christoph von Schmid (15 August 1768 Dinkelsbühl, Bavaria – 3 September 1854 Augsburg) was a writer of children's stories and an educator.

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Christoph von Stadion

Christoph von Stadion (1478–1543) was Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1517 to 1543.

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Christoph Weiditz

Christoph Weiditz (1498, Strasbourg or Freiburg im Breisgau - 1559, Augsburg) was a German painter, medalist, sculptor and goldsmith.

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Christopher Street Day

Christopher Street Day (CSD) is an annual European LGBT celebration and demonstration held in various cities across Europe for the rights of LGBT people, and against discrimination and exclusion.

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Christopher, Duke of Mecklenburg

Christopher, Duke of Mecklenburg-Gadebusch (30 July 1537 in Augsburg – 4 March 1592 in Tempzin Abbey) was a son of Albrecht VII, Duke of Mecklenburg.

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Christos Tsakmakis

Christos Tsakmakis (born 6 September 1987 in Augsburg) is a German-born, Greek slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 2002 to 2016.

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Chronological list of saints and blesseds in the 12th century

A list of 12th-century saints.

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Church of Saint Maurice

Church of Saint Maurice may refer to several churches.

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Cindy Kolodziejski

Cindy Kolodziejski (born 1962 in Augsburg, Germany) is a contemporary ceramic artist living and working in Venice, California.

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Cindy Pöschel

Cindy Pöschel (born 21 September 1989) is a German slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 2006 to 2014.

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City gate

A city gate is a gate which is, or was, set within a city wall.

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City Solar

City Solar AG is a producers of large-scale photovoltaic power plants, taking care of all aspects of production.

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Civilian casualties of strategic bombing

Strategic bombing is the use of airpower to destroy industrial and economic infrastructure—such as factories, oil refineries, railroads, or nuclear power plants—rather than just directly targeting military bases, supply depots, or enemy combatants.

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Clara (rhinoceros)

Clara the rhinoceros (?1738-14 April 1758) was a female Indian rhinoceros who became famous during 17 years of touring Europe in the mid-18th century.

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Clara Hätzlerin

Clara Hätzlerin (c. 1430 – 1476) was a professional scribe in 15th century Augsburg.

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Clara Tott

Clara Tott, in other sources Clara Dett, Clara of Dettingen, Tettingen, or Clare Dettin (– 1520), was a court singer associated with the Elector Palatine Frederick I, whom she is said to have secretly married.

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Clarkson Golden Knights men's ice hockey

The Clarkson Golden Knights men's ice hockey team is a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college ice hockey program that represents Clarkson University.

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Claudia Eder

Claudia Eder (born 7 February 1948) is a German mezzo-soprano in opera and concert, and an academic at the Hochschule für Musik Mainz.

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Claus Grimm

Claus Grimm (born November 22, 1940) is a German art historian and from its founding in 1983 until 2007 he was director of the Bavarian historical institute Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte in Augsburg.

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Claus Sendlinger

Claus Sendlinger (born 1963) is the CEO & President of Design Hotels AG (Börse München: LBA), a publicly traded hospitality services company representing a network of more than 170 independently owned hotels in 40 countries.

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Claus von Stauffenberg

Claus Philipp Maria Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg (15 November 1907 – 21 July 1944) was a German army officer and member of the Bavarian noble family von Stauffenberg, who was one of the leading members of the failed 20 July plot of 1944 to assassinate Adolf Hitler and remove the Nazi Party from power.

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Clemens von Zimmermann

Clemens von Zimmermann, historical painter, was born at Düsseldorf on 8 November 1788.

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Clemens Wenceslaus of Saxony

Prince Clemens Wenceslaus of Saxony (German: Clemens Wenzeslaus August Hubertus Franz Xaver von Sachsen) (28 September 1739 – 27 July 1812) was a German prince from the House of Wettin and the Archbishop-Elector of Trier from 1768 until 1803, the Prince-Bishop of Freising from 1763 until 1768, the Prince-Bishop of Regensburg from 1763 until 1769, and the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1768 until 1812.

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Clock

A clock is an instrument to measure, keep, and indicate time.

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Close helmet

The close helmet, also called the close helm was a military helmet worn by knights and other men-at-arms in the Late Medieval and Renaissance eras.

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Clotilde Kainerstorfer

Clotilde Kainerstorfer (2 July 1833 – 26 September 1897) was an Austrian composer born in Hall in Tirol.

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Coats of arms of the Holy Roman Empire

Over its long history, the Holy Roman Empire used many different heraldic forms, representing its numerous internal divisions.

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Codex Argenteus

The Codex Argenteus (Latin for "Silver Book/Codex") is a 6th-century manuscript, originally containing a 4th century translation of the Bible into the Gothic language.

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Cologne War

The Cologne War (1583–88) devastated the Electorate of Cologne, a historical ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire, within present-day North Rhine-Westphalia, in Germany.

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Colonial Venezuela

Spanish expeditions led by Columbus and Pepito Perez reached the coast of present-day Venezuela in 1498 and 1499.

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Combino

The Combino is a low-floor tram produced by Siemens Mobility (formerly DUEWAG).

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Commodore USA

Commodore USA, LLC was a computer company based in Pompano Beach, Florida, with additional facilities in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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Companions of Saint Nicholas

The companions of Saint Nicholas are a group of closely related figures who accompany Saint Nicholas throughout the territories formerly in the Holy Roman Empire.

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Confessing Church

The Confessing Church (Bekennende Kirche) was a movement within German Protestantism during Nazi Germany that arose in opposition to government-sponsored efforts to unify all Protestant churches into a single pro-Nazi Protestant Reich Church.

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Connections (TV series)

Connections is a 10-episode documentary television series and 1978 book (Connections, based on the series) created, written, and presented by science historian James Burke.

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Conrad Gessner

Conrad Gessner (Conradus Gesnerus; Conrad Geßner or Cůnrat Geßner; 26 March 1516 – 13 December 1565) was a Swiss physician, naturalist, bibliographer, and philologist.

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Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor

Conrad II (4 June 1039), also known as and, was Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire from 1027 until his death in 1039.

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Conrad of Megenberg

Conrad of Megenberg (Konrad von Megenberg, Conradus Megenbergensis; 1309–1374) was a German Catholic scholar, and a writer.

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Conrad, Duke of Lorraine

Conrad (– 10 August 955), called the Red (Konrad der Rote), was Duke of Lorraine from 944 until 953.

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Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe

The Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe is a jurisdiction of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America which includes all its congregations in continental Europe.

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Cooler Master

Cooler Master Co., Ltd. is a computer hardware manufacturer based in Taiwan.

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Cornelius Canis

Cornelius Canis (also de Hondt, d'Hondt) (between 1500 and 1510 – 15 February 1562) was a Franco-Flemish composer, singer, and choir director of the Renaissance, active for much of his life in the Grande Chapelle, the imperial Habsburg music establishment during the reign of Emperor Charles V. He brought the compositional style of the mid-16th century Franco-Flemish school, with its elaborate imitative polyphony, together with the lightness and clarity of the Parisian chanson, and he was one of the few composers of the time to write chansons in both the French and Franco-Flemish idioms.

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Coro, Venezuela

Coro is the capital of Falcón State and the oldest city in the west of Venezuela.

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Corps Cisaria

Cisaria Munich is a German Student Corps (Fraternity) in the Weinheimer Senioren-Convent (WSC), one of the oldest umbrella organizations of German fraternities.

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Counterfeit watch

A counterfeit watch is an illegal copy of an authentic watch.

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Countess Marie Larisch von Moennich

Countess Marie Louise Larisch von Moennich (also known as Countess Marie Louise Larisch-Wallersee and Countess Marie Larisch) (24 February 1858 - 4 July 1940) was the niece and confidante of Empress Elisabeth of Austria.

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Crises Tour

The Crises Tour 1983 was a concert tour by the British multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield.

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Cristina Giai Pron

Maria Cristina Giai Pron (born 21 August 1974 in Turin) is an Italian slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1989 to 2010.

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Croatian Latin literature

Croatian Latin literature (or Croatian Latinism) is a term referring to literary works, written in the Latin language, which have evolved in present-day Croatia since the 9th century AD.

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Croats in Germany

Croats in Germany (Kroaten in Deutschland; Hrvati u Njemačkoj) refers to persons living in Germany who have total or partial Croatian ancestry.

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Cuckoo clock

A cuckoo clock is a typically pendulum-regulated clock that strikes the hours with a sound like a common cuckoo's call and has an automated cuckoo bird that moves with each note.

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Cuius regio, eius religio

Cuius regio, eius religio is a Latin phrase which literally means "Whose realm, his religion", meaning that the religion of the ruler was to dictate the religion of those ruled.

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Curt Frenzel Stadium

The Curt Frenzel Stadium is an arena in Augsburg, Germany.

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Cyprián Karásek Lvovický

Cyprián Karásek Lvovický (of Lvovice) (Czech: Cyprián Karásek Lvovický ze Lvovic, German: Cyprian von Leowitz, Latin: Cyprianus Leovitius) (July 8, 1514? in Hradec Králové – 1574 in Lauingen) was a Bohemian astronomer, mathematician and astrologer.

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Dachau

Dachau is a town in Upper Bavaria, in the southern part of Germany.

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Dancing mania

Dancing mania (also known as dancing plague, choreomania, St. John's Dance and St. Vitus's Dance) was a social phenomenon that occurred primarily in mainland Europe between the 14th and 17th centuries.

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Daniel Chodowiecki

Daniel Niklaus Chodowiecki (16 October 1726 – 7 February 1801) was a Polish—and later German—painter and printmaker with Huguenot ancestry, who is most famous as an etcher.

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Daniel Dölschner

Daniel Dölschner (born January 9, 1976, in Frankfurt am Main) is a German poet and Haiku-writer.

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Daniel Hopfer

Daniel Hopfer (circa 1470 in Kaufbeuren – 1536 in Augsburg) was a German artist who is widely believed to have been the first to use etching in printmaking, at the end of the fifteenth century.

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Danube glaciation

The Danube glaciation or Donau glaciation (Donau-Kaltzeit), also known as the Danube Glacial (Donau-Glazial), is a glacial stage of the Pleistocene epoch.

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Danube Valley Railway (Baden-Württemberg)

The Danube Valley Railway (German: Donautalbahn or Donaubahn) in Baden-Württemberg in south-western Germany is a 133.8-kilometre-long railway running from the city of Ulm to Immendingen, which is largely single-tracked and for the most part not electrified.

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Danube Valley Railway (Bavaria)

The Danube Valley Railway (Donautalbahn) in Bavaria in southern Germany is the railway line that runs from Regensburg via Ingolstadt and Donauwörth to Ulm, just over the Bavarian border in Baden-Württemberg.

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David Backhouse

David Backhouse (born 23 October 1981) is a Dutch slalom canoeist who competed from the late 1990s to the late 2000s.

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David Bailly

David Bailly (1584–1657) was a Dutch Golden Age painter.

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David Florence

David Florence (born 8 August 1982) is a British slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 1999.

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David Hoeschel

David Hoeschel (also Höschel) (Hoeschelius) (8 April 1556, Augsburg – 19 October 1617, Augsburg) was a German librarian, editor and scholar.

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David Sheldon Boone

David Sheldon Boone (born August 26, 1952) is a former U.S. Army signals analyst who worked for the National Security Agency and was convicted of espionage-related charges in 1999 related to his sale of secret documents to the Soviet Union from 1988 to 1991.

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David Tecchler

David Tecchler, sometimes also written Techler, Tekler, Deckler, Dechler, Decler, TecclerRené Vannes, Dictionnaire universel des luthiers, Bruxelles: Les Amis de la musique, 1951, p. 356 or Teckler, (1666–1748) was a German luthier, best known for his cellos and double basses.

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Dayton, Ohio

Dayton is the sixth-largest city in the state of Ohio and the county seat of Montgomery County.

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Dürer's Rhinoceros

Dürer's Rhinoceros is the name commonly given to a woodcut executed by German painter and printmaker Albrecht Dürer in 1515.

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DB Class 103

The Baureihe 103 is a class of electric locomotives in Germany, originally operated by Deutsche Bundesbahn.

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DB Class 403

The DB Class 403 was a series of three electric multiple units commissioned by the Deutsche Bundesbahn in the 1970s, an early predecessor of the Intercity-Express as a high-speed train.

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DB Class 628

The DB Class 628 is a twin-car, diesel multiple unit operated by the Deutsche Bahn AG for local passenger rail services.

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DB Class 78.10

The two German steam locomotives of DB Class 78.10, operated by the Deutsche Bundesbahn, were rebuilds based on two Prussian P 8 engines which were converted by the firm of Krauss-Maffei and the Minden repair shop.

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DB Class ETA 150

The accumulator cars of Class ETA 150 (Class 515 from 1968) were German railbuses used extensively by the Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) over 40 years.

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De Christiana expeditione apud Sinas

De Christiana expeditione apud Sinas suscepta ab Societate Jesu... (Latin for "On the Christian Mission among the Chinese by the Society of Jesus...") is a book based on an Italian manuscript written by the most important founding figure of the Jesuit China mission, Matteo Ricci (1552–1610), expanded and translated into Latin by his colleague Nicolas Trigault (1577–1628).

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De komst van Joachim Stiller

De komst van Joachim Stiller ("The Coming of Joachim Stiller") is a novel by Belgian author Hubert Lampo, first published in 1960.

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Death by burning

Deliberately causing death through the effects of combustion, or effects of exposure to extreme heat, has a long history as a form of capital punishment.

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Death of Cleopatra

The death of Cleopatra VII, the last reigning ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt, occurred on either 10 or 12 August 30 BC in Alexandria, when she was 39 years old.

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December 1959

The following events occurred in December 1959.

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Declaratio Ferdinandei

The Declaratio Ferdinandei (Declaration of Ferdinand) was a clause in the Peace of Augsburg, signed in 1555 to end conflicts between Catholics and Protestants within the Holy Roman Empire.

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Deep Purple European Tour

The Deep Purple European Tour was a year-long successful concert tour by British hard rock band Deep Purple, lasting from July 1969 until June 1970.

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Defensive wall

A defensive wall is a fortification usually used to protect a city, town or other settlement from potential aggressors.

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Dellmensingen Castle

Dellmensingen Castle is an early Baroque castle in the Upper Swabian village of Dellmensingen, now part of the city of Erbach, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Denim Air

Denim Air ACMI B.V. was a Dutch charter airline based in Mijdrecht.

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Der Ritter und die Magd

"Der Ritter und die Magd" ("The Knight and the Maiden") is a traditional German folk song.

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Der Volkswille (Augsburg, 1919)

Der Volkswille ("The Popular Will" or "The People's Will") was a newspaper published from Augsburg, Germany 1919-1921.

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Deuter Sport

Deuter is a German brand of sport packs and bags, for hiking, trekking, snow sports and other uses.

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Deutsche Barockgalerie

The Deutsche Barockgalerie is an art gallery housed in the Schaezlerpalais in Augsburg.

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Deutsche Eishockey Liga

The Deutsche Eishockey Liga (English: German Ice Hockey League) or DEL, is a German professional ice hockey league that was founded in 1994.

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Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken

Deutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabriken Aktien-Gesellschaft (German Weapons and Munitions public limited company), known as DWM, was an arms company in Imperial Germany created in 1896 when Ludwig Loewe & Company united its weapons and ammunition production facilities within one company.

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Deutscher Bund Gälischer Sportarten

The Deutscher Bund Gälischer Sportarten (also German GAA) is a union of German clubs, who play Hurling, Camogie, Gaelic Football, Gaelic Handball and Rounders.

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Deutschland Cup

The Deutschland Cup is an in-season international ice hockey tournament hosted by the German Ice Hockey Federation which has been contested in most years since 1987.

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DFB-Pokal

The DFB-Pokal (until 1943 Tschammer-Pokal) or German Cup is a German knockout football cup competition held annually.

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DFL-Supercup

The DFL-Supercup or German Super Cup is a one-off football match in Germany that features the winners of the Bundesliga championship and the DFB-Pokal.

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Diana Fountain, Bushy Park

The Diana Fountain in Bushy Park, in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, is a seventeenth-century statue ensemble and water feature in an eighteenth-century setting with a surrounding pool and mile long tree lined vistas which honors the Roman Goddess Diana.

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Die Lügend von S. Johanne Chrysostomo

Die Lügend von S. Johanne Chrysostomo, first published by Martin Luther in 1537, is an edition of the late mediaeval Life of John Chrysostom as a hermit, characterised by Luther's sceptical, and often sarcastic, marginal commentary.

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Diedorf

Diedorf is a municipality in the district of Augsburg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Diefflen

Diefflen (pronounced: Dieflen, in the local, Moselle-Franconian dialect Dejfeln) is a district of Dillingen/Saar in the district of Saarlouis (Saarland) and has about 4700 inhabitants.

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Diet of Augsburg

The Diet of Augsburg were the meetings of the Imperial Diet of the Holy Roman Empire held in the German city of Augsburg.

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Diet of Speyer (1526)

The Diet of Speyer or the Diet of Spires (sometimes referred to as Speyer I) was an Imperial Diet of the Holy Roman Empire in 1526 in the Imperial City of Speyer in present-day Germany.

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Dietfurt in Mittelfranken

Dietfurt, now part of the town of Treuchtlingen, is a German village in Middle Franconia, Bavaria.

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Diether Kunerth

Diether Kunerth (born 1940 in Freiwaldau) is a contemporary artist who lives in Ottobeuren, Upper Swabia.

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Dillingen (district)

Dillingen is a ''Landkreis'' (district) in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Dillingen an der Donau

Dillingen, or Dillingen an der Donau (Dillingen on the Danube) is a town in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Dinkelsbühl

Dinkelsbühl is a historic town in Central Franconia, a region of Germany that is now part of the state of Bavaria, in southern Germany.

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Directorium

"Directorium" is a Latin word denoting a guide.

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Dirk Kaftan

Dirk Kaftan (born 1971) is a German opera and concert conductor.

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Dirmstein

Dirmstein is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Donauwörth

Donauwörth) is a town and the capital of the Donau-Ries district in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany. It is said to have been founded by two fishermen where the rivers Danube (Donau) and Wörnitz meet. The city is part of the scenic route called "Romantische Straße" (Romantic Road) The city is situated between Munich and Nuremberg, 46 km north of Augsburg.

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Door knocker

A door knocker is an item of door furniture that allows people outside a house to alert those inside to their presence.

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Dorint Hotel Tower

The Dorint Hotel Tower is the best-known high-rise building in the German city of Augsburg and visible throughout the city.

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Double Portrait of Jakob Meyer zum Hasen and Dorothea Kannengießer

The Double Portrait of Jakob Meyer zum Hasen and Dorothea Kannengießer is a 1516 oil on limewood panel painting by Hans Holbein the Younger.

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Drago Jančar

Drago Jančar (born 13 April 1948) is a Slovenian writer, playwright and essayist.

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DRG Class ET 91

The Baureihe ET 91 was a series of electric multiple units built for the Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft of Germany.

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Ducat

The ducat was a gold or silver coin used as a trade coin in Europe from the later middle ages until as late as the 20th century.

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Duchy of Pomerania

The Duchy of Pomerania (Herzogtum Pommern, Księstwo Pomorskie, 12th century – 1637) was a duchy in Pomerania on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea, ruled by dukes of the House of Pomerania (Griffins).

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Duchy of Swabia

The Duchy of Swabia (German: Herzogtum Schwaben) was one of the five stem duchies of the medieval German kingdom.

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Dudeștii Noi

Dudeștii Noi (Neubeschenowa; Újbesenyő) is a commune in Timiș County, Banat, Romania.

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Duplessis Orphans

The Duplessis Orphans (les Orphelins de Duplessis) were children victimized in a mid-20th century scheme in which approximately 20,000 orphaned children were falsely certified as mentally ill by the government of the province of Quebec, Canada, and confined to psychiatric institutions.

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Early clashes in the Rhine campaign of 1796

In the Rhine Campaign of 1796 (June 1796 to February 1797), two First Coalition armies under the overall command of Archduke Charles outmaneuvered and defeated two Republican French armies.

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Early New High German

Early New High German (ENHG) is a term for the period in the history of the German language, generally defined, following Wilhelm Scherer, as the period 1350 to 1650.

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Eclipse Tour

The Eclipse Tour was a concert tour by American rock band Journey.

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Edeltraud Günther

Edeltraud Günther (born October 10, 1965 in Augsburg) is a German economist and since 1996 professor at the Chair of Business Management, esp.

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Editio princeps

In classical scholarship, the editio princeps (plural: editiones principes) of a work is the first printed edition of the work, that previously had existed only in manuscripts, which could be circulated only after being copied by hand.

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Edle von Webenau

The Edlen von Webenau are a family from Austria.

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Edmund Stoeckle

Edmund Stoeckle (1899 in Augsburg - 1986 in Ottobeuren) was a German politician.

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Eduard Bayer

Johann Gottfried Eduard Bayer (20 March 1822 – 23 March 1908), usually known as Eduard Bayer, was a German composer for the classical guitar and a virtuoso performer on the guitar, harp guitar, mandolin and zither.

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Eduard Dyckhoff

Eduard Dyckhoff (November 14, 1880 in Augsburg, Germany – March 2, 1949) was a German doctor of law and chess player.

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Eduard Oswald

Eduard Oswald (born Augsburg 1947) is one of the Vice Presidents of the German Bundestag.

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Edward Florian

Edward Florian is a former Polish slalom canoeist who competed in the early-to-mid-1980s.

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Edward Kelley

Sir Edward Kelley or Kelly, also known as Edward Talbot (1 August 1555 – 1 November 1597), was an English Renaissance occultist and self-declared spirit medium.

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Edwin Sandys (bishop)

Edwin Sandys (1519 – 10 July, 1588) was an English prelate.

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Edwin Walker

Edwin Anderson Walker (November 10, 1909 – October 31, 1993) — known as Ted Walker — was a United States Army officer who served in World War II and the Korean War.

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Efim Bogoljubov

Efim Dmitriyevich Bogolyubov (also Romanized Bogoljubov, Bogoljubow; April 14, 1889 – June 18, 1952) was a Russian-born German chess grandmaster who won numerous events and played two matches against Alexander Alekhine for the world championship.

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Eggenberg family

Eggenberg was the name of an Austrian noble family from Styria, who achieved princely rank in the 17th century.

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Ehrgott Bernhard Bendl

Ehrgott or Ehregott Bernhard Bendl, Bendel, Pendel or Pendl (c.1660, Pfarrkirchen - 31 January 1738, Augsburg) was a German sculptor and plaster-worker.

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Eighth Air Force

The Eighth Air Force (Air Forces Strategic) (8 AF) is a numbered air force (NAF) of the United States Air Force's Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC).

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Electoral Palace, Koblenz

The Electoral Palace (German: Kurfürstliches Schloss) in Koblenz, Germany, was the residence of the last Archbishop and Elector of Trier, Clemens Wenceslaus of Saxony, who commissioned the building in the late 18th century.

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Elias Baeck

Elias Baeck (1679–1747) called "Heldenmuth", was a German painter and engraver from Augsburg.

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Elias Holl

Elias Holl (February 28, 1573 in Augsburg – January 6, 1646 in Augsburg) was the most important architect of late German Renaissance architecture.

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Elisabeth Micheler-Jones

Elisabeth Micheler-Jones (born 30 April 1966 in Augsburg) is a West German-German slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s.

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Elizabeth of Carinthia, Queen of Germany

Elizabeth of Carinthia (also known as Elizabeth of Tyrol; – 28 October 1312), was a Duchess of Austria from 1282 and Queen of Germany from 1298 until 1308, by marriage to the Habsburg king Albert I.

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Elizabeth Parcells

Elizabeth Parcells (December 28, 1951 in Detroit, Michigan – December 29, 2005 in Detroit, Michigan) was an American coloratura soprano.

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Ellen White (footballer)

Ellen Toni White (born 9 May 1989) is an English international footballer who plays as a forward.

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Ellwangen

Ellwangen an der Jagst, officially Ellwangen (Jagst), in common use simply Ellwangen is a town in the district of Ostalbkreis in the east of Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

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Ellyse Perry

Ellyse Alexandra Perry (born 3 November 1990) is an Australian sportswoman who made her debut for both the Australian cricket and the Australian women's national soccer team at the age of 16.

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Elmar Wepper

Elmar Wepper (born 16 April 1944 in Augsburg) is a German actor best known for dubbing Mel Gibson's voice since the 1980s.

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Elmārs Zemgalis

Elmārs Zemgalis (9 September 1923 – 8 December 2014), was a Latvian-American chess master and mathematics professor.

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Els von Eystett

Els von Eystett was a 15th-century German prostitute at the center of a well-documented legal case.

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Elvedin Herić

Elvedin Herić (born 9 February 1998) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian professional footballer who plays as a Midfielder for Premier League club Sarajevo.

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Emil Hilb

Emil Hilb (born 26 April 1882 in Stuttgart; died 6 August 1929 in Würzburg) was a German-Jewish mathematician who worked in the fields of special functions, differential equations, and difference equations.

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Emil Schürer

Emil Schürer (May 2, 1844 – April 30, 1910) was a German Protestant theologian known mainly for his study of the history of the Jews around the time of Jesus' ministry.

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Emil Zimmermann

Emil Zimmermann is a retired East German slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s.

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Entente Florale

The Entente Florale Europe ("Flowery Alliance of Europe") is an international horticultural competition established to recognise municipalities and villages in Europe for excellence in horticultural displays.

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Equestrian Portrait of Charles V

Equestrian Portrait of Charles V (also Emperor Charles V on Horseback or Charles V at Mühlberg) is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Italian Renaissance artist Titian.

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Erbach Castle

Erbach Castle is a patrician Renaissance castle situated on a hillside close to the city of Erbach an der Donau in the state of Baden Württemberg, Germany.

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Erhard Ratdolt

Erhard Ratdolt (1442–1528) was an early German printer from Augsburg.

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Erhard Wunderlich

Erhard "Sepp" Wunderlich (14 December 1956 – 4 October 2012) was a German handball player.

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Erich Brandenberger

Erich Brandenberger (15 July 1892 – 21 June 1955) was a German general in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II.

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Erich Emminger

Erich Emminger (25 June 1880 – 30 August 1951) was a German lawyer and Catholic politician of the Center Party (Zentrum) and later of the Bavarian People's Party (BVP).

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Erich Riedl

Erich Riedl (born 23 June 1933, Cheb, Czechoslovakia) is a German politician, representing the Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU).

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Erich Zeller

Erich Zeller (13 January 1920 in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany – 6 November 2001 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany) was a German figure skater and figure skating coach.

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Erlingen

Erlingen is a small village and also an Ortsteil of the municipality Meitingen.

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Erna Woll

Erna Woll (23 March 1917 – 7 April 2005) was a German composer, church musician and author.

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Ernest Bramsted

Ernest Kohn Bramsted (born Ernst Kohn-Bramstedt, 1901; died 14 May 1978) was a German-born historian and sociologist of literature who spent large parts of his career in Germany, England and Australia.

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Ernest I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg

Ernest of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Ernst der Bekenner) (27 June 1497 – 11 January 1546), also frequently called Ernest the Confessor, was duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and a champion of the Protestant cause during the early years of the Protestant Reformation.

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Ernest Peter Burger

Ernst Peter Burger (September 1, 1906 – October 9, 1975) was a German-American who was a spy and saboteur for Germany during World War II.

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Ernst Cramer (journalist)

Ernst J. Cramer (* January 28, 1913 in Augsburg; † January 19, 2010 in Berlin) was a Germany-born publisher and Chairman of the Board of the Axel-Springer-Foundation.

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Ernst Lehner

Ernst Lehner (7 November 1912 – 10 January 1986) was a German footballer.

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Ernst Zündel

Ernst Christof Friedrich Zündel (April 24, 1939 – August 5, 2017) was a German publisher and pamphleteer known for promoting Holocaust denial.

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Erwin Busta

Erwin Julius Busta (April 12, 1905 – 1982) was an Austrian SS-Hauptscharführer and concentration camp functionary.

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Erwin Kreuz

Erwin Kreuz (born 1927) was a West German tourist to the United States who achieved international celebrity status in the late 1970s for mistaking the city of Bangor, Maine for San Francisco, California.

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Eschede derailment

The Eschede derailment occurred on 3 June 1998, near the village of Eschede in the Celle district of Lower Saxony, Germany, when a high-speed train derailed and crashed into a road bridge.

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Eselsburg Castle

Eselsburg Castle (Burgstall Eselsburg) is a levelled castle located above the town of Herbrechtingen in the Heidenheim district of Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

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Etienne Stott

Etienne Stott MBE (born 30 June 1979 in Manchester) is an English slalom canoeist who started competing at the international level in 2002, initially in the K1 category, but switching to C2 in 2005.

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Ettal Abbey

Ettal Abbey (Kloster Ettal) is a Benedictine monastery in the village of Ettal close to Oberammergau and Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Bavaria, Germany.

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Etymologiae

Etymologiae (Latin for "The Etymologies"), also known as the Origines ("Origins") and usually abbreviated Orig., is an etymological encyclopedia compiled by Isidore of Seville (c. 560–636) towards the end of his life.

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Eugénie de Beauharnais

Eugénie Hortense Auguste Napoléone, known as Eugénie de Beauharnais, princess of Leuchtenberg (22 December 1808, Milan – 1 September 1847, Freudenstadt) was a Franco-German princess.

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Eugen Deutsch

Eugen Deutsch (born November 9, 1907 in Ludwigshafen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany, killed February 8, 1945 (Aged 37) in Großsteinhausen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany) was a German weightlifter who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics and won a silver medal in light-heavyweight category.

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Eugen Jochum

Eugen Jochum (1 November 1902 – 26 March 1987) was an eminent German conductor.

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Eugen von Boeck

Eugen von Boeck (July 13, 1823 – January 31, 1886) was a German educator and scientist who lived in Chile, Peru and Bolivia sending and publishing the results of his research in Europe during the second half of the 19th century.

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Eulogius Schneider

Eulogius Schneider (baptized as: Johann Georg; October 20, 1756 – April 1, 1794) was a Franciscan monk, professor in Bonn and Dominican in Strasbourg.

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EuroCity in Germany

The German rail network provides connections to each of its neighbouring countries, many of which are under the EuroCity classification.

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European Acrobatics Championships

European Acrobatics Championships is main acrobatics sports championships in Europe.

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European Canoe Slalom Championships

The European Canoe Slalom Championships is an annual international canoeing and kayaking event organized by the European Canoe Association (ECA) since 1996.

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European Professional Basketball League

The European Professional Basketball League (EPBL) was a professional basketball league held in Europe in 1975.

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European Rail Shuttle B.V.

ERS Railways (formerly European Rail Shuttle B.V.) is a fully independent railway company, 100% owned by Freightliner Group Ltd., with five offices in four countries across Europe.

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European route E52

European route E 52 is a road part of the International E-road network.

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European Route of Industrial Heritage

The European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH) is a network (theme route) of the most important industrial heritage sites in Europe.

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Eva Ornstová

Eva Ornstová is a Czech slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 2005 to 2015.

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Eva Roth

Eva Roth (born 26 December 1967 in Augsburg) is a German slalom canoeist who competed in the late 1980s and the early 1990s.

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Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is a mainline Protestant denomination headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.

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Everett W. Stewart

Everett Wilson Stewart (July 18, 1915 – February 9, 1982) was an American flying ace of World War II with 7.83 aerial victories and 1.5 ground victories.

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Experimental archaeology

Experimental archaeology (also called experiment archaeology and experiential archaeology) is a field of study which attempts to generate and test archaeological hypotheses, usually by replicating or approximating the feasibility of ancient cultures performing various tasks or feats.

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Expulsion of Jews from Spain

The expulsion of the Jews from Spain was ordered in 1492 by the Catholic Monarchs ruling Castile and Aragon through the Edict of Granada with the purpose, according to the decree, of preventing them from influencing "New Christians", Jews and their descendants who had under duress converted to Christianity.

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Fabian Kling

Fabian Kling (born July 24, 1987) is a German footballer.

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Fabien Lefèvre

Fabien Lefèvre (born 18 June 1982) is a French slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1998 to 2015.

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Factions in the Frankfurt Assembly

The factions in the Frankfurt Assembly were the groups or political factions (Fraktionen) that developed among delegates to the Frankfurt Parliament that met from 18 May 1848 to 31 May 1849 in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt am Main.

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Fatmire Alushi

Fatmire "Lira" Alushi (née Bajramaj; born 1 April 1988), is a German retired footballer.

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Fürst Fugger Privatbank

Fürst Fugger Privatbank is a small German regional bank in Augsburg, founded in 1954 and mainly serving the Swabia region of Bavaria, with 159 employees.

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Fürstenfeldbruck

Fürstenfeldbruck is a town in Bavaria, Germany, located 32 kilometres west of Munich.

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Füssen

Füssen is a town in Bavaria, Germany, in the district of Ostallgäu, situated from the Austrian border.

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FC Augsburg

Fußball-Club Augsburg 1907 e. V., commonly known as FC Augsburg or Augsburg, is a German football club based in Augsburg, Bavaria.

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FC Augsburg II

The FC Augsburg II is the reserve team of the German association football club FC Augsburg from the city of Augsburg, Bavaria, whose first team play in the Fußball-Bundesliga.

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FC Augsburg–TSV 1860 Munich rivalry

The FC Augsburg–TSV 1860 Munich rivalry is an association football rivalry in Bavaria, Germany, between FC Augsburg and TSV 1860 Munich.

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FC Enikon Augsburg

The FC Enikon Augsburg was a German football club from Augsburg, Bavaria that was active from the late 70s until the mid-90s.

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FC Gundelfingen

The FC Gundelfingen is a German association football club from Gundelfingen an der Donau, Bavaria.

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Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist

The Feast of Herod with the Beheading of St John the Baptist is an extremely large painting by the German-Silesian artist Bartholomeus Strobel the Younger (1591 – about 1650) which is now displayed in the Museo del Prado in Madrid.

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Feast of the Rosary

The Feast of the Rosary (German: Rosenkranzfest) is a 1506 oil painting by Albrecht Dürer, now in the National Gallery, Prague, Czech Republic.

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FedCon

FedCon (short for Federation Convention) is a science fiction convention, also including a bit of fantasy, in Germany.

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Feigned retreat

A feigned retreat is a military tactic whereby a military force pretends to withdraw or to have been routed, in order to lure an enemy into a position of vulnerability.

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Felicitas Hoppe

Felicitas Hoppe (born 22 December 1960 in Hamelin, Lower Saxony) is a German writer.

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Felix Lederer

Felix Lederer (25 February 1877 – 26 March 1957) was a Czech musician and conductor.

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Fella-Werke

AGCO Feucht GmbH is a German manufacturer of agricultural equipment based in Feucht, Germany, located just southwest of Nuremberg in Bavaria.

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Ferdinand Feichtner

Ferdinand Feichtner (* 3 February 1908 in Augsburg, Bavaria) was a German, Luftwaffe radar and radio intercept specialist, before and during the time of World War II and who became Chief Signals Officer of the Luftnachrichten Abteilung 352, the Signals intelligence agency, whose task was the mapping and interception of communication intelligence of Allied Air Forces in the Mediterranean area.

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Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria

Ferdinand II, Archduke of Further Austria (Linz, 14 June 1529 – 24 January 1595, Innsbruck) was ruler of Further Austria including Tirol.

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Ferdinand Kuehn

Ferdinand Kuehn (January 22, 1821 – January 31, 1901) was an American politician.

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Fernão de Loronha

Fernão de Loronha (c. 1470 or before – Lisbon, c. 1540), whose name is often corrupted to Fernando de Noronha or Fernando della Rogna, was a prominent 16th-century Portuguese merchant of Lisbon, of Jewish descent.

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FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament

The FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament, formerly known as the Pre-Olympic Basketball Tournament, is the last qualifying tournament for the Olympic Basketball Tournament.

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Fierrabras (opera)

Fierrabras, 796, is a three-act German opera with spoken dialogue written by the composer Franz Schubert in 1823, to a libretto by, the general manager of the Theater am Kärntnertor (Vienna's Court Opera Theatre).

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Fine press

Fine press printing and publishing comprises historical and contemporary printers and publishers publishing books and other printed matter of exceptional intrinsic quality and artistic taste, including both commercial and private presses.

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Fire department TU Munich

The Fire department TU Munich is a factory fire department at the Technical University of Munich.

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Fire engine

A fire engine (also known in some territories as a fire truck or fire appliance) is a vehicle designed primarily for firefighting operations.

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Firefighting apparatus

A firefighting apparatus describes any vehicle that has been customized for use during firefighting operations.

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First Battle of Höchstädt

The First Battle of Höchstädt was fought on 20 September 1703, near Höchstädt in Bavaria, and resulted in a French-Bavarian victory under Marshal Villars against the Austrians under General Hermann Otto of Limburg Styrum.

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Five Miles Out World Tour 1982

The Five Miles Out World Tour 1982 was a concert tour by the British multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield.

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Flag officers of the Kriegsmarine

Flag officers of the Kriegsmarine were the leadership of the German Navy (known then as the "Kriegsmarine") from 1935 to 1945.

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Flavius Aetius

Flavius Aetius (Flavius Aetius; 391–454), dux et patricius, commonly called simply Aetius or Aëtius, was a Roman general of the closing period of the Western Roman Empire.

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Fleinhausen

Fleinhausen is a village of the municipality of Dinkelscherben in the western part of the Bavarian district of Augsburg in Germany.

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Flight airspeed record

An air speed record is the highest airspeed attained by an aircraft of a particular class.

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Florian Hecker

Florian Hecker was born in 1975 in Augsburg, Germany.

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Florian Müller (author)

Florian Müller (born January 21, 1970 in Augsburg, Germany) is a German lobbyist.

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Floris Braat

Floris Braat (born 29 September 1979 in Eindhoven) is a Dutch slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1994 to 2004.

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Fondaco dei Tedeschi

The Fondaco dei Tedeschi (Venetian: Fontego dei Tedeschi) is a historic building in Venice, northern Italy, situated on the Grand Canal near the Rialto Bridge.

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Foot (unit)

The foot (feet; abbreviation: ft; symbol: ′, the prime symbol) is a unit of length in the imperial and US customary systems of measurement.

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Football at the 1972 Summer Olympics

The 1972 Olympic football tournament, held in Munich, Augsburg, Ingolstadt, Nürnberg, Passau, and Regensburg, was played as part of the 1972 Summer Olympics.

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Football at the Summer Olympics

Association football has been included in every Summer Olympic Games as a men's competition sport, except 1896 and 1932.

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Fortepiano

A fortepiano is an early piano.

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Fortunatus (book)

Fortunatus is a German proto-novel or chapbook about a legendary hero popular in 15th- and 16th-century Europe.

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Fougasse (weapon)

A fougasse is an improvised mortar constructed by making a hollow in the ground or rock and filling it with explosives (originally, black powder) and projectiles.

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Fraktur

Fraktur is a calligraphic hand of the Latin alphabet and any of several blackletter typefaces derived from this hand.

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François Dominique Séraphin

François Dominique Séraphin (15 February 1747 in Longwy – 5 December 1800 in Paris) was a French entertainer who developed and popularised shadow plays in France.

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Francesco Stancaro

Francesco Stancaro (also Latin: Franciscus Stancarus) (1501 in Mantua – 1574 in Stopnica) was an Italian Catholic priest, theologian, Protestant convert, and Protestant reformer who became professor of Hebrew at the University of Königsberg.

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Francis Xavier Schmalzgrueber

Francis Xavier Schmalzgrueber (9 October 1663 – 7 November 1735) was a German Jesuit canonist.

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Franciscans

The Franciscans are a group of related mendicant religious orders within the Catholic Church, founded in 1209 by Saint Francis of Assisi.

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Francisco Leontaritis

Francisco Leontaritis or Francesco Londarit or Francesco Londarit, Franciscus Londariti, Leondaryti, Londaretus, Londaratus or Londaritus (1518-1572) was a Greek composer, singer and hymnographer from today's Heraklion of the Venetian-dominated Crete (Candia) at the Renaissance age.

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Franciscus de Neve (II)

Franciscus de Neve (II) (also: Frans de (II) Neve, Fraciscus de Neuff, Francesco della Neve and nicknames: Bloosaerken and Blaserken) (1632, Antwerp – after 1704) was a Flemish painter and engraver.

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Frankfurter Judengasse

The Frankfurter Judengasse (from German: “Jews' Alley”) was the Jewish ghetto of Frankfurt and one of the earliest ghettos in Germany.

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Franz Friedrich Franck

Franz Friedrich Franck, born at Augsburg in 1627, was instructed by his father, Hans Ulrich Franck.

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Franz Friedrich von Sturmfeder

Franz Friedrich von Sturmfeder (11 December 1758, Mannheim – 26 February 1828, Augsburg) was a German Roman Catholic priest.

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Franz Herre

Franz Herre (born 11 April 1926, Fischen im Allgäu) is a German biographer, historian and journalist.

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Franz Ignaz Oefele

Franz Ignaz Oefele (26 June 1721, Posen - 18 September 1797, Munich) was a German painter, etcher, and miniaturist.

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Franz Karl Achard

Franz Karl Achard (April 28, 1753 – April 20, 1821) was a German (Prussian) chemist, physicist and biologist.

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Franz Karl Joseph Fürst von Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst

Franz Joseph Xaver Karl Fürst zu Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst (27 November 1745, Waldenburg – 9 October 1819, Augsburg) was a Roman Catholic auxiliary bishop and bishop of Augsburg (the first after it ceased to be the Prince-Bishopric of Augsburg), as well as vicar general of Neuwürttemberg.

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Franz Kelch

Franz Kelch (1 November 19155 June 2013) was a German bass-baritone lied and oratorio singer.

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Franz Mozart

Franz Mozart (3 October 1649 – 1693 or 1694) was a German mason and the grandfather of Leopold Mozart and great-grandfather of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

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Franz Neumayr

Franz Neumayr (17 January 1697 – 1 May 1765) was a German Jesuit preacher, writer on theological, controversial and ascetical subjects, and author of many Latin dramas on sacred themes.

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Franz Reinisch

Franz Reinisch SAC (February 1, 1903 – August 21, 1942) was a member of the Schoenstatt Movement.

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Franz Ritter von Epp

Franz Xaver Ritter von Epp, from 1916 Ritter von Epp, (16 October 1868 – 31 January 1947)Lilla, Joachim:.

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Franz Seraph von Kohlbrenner

Johann Franz Seraph von Kohlbrenner (17 October 1728 – 6 June 1783) was a German polymath, promoting the Enlightenment in Bavaria.

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Franz von Hillenbrand

Franz von Hillenbrand was a Roman Catholic German aristocrat.

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Franz Xaver Eggert

Franz Xaver Eggert (11 November 1802 – 14 October 1876) was a German glass painter.

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Franz Xaver Feuchtmayer

Franz Xaver Feuchtmayer (the Elder) (1698–1763) was a German Baroque stucco plasterer of the Wessobrunner School.

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Franz Xaver Schmid

Franz Xaver Schmid; name sometimes given as Franz Xaver Schmid-Schwarzenberg (October 22, 1819 – November 28, 1883) was an Austrian-German educator and philosopher born in Schwarzenberg am Böhmerwald.

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Franziska von Reitzenstein

Franziska Freifrau von Reitzenstein, née von Nyss, alias "Franz von Nemmersdorf" (September 19, 1834 – June 4, 1896) was a German novelist.

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Fred J. Christensen

Fred Joseph Christensen Jr. (October 17, 1921 – April 4, 2006) was an American fighter pilot and flying ace who flew with the United States Army Air Forces during World War II.

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Frederick I, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach

Frederick I of Ansbach and Bayreuth (also known as Frederick V; Friedrich II. or Friedrich der Ältere; 8 May 1460 – 4 April 1536) was born at Ansbach as the eldest son of Albert III, Margrave of Brandenburg by his second wife Anna, daughter of Frederick II, Elector of Saxony.

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Frederiksborg Castle

Frederiksborg Castle (Frederiksborg Slot) is a palatial complex in Hillerød, Denmark.

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Free city

Free city may refer to.

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Free imperial city

In the Holy Roman Empire, the collective term free and imperial cities (Freie und Reichsstädte), briefly worded free imperial city (Freie Reichsstadt, urbs imperialis libera), was used from the fifteenth century to denote a self-ruling city that had a certain amount of autonomy and was represented in the Imperial Diet.

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Free Imperial City of Nuremberg

The Imperial City of Nuremberg (Reichsstadt Nürnberg) was a free imperial city — independent city-state — within the Holy Roman Empire.

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Free Spirit Tour

The Free Spirit Tour was a tour by Welsh singer, Bonnie Tyler which followed the release of her 1995 album, Free Spirit.

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Freilassing Locomotive World

The Freilassing Locomotive World (Lokwelt Freilassing) is a railway museum in the Berchtesgadener Land, which is operated with the cooperation of the town of Freilassing and the Deutsches Museum.

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Freising Bishops' Conference

The Freising Bishops' Conference was founded in 1850.

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Fridolin of Säckingen

Saint Fridolin, otherwise Fridolin of Säckingen is a legendary Irish missionary, apostle of the Alamanni and founder of Säckingen Abbey on the Upper Rhine.

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Friedberg, Bavaria

Friedberg is a town in the district Aichach-Friedberg, Bavaria, Germany, with some 30,000 inhabitants.

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Friedberger Baggersee

Friedberger Baggersee is a lake in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Friedrich Freiherr von Hotze

Friedrich Freiherr (Baron) von Hotze (20 April 1739 – 25 September 1799), was a Swiss-born general in the Austrian army during the French Revolutionary Wars, campaigned in the Rhineland during the War of the First Coalition and in Switzerland in the War of the Second Coalition, notably at Battle of Winterthur in late May 1799, and the First Battle of Zurich in early June 1799.

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Friedrich Hartmann Graf

Friedrich Hartmann Graf (23 August 1727 – 19 August 1795) was a German flautist and composer.

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Friedrich List

Georg Friedrich List (6 August 1789 – 30 November 1846) was a German economist with dual American citizenship who developed the "National System", also known as the National System of Innovation.

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Friedrich Ludwig Lindner

Friedrich Ludwig Lindner (23 October 1772 - 11 May 1845) was a German writer, journalist and physician.

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Friedrich Märker

Friedrich Märker (March 7, 1893 in Augsburg, Bavaria – 27 April 1985, in Feldafing, Bavaria) was a German writer, essayist, theatre critic and publicist.

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Friedrich von Müller

Friedrich von Müller (17 September 1858, Augsburg – 18 November 1941, Munich) was a German physician remembered for describing Müller's sign.

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Fritz Herlen

Fritz Herlen (or Herlin) (before 1449 – October 12, 1491) was a German artist of the early Swabian school, in the 15th century.

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Fritz Koelle

Fritz Koelle (10 March 1895, Augsburg — 4 August 1953, Probstzella) was a German sculptor.

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Fritz Pröll

Fritz Pröll (23 April 1915 in Augsburg – 22 November 1944 in Mittelbau-Dora Nordhausen in the Harz) was a resistance fighter against the Nazi régime.

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Fritz Wendel

Friedrich "Fritz" Wendel (February 21, 1915 – February 9, 1975) was a German test pilot during the 1930s and 1940s.

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Fritz Wiedemann

Fritz Wiedemann (16 August 1891 in Augsburg – 17 January 1970 in Postmünster) was a German soldier and Nazi Party activist.

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Fronta

The Diocese of Fronta Dioecesis Frontensis) is a suppressed and titular see of the Roman Catholic Church. During the Roman Empire the Diocese of Fronta, was of the Roman province of Mauretania Caesariensis. The location of the seat of the diocese remains unknown but has been tentatively identified with Fortassa, Uzès-le-Duc in modern Algeria. The only known bishop of this diocese from antiquity is Donato, who took part in the synod assembled in Carthage in 484 by the Vandal King Huneric, after which the bishop was exiled. Today Fronta survives as a titular bishopric and the current bishop is Josef Grünwald, of Augsburg.

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Fryderyk Krzysztof Dietrich

Fryderyk Krzysztof Dietrich (Friedrich Christoph Dietrich; 1779–1847) was a German-born Polish engraver and civil servant.

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Fugger

Fugger is a German family that was a historically prominent group of European bankers, members of the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century mercantile patriciate of Augsburg, international mercantile bankers, and venture capitalists.

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Fuggerei

The Fuggerei is the world's oldest social housing complex still in use.

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Fuggerhäuser

The Fuggerhäuser (Fugger houses) is a complex of houses on the Maximilianstraße in Augsburg, built for the Fugger family of businessmen.

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Fuhrer city

A Fuhrer city, or Führerstadt in German, was a status given to five German cities in 1937 by Adolf Hitler, the dictator of Nazi Germany.

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Further Austria

Further Austria, Outer Austria or Anterior Austria (Vorderösterreich, formerly die Vorlande (pl.)) was the collective name for the early (and later) possessions of the House of Habsburg in the former Swabian stem duchy of south-western Germany, including territories in the Alsace region west of the Rhine and in Vorarlberg.

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Gabi Loose

Gabiriella Loose is a former West German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1980s.

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Gablingen Kaserne

Gablingen Kaserne is a former military facility in Gablingen near Augsburg, Germany, which was closed in 1998.

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Gabriel Karg

Gabriel Karg (born in or before 1570: died between 1630 and 1640)Werner Fleischhauer: Die Anfänge..., p. 210 was a Swabian artist who spent his career in Swabia and Württemberg.

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Gaelic Games Europe

The European Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) (Cumann Luthchleas Gael na hEorpa) or Gaelic Games Europe is one of the international units of the GAA (outside Ireland), and is responsible for organising Gaelic games in continental Europe.

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Gail Allan

Gail Allan (born 1965) is a former British slalom canoeist who competed in the 1980s.

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Gallienus

Gallienus (Publius Licinius Egnatius Gallienus Augustus; c. 218 – 268), also known as Gallien, was Roman Emperor with his father Valerian from 253 to 260 and alone from 260 to 268.

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Gare de l'Est

The Gare de l'Est ("Station of the East" in English), officially Paris-Est, is one of the six large SNCF termini in Paris.

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Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Garmisch-Partenkirchen is a ski town in Bavaria, southern Germany.

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Gau Swabia

Gau Swabia (German: Gau Schwaben) was an administrative division of Nazi Germany in Swabia, Bavaria, from 1933 to 1945.

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Gauls

The Gauls were Celtic people inhabiting Gaul in the Iron Age and the Roman period (roughly from the 5th century BC to the 5th century AD).

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Gauting

Gauting is a municipality in the district of Starnberg, in Bavaria, Germany with a population of approximately 20,000.

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Göppingen

Göppingen is a town in southern Germany, part of the Stuttgart Region of Baden-Württemberg.

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Götz von Berlichingen

Gottfried "Götz" von Berlichingen (1480 – 23 July 1562), also known as Götz of the Iron Hand, was a German (Franconian) Imperial Knight (Reichsritter), mercenary, and poet.

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Günter Kirchner

Günter Kirchner is a retired West German slalom canoeist who competed in the late 1950s.

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Günter Mack

Günter Mack (12 December 1930 – 27 March 2007) was a German actor.

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Günther Beck

Günther Beck is a former West German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1950s and the 1960s.

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Günther Lützow

Günther Lützow (4 September 1912 – 24 April 1945) was a German Luftwaffe aviator and fighter ace credited with 110 enemy aircraft shot down in over 300 combat missions.

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Günther Strupp

Günther Strupp (March 6, 1912 – 1996) was a German artist, illustrator, and art director.

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Günther Zainer

Günther Zainer (or Zeyner or Zeiner) (died 1 October 1478) was the first printer in Augsburg, where he worked from 1468 until his death; he produced about 80 books including two German editions of the Bible and the first printed calendar.

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Gebhard Truchsess von Waldburg

Gebhard Truchsess von Waldburg (10 November 1547 – 21 May 1601) was Archbishop-Elector of Cologne.

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Gebhard, Duke of Lorraine

Gebhard of Lahngau (860/868 – 22 June 910), of the Conradine dynasty, son of Odo (died 879), count of Lahngau, and Judith, was himself count of Wetterau (909–910) and Rheingau (897–906) and then duke of Lotharingia (Lorraine).

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Gedächtniskirche, Speyer

The Gedächtniskirche der Protestation (English: The Memorial Church of the Protestation) is a United Protestant church of both Lutheran and Reformed confessions in Speyer, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany that commemorates the Protestation at Speyer in defense of the evangelical faith, specifically Lutheranism.

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Georg Österreich

Georg Österreich (baptized on 17 March 1664 – 6 June 1735) was a German Baroque composer and collector.

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Georg Daniel Hirtz

Georg Daniel Hirtz (in French: Georges Daniel Hirtz) was a master turner and author from Alsace.

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Georg Friedrich Brander

Georg Friedrich Brander (1713-1783) was an important maker of scientific instruments.

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Georg Fugger

Georg Fugger von der Lilie (1453–1506) was a German merchant of the Fugger dynasty.

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Georg Henisch

Georg Henisch (1549–1618) was a physician, humanist, educator, astronomer, mathematician and a Professor of St. Ann Gymnasium in Augsburg, Germany, in 16th and early 17th centuries.

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Georg Köberle

Georg Köberle (21 March 1819 in Nonnenhorn, on Lake Constance – 7 June 1898 in Dresden) was a German author and dramatist.

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Georg Klein (writer)

Georg Klein (Augsburg 29 March 1953) in a German novelist.

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Georg Krauß

Georg Krauß, from 1905 Ritter von Krauß (25 December 1826 – 5 November 1906) was a German industrialist and the founder of the Krauss Locomotive Works (Locomotivfabrik Krauß & Comp.) in Munich, Germany and Linz, Upper Austria.

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Georg Ludwig Jochum

Georg Ludwig Jochum (sometimes hyphenated as Georg-Ludwig Jochum) (10 December 1909 – 1 November 1970) was a German conductor and younger brother of better-known conductor Eugen Jochum.

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Georg Petel

Georg Petel (1601-2, Weilheim, Bavaria – January 1635, Augsburg) was a German sculptor and a virtuoso ivory carver.

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Georg Philipp Rugendas

Georg Philipp Rugendas (27 November 1666 – 1742) was a battle and military genre painter and engraver born in the Free Imperial City of Augsburg in what is now Bavaria, Germany.

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Georg Schenk von Limpurg

Georg Schenk von Limpurg (1470–1522) was the Prince-Bishop of Bamberg from 1505 to 1522.

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Georg von Speyer

Georg von Speyer (1500, Speyer, Holy Roman Empire – 11 June 1540, Coro, Venezuela) was a German conquistador in New Granada, now Venezuela and Colombia.

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Georg von Vollmar

Georg Heinrich Ritter (Chevalier) von Vollmar auf Veldheim (March 7, 1850 – June 30, 1922) was a democratic socialist politician from Bavaria.

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Georg Zacharias Platner

Georg Zacharias Platner (27 July 1781 - 8 July 1862) was a German manufacturer-entrepreneur and an astute businessman who later also became a politician.

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George Mendeluk

George Mendeluk (Джордж Менделюк) (born March 20, 1948 in Augsburg, Bavaria) is a German-born Canadian film director, television director and writer of Ukrainian descent.

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Georgios Georgiou

Georgios Georgiou (Greek: Γιώργος Γεωργίου; born on 24 September 1979) is a Greek footballer who currently plays for A.E. Kifisia F.C. in the Football League 2 as a Centre back.

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Georgios Tzavellas

Georgios "Giorgos" Tzavellas (Γεώργιος Τζαβέλλας; born 26 November 1987) is a Greek professional footballer who plays for Turkish Süper Lig club Alanyaspor and the Greek national team as a left back.

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Gerd von Hassler

Gerd von Hassler (or in German Gerd von Haßler) (28 August 1928 – 7 January 1989) was a German author, director, radio broadcaster, composer, singer, journalist and producer.

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Gerhard Adam Neuhofer

Gerhard Adam Neuhofer (16 January 1773 – 12 December 1816) was a German deacon, teacher, philologist, historian and poet.

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Gerhard Markson

Gerhard Markson is a German conductor.

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Gerhard Raht

Gerhard Ferdinand Otto Raht (6 June 1920 – 11 January 1977) was a German Luftwaffe night fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves during World War II.

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Gerlach IV of Isenburg-Limburg

Gerlach IV of Isenburg-Limburg (died 1289), also known as Gerlach I of Limburg, was from 1258 Count of (Isenburg-)Limburg, ruling over the town of Limburg an der Lahn and some villages in its hinterlands.

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German Aerospace Center

The German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V.), abbreviated DLR, is the national center for aerospace, energy and transportation research of the Federal Republic of Germany.

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German Assyrians

German Assyrians are Germans of Assyrian descent or Assyrians who have German citizenship. The Assyrians in Germany mainly came from Azerbaijan, Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Iran. The immigrant community of people of Assyrian descent in Germany is estimated at around 100,000 people. They are known in German either as Assyrer ("Assyrians") or as Aramäer ("Arameans"). Significant local communities exist in certain cities and towns such as Munich, Wiesbaden, Paderborn, Essen, Bietigheim-Bissingen, Ahlen, Göppingen, Köln, Hamburg, Berlin, Augsburg and Gütersloh.

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German colonization of the Americas

The German colonization of the Americas consisted of German settlements in Venezuela (Klein-Venedig, also Welser-Kolonie), St. Thomas, Crab Island (Guyana), and Ter Tholen (Tortola) in the 16th and 17th centuries.

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German destroyer Z51

The German destroyer Z51 was the only ship of the Type 1942 destroyer class built for the Kriegsmarine.

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German Figure Skating Championships

The German Figure Skating Championships (Deutsche Meisterschaften im Eiskunstlaufen) are a figure skating national championship held annually to determine the national champions of Germany.

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German Ice Hockey Hall of Fame

The German Ice Hockey Hall of Fame, was founded in 1988 and is located in Augsburg, Germany.

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German mediatization

German mediatization (deutsche Mediatisierung) was the major territorial restructuring that took place between 1802 and 1814 in Germany and the surrounding region by means of the mass mediatization and secularization of a large number of Imperial Estates.

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German punk

German punk is punk rock music and punk subculture in Germany since punk music became popular in the 1970s.

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German railway signalling

Railway signals in Germany are regulated by the Eisenbahn-Signalordnung (ESO, railway signalling rules).

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German Renaissance

The German Renaissance, part of the Northern Renaissance, was a cultural and artistic movement that spread among German thinkers in the 15th and 16th centuries, which developed from the Italian Renaissance.

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German royal election, 1002

The German royal election of 1002 was the decision on the succession which was held after the death of Emperor Otto III without heirs.

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German school of fencing

The German school of fencing (Deutsche Schule; Kunst des Fechtens) is a system of combat taught in the Holy Roman Empire during the Late Medieval, Renaissance, and Early Modern periods, as described in the contemporary Fechtbücher ("combat manuals") written at the time.

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German toponymy

Placenames in the German language area can be classified by the language from which they originate, and by their age.

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German Venezuelans

German Venezuelans (Deutsch-Venezolaner; Germano-venezolanos) are Venezuelan citizens who descend from Germans or German people with Venezuelan citizenship.

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German weather ship WBS 1 Hermann

Hermann was a Kriegsmarine weather ship that was built in 1929 as the fishing trawler J. F. Schröder. She was renamed Sachsen in 1933 and requisitioned in 1940, serving as WBS 1 Sachsen. She was renamed Hermann in 1942, serving until scuttled off the coast of Greenland in June 1943.

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German weather ship WBS 2 Coburg

Coburg was a fishing trawler that was built in 1938 and requisitioned by the Kriegsmarine in 1940.

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Germania Superior

Germania Superior ("Upper Germania") was an imperial province of the Roman Empire.

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Germany at the 2016 Summer Olympics

Germany competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, from 3 to 21 August 2016.

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Germany national football team results (2000–present)

This is a list of international games played by the German national football team.

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Germany national under-21 football team

The Germany national under-21 football team represents the under-21s of Germany in the UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship and is controlled by the German Football Association (DFB), the governing body of football in Germany. Before the reunification of Germany, East Germany and West Germany played as separate entities — the two teams played separately until summer 1990. Following the realignment of UEFA's youth competitions in 1976, international under-21 football in Europe began. A West German team, however, did not compete in the U-21 European Championship until the qualifying round (beginning in 1980) of the 1982 competition. West Germany competed in the first two under-23 competitions, which finished in 1972 and 1974. The first under-21 competition finals were in 1978, and since the under-21 competition rules state that players must be 21 or under at the start of a two-year competition, technically it is an under-23 competition. The current Germany team can be legitimately considered as the current incarnation of the West German team, since the West Germany flag, uniform, and football association all became those of the unified Germany. In effect, the West German team absorbed the East German team to become 'the Germany national under-21 football team'. For these reasons, the record of West Germany for the U-23 and U-21 competitions is shown below.

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Germany's Next Topmodel (cycle 6)

Germany's Next Topmodel, Cycle 6 is the sixth season of the show that was aired on the German television network ProSieben.

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Germany–United Kingdom relations

Germany–United Kingdom relations, or Anglo–German relations, are the bilateral relations between the United Kingdom and Germany.

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Gersthofen

Gersthofen is a town in the district of Augsburg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Gert Boyle

Gertrude "Gert" Boyle (born March 6, 1924) is a German-born American businesswoman in the state of Oregon.

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Gertrude of Süpplingenburg

Gertrude of Süpplingenburg (18 April 1115 – 18 April 1143) was Duchess consort of Bavaria from 1127 to 1138, Margravine consort of Tuscany from 1136 to 1139, and Duchess consort of Saxony from 1137 to 1138.

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Gertrude Stöllner

Gertrude Stöllner is a retired Austrian slalom canoeist who competed in the late 1950s.

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Giacomo Cantelmo

Giacomo Cantelmo (13 June, 1645 – 11 December, 1702) was a Roman Catholic cardinal from 1690 to 1702.

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Gilching

Gilching is a municipality in the district of Starnberg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Giovanni Faber

Giovanni Faber (or Johann Faber, sometimes also known as Fabri or Fabro) (1574–1629) was a German papal doctor, botanist and art collector, originally from Bamberg in Bavaria, who lived in Rome from 1598.

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Girolamo Dalla Casa

Girolamo Dalla Casa (also known as Hieronymo de Udene, died 1601) was an Italian composer, instrumentalist, and writer of the late Renaissance.

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Giulio Licinio

Giulio Licinio (16th century) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance period.

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Gjelosh Gjokaj

Gjelosh Gjokaj (25.07.1933 - 25.09.2016) was an Albanian painter and graphic artist.

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Global spread of the printing press

The global spread of the printing press began with the invention of the printing press with movable type by Johannes Gutenberg in Mainz, Germany.

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Glonn

Glonn is a market town in the Ebersberg district in Upper Bavaria, Germany, about southeast of Munich.

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Glonn (Amper)

Glonn is a river of Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany.

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Gnaeus Pinarius Cornelius Clemens

Gnaeus Pinarius Cornelius Clemens (fl. 1st century AD) was a Roman military officer and senator who was appointed Suffect consul during the reign of Vespasian.

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Google Aerial View

Google Aerial View is a view on Google Maps.

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Gothic plate armour

Gothic plate armour (German: Gotischer Plattenpanzer) is the term for the type of steel plate armour made in the Holy Roman Empire during the 15th century.

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Gottfried Bernhard Göz

Gottfried Bernhard Göz, also Goez, Goetz or Götz (baptized 10 August 1708, Welehrad - 23 November 1774, Augsburg) was a German Rococo painter and engraver.

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Gottfried Schapper

Gottfried Schapper (* 16 December 1888 in Groß Möringen; † district of Stendal in the 20th century) was a German listening specialist, before and during World War II.

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Gottlieb Tobias Wilhelm

Gottlieb Tobias Wilhelm (16 October 1758 Augsburg - 12 December 1811 Augsburg) was a Protestant pastor and natural history writer, probably best known for his monumental "Unterhaltungen aus der Naturgeschichte" ("Wilhelm's Discourses on Natural History").

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Grand Burgher

Grand Burgher or Grand Burgheress (from German: Großbürger, Großbürgerin) is a specific conferred or inherited title of medieval German origin and legally defined preeminent status granting exclusive constitutional privileges and legal rights (German: Großbürgerrecht),Titel: Lehrbuch des teutschen Privatrechts; Landrecht und Lehnrecht enthaltend.

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Grannus

In the Celtic polytheism of classical antiquity, Grannus (also Granus, Mogounus, and Amarcolitanus) was a deity associated with spas, healing thermal and mineral springs, and the sun.

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Graphics

Graphics (from Greek γραφικός graphikos, "belonging to drawing") are visual images or designs on some surface, such as a wall, canvas, screen, paper, or stone to inform, illustrate, or entertain.

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Graswurzelrevolution

Graswurzelrevolution (English: Grassroots Revolution) is an anarcho-pacifist magazine founded in 1972 by Wolfgang Hertle in West Germany.

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Gründtliche Beschreibung der Kunst des Fechtens

Gründtliche Beschreibung der Kunst des Fechtens or, in English: A Foundational Description of the Art of Fencing: A Thorough Description of the Free, Knightly and Noble Art of Fencing, Showing Various Customary Defenses, Affected and Put Forth with Many Handsome and Useful Drawings is a German fencing manual that was published in 1570.

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Great Council of Mechelen

From the 15th century onwards, the Great Council of the Netherlands at Mechelen (Dutch: De Grote Raad der Nederlanden te Mechelen; French: le grand conseil des Pays-Bas à Malines; German: der Grosse Rat der Niederlände zu Mecheln) was the highest court in the Burgundian Netherlands.

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Greek exonyms

Below is a list of modern-day Greek language exonyms for mostly European places outside of Greece and Cyprus.

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Green Mover Max

The Green Mover Max was the first 100% low-floor articulated Light Rail Vehicle (LRV) to be built entirely in Japan.

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Greg Moore (ice hockey)

Gregory "Greg" Moore (born March 26, 1984) is an American professional ice hockey forward who is currently an unrestricted free agent who most recently played for the Augsburger Panther of the German Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL).

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Greg Pitt

Greg Pitt (born 15 July 1989 in Wolverhampton) is a British slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 2006 to 2015.

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Gregor Aichinger

Gregor Aichinger (c. 1565 – 21 January 1628) was a German composer.

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Gregor Erhart

Gregor Erhart (ca. 1470?–1540) was a German sculptor who was born at Ulm, the son of sculptor Michel Erhart.

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Gregor Werner

Gregor Joseph Werner (28 January 1693 – 3 March 1766) was an Austrian composer.

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Gregor Zallwein

Gregor Zallwein (20 October 1712, Oberviechtach, Oberpfalz - 6 or 9 August 1766, Salzburg) was an expert on canon law.

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Gregorius Thomas Ziegler

Gregorius Thomas Ziegler, bishop of Linz (March 7, 1770 – April 15, 1852), was born at Kirchheim in Schwaben near Augsburg.

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Grenadiers à Cheval de la Garde Impériale

The Grenadiers à Cheval de la Garde Impériale (in English: Horse Grenadiers of the Imperial Guard) constituted a heavy cavalry regiment in the Consular, then Imperial Guard during the French Consulate and First French Empire respectively.

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Grey Passion

The Grey Passion is a series of paintings by Hans Holbein the Elder (1465-1524).

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Grill (family)

The Grill family was one of several Swedish families having significant influence with the Swedish East India Company (SOIC).

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Grumbach Feud

The “Grumbach Feud” (Grumbachsche Händel), in 1567, was a rather bizarre episode in the history of the Ernestine side of the House of Wettin, which led to life imprisonment for Elector John Frederick II “the Middle”, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Eisenach.

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GT4 (Stuttgart)

The GT4 (from German: Gelenktriebwagen 4-achsig, which translates as 4-axle articulated tramcar) is a GT4 type tramway vehicle built by Maschinenfabrik Esslingen.

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Gualfardo of Verona

Gualfardo of Verona by I. Brint (1620) Saint Gualfardo of Verona (or Wolfhard of Augsburg) (1070–1127) was a Swabian artisan, trader, and hermit who lived around Verona.

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Guido de Monte Rochen

Guido de Monte Rochen or Guy de Montrocher was a Spanish priest and jurist who was active around 1331.

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Guillaume-René Lefébure

Guillaume-René Lefébure, baron de Saint-Ildephont (25 September 1744 – 27 July 1809) was an 18th–19th-century French military, historian, physician, political writer and man of letters.

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Gunārs Saliņš

Gunars Saliņš (April 21, 1924 – June 29, 2010) was a modernist poet within the Latvian lyric poetry tradition.

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Gundelfingen an der Donau

Gundelfingen an der Donau is a town in the Bavarian district Dillingen in Swabia.

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Guntram the Rich

Guntram the Rich (Guntramnus Dives, Guntram der Reiche, Gontran le Riche; 920 – March 26, 973) was a count in Breisgau, member of the noble family of the Etichonids, and possibly the progenitor of the House of Habsburg.

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Gustav Conrad Bauer

Gustav Conrad Bauer (18 November 1820, Augsburg – 3 April 1906, Munich) was a German mathematician, known for the Bauer-Muir transformation and Bauer's conic sections.

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Gustav Weil

Gustav Weil (April 25, 1808 - August 29, 1889) was a German orientalist.

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Gymnasium bei St. Anna

The Gymnasium bei St.

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Gypsy jazz

Gypsy jazz (also known as gypsy swing or hot club jazz) is a style of jazz music generally accepted to have been started by the gypsy guitarist Jean "Django" Reinhardt in and around Paris in the 1930s.

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H. W. J. Thiersch

Heinrich Wilhelm Josias Thiersch (November 5, 1817 – December 3, 1885), usually known as H. W. J. Thiersch, was a German philologist, initially a Protestant theologian, then minister in the short-lived Catholic Apostolic Church.

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Habsburg Netherlands

Habsburg Netherlands is the collective name of Holy Roman Empire fiefs in the Low Countries held by the House of Habsburg and later by the Spanish Empire, also known as the Spanish Netherlands.

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Hamburg-Harburg station

Hamburg-Harburg or Harburg (Bahnhof Hamburg-Harburg) is one of four operational main-line railway stations (Fernbahnhöfe) in the city of Hamburg, Germany.

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Hannes Aigner

Hannes Aigner (born 19 March 1989 in Augsburg) is a German slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 2006.

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Hans Adlhoch

Hans Adlhoch (29 January 1883 in Straubing, Lower Bavaria – 21 May 1945 in Munich) was a German politician, representative of the Bavarian People's Party.

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Hans Breuer (politician)

Hans Breuer was the mayor of Augsburg, Germany, for twenty-eight years between 1972 and 1990.

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Hans Burgkmair

Hans Burgkmair the Elder (1473–1531) was a German painter and woodcut printmaker.

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Hans Daucher

Hans Daucher (1486, Augsburg – 1538, Stuttgart) was a German Renaissance wood carver, sculptor and medal designer.

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Hans Denck

Hans Denck (c. 1495 – November 27, 1527) was a German theologian and Anabaptist leader during the Reformation.

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Hans Erl

Hans Tobias Erl (Warsaw or Vienna 1882 — Deported to Auschwitz, 1942?) was a German operatic bass.

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Hans Fugger

Hans Fugger von der Lilie, full name Hans, Freiherr Fugger, Herr zu Kirchheim, Glött, Mickhausen, Stettenfels und Schmiechen, (4 September 1531 - 19 April 1598; buried in Kirchheim in Schwaben) was a German arts patron, businessman and politician of the Fugger family.

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Hans Henning Atrott

Hans Henning Atrott, also Hans Atrott, (born 12 January 1944 in Memel, East Prussia now Klaipéda, Lithuania) is notable for his commitment in worldwide right-to-die movement and as a critic of Christianity.

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Hans Hermannstädter

Hans Hermannstädter (February 6, 1918 – December 30, 2006) was a Romanian field handball player who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics.

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Hans Holbein the Elder

Hans Holbein the Elder (c. 1460 – 1524) was a German painter.

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Hans Holbein the Younger

Hans Holbein the Younger (Hans Holbein der Jüngere) (– between 7 October and 29 November 1543) was a German artist and printmaker who worked in a Northern Renaissance style, known as one of the greatest portraitists of the 16th century.

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Hans Hopf

Hans Hopf (August 2, 1916, Nuremberg – June 25, 1993, Munich) was a German operatic tenor, one of the leading heldentenors of the immediate postwar period.

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Hans Hut

Hans Hut (c. 14906 December 1527) was a very active Anabaptist in southern Germany and Austria.

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Hans Lang (footballer)

Hans Lang (8 February 1899 – 27 April 1943) was a German international footballer who played for BC Augsburg, SpVgg Fürth and Hamburger SV.

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Hans Leo Hassler

Hans Leo Hassler (in German, Hans Leo Haßler) (baptized 26 October 1564 – 8 June 1612) was a German composer and organist of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, elder brother of composer Jakob Hassler.

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Hans Leonhard Schäufelein

Hans Leonhard Schäufelein (c. 1480–1540) was a German painter, designer, and wood engraver.

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Hans Loritz

Oberführer (Senior Colonel) Hans Loritz (12 December 1895, Augsburg – 31 January 1946) joined the SS in September 1930 and the NSDAP in August 1930.

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Hans Nielsen (actor)

Hans Nielsen (30 November 1911 – 11 October 1965) was a German film actor.

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Hans Rottenhammer

Johann Rottenhammer, or Hans Rottenhammer (1564 – 14 August 1625), was a German painter.

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Hans Schlottheim

Hans Schlottheim (1545–1625) was a goldsmith and clockmaker active in Augsburg, Germany, now best known for his clockwork automata.

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Hans Schwarz (sculptor)

Hans Schwarz (1492 – after 1521), was a German sculptor and medallist.

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Hans Ulrich Franck

Hans Ulrich Franck, a German historical painter and etcher, was born at Kaufbeuren, in Swabia, in 1603.

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Hans von Aachen

Hans von Aachen (1552 – 4 March 1615) was a German painter who was one of the leading representatives of Northern Mannerism.

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Hans von Euler-Chelpin

Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin (15 February 1873 – 6 November 1964) was a German-born Swedish biochemist.

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Hans W. Geißendörfer

Hans W. Geißendörfer (born 6 April 1941 in Augsburg) is a German film director and producer.

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Hans Weiditz

Hans Weiditz the Younger, Hans Weiditz der Jüngere, Hans Weiditz II (1495 Freiburg im Breisgau - c1537 Bern), was a German Renaissance artist, also known as The Petrarch Master for his woodcuts illustrating Petrarch's De remediis utriusque fortunae, or Remedies for Both Good and Bad Fortune, or Phisicke Against Fortune.

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Hans-Eberhardt Gandert

General-major Hans-Eberhardt Gandert (2 September 1892 – 24 July 1947) was a German professional soldier who began his 33-year military career in 1912.

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Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters

Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is a 2013 dark fantasy action horror comedy film written and directed by Tommy Wirkola.

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Hansjörg Durz

Hansjörg Durz (born 29 July 1971) is a German politician from the Christian Social Union of Bavaria.

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Harald Schmidt

Harald Franz Schmidt (born 18 August 1957) is a German actor, writer, columnist, comedian and television entertainer best known as host of two popular German late-night shows.

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Haralds Blaus

Harry Blau (Latvian: Haralds Blaus, Гарольд Блау, Гарри Блау, 6 February 1885 – 4 June 1944) was a Latvian sports shooter of Baltic German origin who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics representing Russia.

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Harry Edward

Harry Francis Vincent Edward (15 April 1898 – 8 July 1973) was a British runner.

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Harry Groener

Harry Groener (born September 10, 1951) is a German-born American actor and dancer, perhaps best known for playing Mayor Wilkins in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (seasons 3, 4 and 7).

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Harry Nelson Pillsbury

Harry Nelson Pillsbury (December 5, 1872 – June 17, 1906) was a leading American chess player.

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Hartmann von An der Lan-Hochbrunn

Hartmann von An der Lan-Hochbrunn, O.F.M., (21 December 1863 – 6 December 1914) was an Austrian Friar Minor and Catholic priest, who worked as a composer, organist and conductor.

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Haubitz + Zoche

Sabine Haubitz and Stefanie Zoche were two German artists who worked together as Haubitz + Zoche from 1998 to 2014.

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Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte

The Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte (House of Bavarian History) or HdBG was established in 1983 as an authority of the Free State of Bavaria in Germany and, since 1993, has had its permanent headquarters at Augsburg.

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Hausmalerei

Hausmalerei is a tradition originating with the freelance enamelers on glass in Bohemia but developed in Germany on white tin-glazed earthenware in the 17th century, in which glazed and fired but unpainted wares "in the white" were purchased on speculation by unsupervised freelance ateliers of china painters, who decorated them in overglaze enamel colours and gilding, which were fixed by further firing in their own kilns.

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Höchstädt an der Donau

Höchstädt an der Donau is a town in the district of Dillingen, Bavaria, Germany.

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Heather Sheehan

Heather Sheehan (born December 9, 1961) is an American artist who lives and works in Cologne, Germany.

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Hedwig Lachmann

Hedwig Lachmann (29 August 1865 – 21 February 1918) was a German author, translator and poet.

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Heidelberg University Library

The University Library Heidelberg (Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg) is the central library of the University of Heidelberg.

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Heike Hofmann

Heike Hofmann (born April 16, 1972) is a statistician.

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Heiligen-Lexicon

Heiligen-Lexicon, oder Lebensgeschichten aller Heiligen by Johann Evangelist Stadler is a book of hagiography published in Augsburg in 1861.

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Heilmann & Littmann

Heilmann & Littmann was a leading German contracting business.

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Heimberg

There are several municipalities and communities that have the name Heimberg.

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Heinrich Adam

Heinrich Adam (1787 – 15 February 1862) was a German painter.

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Heinrich Gross (rabbi)

Heinrich Gross, writing also as Henri Gross (born Szenicz, Hungarian Kingdom, now Senica, Slovakia, November 6, 1835; died 1910), was a German rabbi.

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Heinrich Jakob Fried

Heinrich Jakob Fried, born at Queichheim, near Landau, in 1802, studied at Stuttgart and Augsburg, and from 1822 under Langer and Cornelius at the Academy of Munich.

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Heinrich Pröhle

Christoph Ferdinand Heinrich Pröhle (June 4, 1822 – May 28, 1895) was a German literary historian, teacher (Oberlehrer), writer, and folk tale—fairy tale collector (a successor of the Brothers Grimm).

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Heinrich Schroth

Heinrich Schroth (23 March 1871 – 14 January 1945) was a German stage and film actor.

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Heinrich Steinhöwel

Heinrich Steinhöwel (also Steinhäuel or Steinheil; 1412 – 1482) was a Swabian author, humanist, and translator who was much inspired by the Italian Renaissance.

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Heinrich Vogtherr

Heinrich Vogtherr (the Elder) (1490 in Dillingen an der Donau – 1556 in Vienna) was an artist, printer, poet and medical author of the Reformation period.

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Heinrich von Knöringen

Heinrich von Knöringen (5 February, 1570 – 25 June, 1646) was Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1591 to 1646.

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Heinrich von Lichtenau

Heinrich von Lichtenau (1444–1517) was Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1505 to 1517.

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Heinz Gerstinger

Heinz Gerstinger (born October 13, 1919 in Vienna; died April 28, 2016) was an Austrian writer, playwright and historian.

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Heinz Hohner

Heinz Hohner (1907–1967) was the mayor of Augsburg, Germany, between 1946 and 1947.

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Heinz Traimer

Heinz Traimer (1921–2002) was a German graphic designer and advertising copywriter who lived and worked in Vienna.

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Heinz Wallberg

Heinz Wallberg (16 March 192329 September 2004) was a German conductor.

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Heinz Weifenbach

Heinz Weifenbach (11 July 1939–21 February 2015) was a German ice hockey executive best known for the 1987 advertising contract he negotiated in which his club, the ECD Iserlohn, advertised Muammar Gaddafi's Green Book (Das Grüne Buch) on its shirts.

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Helene Böhlau

Helene Böhlau (22 November 1859 in Weimar – 26 March 1940 in Augsburg) was a German novelist.

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Hella Philips

Hella Philips is a retired Austrian slalom canoeist who competed in the mid-to-late 1950s.

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Helmschmied

The Helmschmieds of Augsburg were one of late medieval Europe's foremost families of armourers.

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Helmut Haller

Helmut Haller (21 July 1939 – 11 October 2012) was a German footballer who played as a forward.

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Helmut Oblinger

Helmut Oblinger (born 14 March 1973 in Schärding) is an Austrian slalom canoeist who competed from the early 1990s to 2015.

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Helmut Schmieder

Helmut Schmieder is a former East German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1950s.

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Henriette Mendel

Henriette Mendel, Baroness von Wallersee (July 31, 1833 – November 12, 1891) was a German actress, and the mistress and, later, morganatic wife of Ludwig Wilhelm, Duke in Bavaria.

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Henry I, Duke of Bavaria

Henry I (919/921 – 1 November 955), a member of the German royal Ottonian dynasty, was Duke of Bavaria from 948 until his death.

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Henry II of Augsburg

Henry II (origin and ancestry unknown; died 3 September 1063) was Bishop of Augsburg from 1047 to 1063.

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Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor

Henry II (Heinrich II; Enrico II) (6 May 973 – 13 July 1024), also known as Saint Henry, Obl. S. B., was Holy Roman Emperor ("Romanorum Imperator") from 1014 until his death in 1024 and the last member of the Ottonian dynasty of Emperors as he had no children.

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Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor

Henry III (28 October 1016 – 5 October 1056), called the Black or the Pious, was a member of the Salian Dynasty of Holy Roman Emperors.

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Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor

Henry IV (Heinrich IV; 11 November 1050 – 7 August 1106) became King of the Germans in 1056.

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Henry of Nördlingen

Henry of Nördlingen (Heinrich von Nördlingen) was a German Catholic priest from Bavaria, who lived in the 14th century, his date of death being unknown.

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Henry Scrimgeour

Henry Scrimgeour or Scrymgeour (c. 1505 – 23 September 1572) was a diplomat and book collector.

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Henry the Lion

Henry the Lion (Heinrich der Löwe; 1129/1131 – 6 August 1195) was a member of the Welf dynasty and Duke of Saxony, as Henry III, from 1142, and Duke of Bavaria, as Henry XII, from 1156, the duchies of which he held until 1180.

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Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor

Henry VI (Heinrich VI) (November 1165 – 28 September 1197), a member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was King of Germany (King of the Romans) from 1190 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1191 until his death.

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Henry Wotton

Sir Henry Wotton (30 March 1568 – December 1639) was an English author, diplomat and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1614 and 1625.

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Henry XI of Legnica

Henry XI of Legnica (Henryk XI Legnicki; Schloss Liegnitz, 23 February 1539 – Krakow, 3 March 1588), was a thrice Duke of Legnica: 1551-1556 (under regency), 1559–1576 and 1580-1581.

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Herbert Herz

Herbert Herz (known as Georges-Hubert Charnay by false papers) (1924-2016) is a former fighter with the French Résistance in the FTP-MOI, a member of the Carmagnole and Liberté squads of the Lyon region during World War II.

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Hergatz

Hergatz is a municipality in the district of Lindau in Bavaria in Germany.

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Herman of Carinthia

Herman of Carinthia (c. 1100 – c. 1160), also nicknamed Hermannus Dalmata ("the Dalmatian"), Sclavus ("the Slav") or Secundus ("the Second"), was an Istrian philosopher, astronomer, astrologer, mathematician, translator and author.

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Hermann Blau

Hermann Blau (21 January 1871 – 18 February 1944) was a German engineer and chemist, and inventor of Blau gas.

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Hermann Fressant

Hermann Fressant was a 14th-century town clerk in the German city of Ulm.

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Hermann Giesler

Hermann Giesler (April 2, 1898, Siegen – January 20, 1987, Düsseldorf) was a German architect during the Nazi era, one of the two architects most favoured and rewarded by Adolf Hitler (the other being Albert Speer).

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Hermann Höfle (SS general)

(12 September 1898 in Augsburg – 9 December 1947 in Bratislava) was a German SS-Obergruppenführer, General of the Waffen-SS and police, and SS and Police Leader (HSSPF).

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Hermann Marggraff

Hermann Marggraff (1809–64) was a German poet and humorous author.

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Hermann of Baden-Baden

Margrave (Prince) Hermann of Baden-Baden (12 October 1628 in Baden-Baden; died 30 October 1691 in Regensburg) was a general and diplomat in the imperial service.

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Hermann Rosa

Hermann Rosa (* November 2, 1911, Pirna; † October 5, 1981, Munich) was a German sculptor and architect.

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Hesselberg

Hesselberg (689 m above sea level) is the highest point in Middle Franconia and the Franconian Jura and is situated 60 km south west of Nuremberg, Germany.

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Hieronymus Brunschwig

Hieronymus Brunschwig or Hieronymus Brunschwygk (c. 1450c. 1512) was a German surgeon ("wund artzot"), alchemist and botanist.

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Hieronymus Wolf

Hieronymus Wolf (13 August 1516 - 8 October 1580) was a sixteenth-century German historian and humanist, most famous for introducing a system of Byzantine historiography that eventually became the standard in works of medieval Greek history.

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High-speed rail

High-speed rail is a type of rail transport that operates significantly faster than traditional rail traffic, using an integrated system of specialized rolling stock and dedicated tracks.

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Hindenburg-class airship

The two Hindenburg-class airships were hydrogen-filled, passenger-carrying rigid airships built in Germany in the 1930s and named in honor of Paul von Hindenburg. They were the last such aircraft ever built, and in terms of their length and volume, the largest Zeppelins ever to fly. During the 1930s, airships like the Hindenburg class were widely considered the future of air travel, and the lead ship of the class, LZ 129 ''Hindenburg'', established a regular transatlantic service. The destruction of this same ship in a highly publicized accident was to prove the death knell for these expectations. The second ship, LZ 130 ''Graf Zeppelin'', was never operated on a regular passenger service, and was scrapped in 1940 by the order of Hermann Göring.

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Historical urban community sizes

These are estimated populations of historical cities over time.

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History of Austria

The history of Austria covers the history of Austria and its predecessor states, from the early Stone Age to the present state.

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History of Baden-Württemberg

The history of Baden-Württemberg covers the area included in the historical state of Baden, the former Prussian Hohenzollern, and Württemberg, part of the region of Swabia since the 9th century.

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History of banking

The history of banking began with the first prototype banks were the merchants of the world, who made grain loans to farmers and traders who carried goods between cities.

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History of Catholic mariology

The history of Catholic Mariology traces theological developments and views regarding Mary from the early Church to the 21st century.

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History of firefighting

The history of organized firefighting began in ancient Rome while under the rule of Augustus.

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History of hospitals

The history of hospitals has stretched over 2500 years.

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History of jewellery in Ukraine

Jewellery as an art form originated as an expression of human culture.

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History of Lutheranism

Lutheranism as a religious movement originated in the early 16th century Holy Roman Empire as an attempt to reform the Roman Catholic Church.

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History of McDonald's

This history of McDonald's is an overview of the original restaurant and of the chain.

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History of Munich

Events in the history of Munich in Germany.

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History of pawnbroking

The history of pawnbroking began in the earliest ages of the world.

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History of printing in Poland

The history of printing in Poland began in the late 15th century, when following the creation of the Gutenberg Bible in 1455, printers from Western Europe spread the new craft abroad.

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History of Protestantism

Protestantism originated from work of several theologians starting in the 12th century, although there could have been earlier cases of which there is no surviving evidence.

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History of rail transport in Germany

The history of rail transport in Germany can be traced back to the 16th century.

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History of syphilis

The first recorded outbreak of syphilis in Europe occurred in 1494/1495 in Naples, Italy, during a French invasion.

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History of the Serbian Air Force

Since its establishment, the Air and Air Defense Forces has numbered tens of thousands of pilots, more than 5,000 aircraft, and four types of missile launching mid-range systems, a number of small-range missile launching systems and 15 radar types.

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History of timekeeping devices

For thousands of years, devices have been used to measure and keep track of time.

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History of Trier

Trier in Rhineland-Palatinate, whose history dates to the Roman Empire, is often claimed to be the oldest city in Germany.

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History of Venezuela

The history of Venezuela reflects events in areas of the Americas colonized by Spain starting 1522; amid resistance from indigenous peoples, led by Native caciques, such as Guaicaipuro and Tamanaco.

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History of watches

The history of watches began in 16th century Europe, where watches evolved from portable spring-driven clocks, which first appeared in the 15th century.

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Hochschule für Musik Nürnberg

The Hochschule für Musik Nürnberg (formerly Hochschule für Musik Nürnberg-Augsburg) is a music conservatoire based in Nuremberg (with a secondary building in Augsburg), Germany.

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Hochstetter

The family of Höchstetter (also rendered Hechstetter or Hochstetter) from Höchstädt in western Bavaria near the banks of the Danube were members of the fifteenth and sixteenth-century mercantile patriciate of Augsburg.

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Hofatelier Elvira

The Hofatelier Elvira (tr. Court atelier Elvira, also known as Atelier Elvira or Salon Elvira) was a photography studio in Munich founded by jurist and actress Anita Augspurg and friend photographer Sophia Goudstikker in 1887 and is notable as the first company founded by women in Germany.

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Hofgarten

Hofgarten is German for "court garden" and refers to the gardens of a seat or Residenz of a noble family, usually a reigning prince or sovereign.

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Hohe Schule, Loosdorf, Austria

The Hohe Schule (meaning: "The High School") in Loosdorf near Melk was a Protestant school open from ca.

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Hohenfreyberg Castle

Hohenfreyberg Castle (Burg Hohenfreyberg), together with Eisenberg Castle directly opposite, forms a castle group in the southern Allgäu that is visible from a long way off.

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Hohenschwangau Castle

Hohenschwangau Castle or Schloss Hohenschwangau (lit: Upper Swan County Palace) is a 19th-century palace in southern Germany.

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Holbein-Gymnasium Augsburg

The Holbein-Gymnasium is a natural scientific technological and lingual Gymnasium in Augsburg.

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Holy Cross Church, Augsburg

The Holy Cross Church (Heilig-Kreuz-Kirche) is a Roman Catholic parish church in the southern German city of Augsburg, Bavaria.

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Holy Crown of Hungary

The Holy Crown of Hungary (Szent Korona, also known as the Crown of Saint Stephen) was the coronation crown used by the Kingdom of Hungary for most of its existence; kings have been crowned with it since the twelfth century.

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Holy Roman Empire

The Holy Roman Empire (Sacrum Romanum Imperium; Heiliges Römisches Reich) was a multi-ethnic but mostly German complex of territories in central Europe that developed during the Early Middle Ages and continued until its dissolution in 1806.

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Holzen Abbey

Holzen Abbey (Kloster Holzen) was a convent of Benedictine nuns at the village of Golzen (west of the B2 at Nordendorf above the Schmutter) in Allmannshofen in Bavaria, Germany.

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Homare Sawa

is a former Japanese professional football player.

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Honorius Augustodunensis

Honorius Augustodunensis (c. 1080–1154?), commonly known as Honorius of Autun, was a very popular 12th-century Christian theologian who wrote prolifically on many subjects.

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Horten AG

Horten AG (Aktiengesellschaft) was a German department store chain founded by Helmut Horten in 1936 and headquartered in Düsseldorf, Germany. With up to 80 stores throughout Germany, Horten ranked fourth-largest among German department store chains, after Karstadt, Kaufhof and Hertie. Horten was one of the most modern German department store companies in the 1960s and 1970s. Many new stores were built and the traditional, long-established high street stores were renovated, modernized, and in some cases, expanded. Horten built the first department stores that included car parks and petrol stations. Horten wanted to be the department store of choice for customers from the suburbs who had their first cars and did not want to travel into the cities by bus or tram. In addition to their high-end downtown department stores, Horten built new "edge of downtown stores." Every department store featured a restaurant, mostly located on the top floor. In the 1960s they were called "KUPFERSPIESS" (Copper Kettle). Later, Horten began to reorganise them into self-service-restaurants and called them "Bon appetit" or "Horten-Restaurant," also combined together as "Bon appetit: Ihr Horten-Restaurant." In the 1990s Horten also began introducing the Galeria-concept for its restaurants and gave them a new food distribution sector and a lighter outfit. After Kaufhof took over Horten, they merged their two restaurant companies "Bel-Terine" and "Bon appetit" into one, dubbed "DINEA." Smaller restaurants with less service were called "Grillpfanne." Horten's dark brown interiors morphed into a more modern and fresh look with the introduction of the new Galeria stores in the 1980s, with an emphasis on lighter colors such as blue, light gray and white. Some of the bigger stores added food courts called "delikatessa" and also added onsite supermarkets. After returning from a visit to the United States and returning with the concept, Helmut Horten opened Germany's first supermarkets in the basement floors of his department stores. They were innovative, modern, and much larger than most German grocery stores at the time. In 1968 Helmut Horten sold all of his shares in the company and was not subsequently seen at celebratory occasions of Horten AG (like the 50th anniversary in 1986). Helmut Horten died in 1987, at this time his former company had been acquired by British American Tobacco plc. Until 1988, Horten operated some of its department stores under the name of Merkur; some of the group's smaller department stores were called DeFaKa (Deutsches Familien Kaufhaus), but these had all been replaced with modern types of Horten department stores by the 1970s. In 1988 Horten introduced a new concept for their department stores called the "GALERIA" concept. This proved to be a very successful venture for Horten AG. Horten AG decided to refresh the 39 biggest stores with the GALERIA design, though this goal was never fully implemented. That year, Horten founded Horten-Extra GmbH to hold its thirteen smallest locations not branded with the new GALERIA design. Ten of these Horten-Extra stores were sold to Kaufring AG in 1993. The other three Horten-Extra stores also did not have successful histories. The location in Dortmund was closed directly after the ten Horten-Extra stores were sold; it was renovated as a mall (Westfalen Forum). The other two Horten-Extra stores became part of Kaufhof (Neuss and Schwäbisch Gmünd) and traded for a few years once again as Horten, until the year 2000, when both stores closed because they were considered too small to be renamed Galeria Kaufhof. In 1994 competitor Kaufhof took over Horten and - over a ten-year period - all Horten department stores were either renamed Kaufhof, sold or closed. This process ended in 2004 with the last stores being closed or renamed and the Horten name disappeared. Today only one store - the Carsch-Haus in Düssldorf - still has the Horten logo on its facade, struck in stone over the main doors. The former name "Horten im Carsch-Haus" was dropped in 1996. In 2008 Kaufhof cleaned the Horten stone logos and they are now clearly visible on the facade. The store now simply trades as Carsch-Haus and wasn't changed into Kaufhof. A Galeria Kaufhof store is located in the same street. The 'Carsch-Haus' in Düsseldorf was the finest department store of Horten AG and served as a flagship store. It is now run by Kaufhof, but still trades as Carsch-Haus. This store has a very interesting and unique story, as in the 1980s it was dismantled stone by stone and later rebuilt only a few feet away. This became necessary because the 'Rheinbahn' (public transport in Düsseldorf) had planned to build a subway station under the building. After rebuilding, the Carsch-Haus became Horten AG's most modern department store and a model of development for the Galeria concept. In 1995 Horten AG became a real estate company and leased the Horten stores to Kaufhof. The operating business was transferred to the Horten GALERIA GmbH, which was later merged with Kaufhof AG.

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Hortus Eystettensis

The Hortus Eystettensis is a codex produced by Basilius Besler in 1613 of the garden of the bishop of Eichstätt in Bavaria.

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Hour record

The hour record is the record for the longest distance cycled in one hour on a bicycle from a stationary start.

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House of Absberg

Absberg was a local noble family in Franconia.

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Howard Adams

Howard Adams (September 8, 1921 – September 8, 2001) was an influential twentieth century Metis academic and activist.

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Hubert Gerhard

Hubert Gerhards (c. 1540/1550–1620; born 's-Hertogenbosch) was a Dutch sculptor.

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Hubertus Lamey

Hubertus Lamey (Mannheim 30 October 1896 – 7 April 1981) was a German general in the Wehrmacht during World War II.

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Hugo Niebeling

Hugo Niebeling (2 February 1931 – 9 July 2016) was a German film director and producer.

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Humanity World Tour

The Humanity World Tour was a worldwide concert tour by German heavy metal band Scorpions.

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Hungarian exonyms

Below is a list of Hungarian language exonyms for places outside of Hungary.

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Hungarian invasions of Europe

The Hungarian invasions of Europe (kalandozások, Ungarneinfälle) took place in the ninth and tenth centuries, the period of transition in the history of Europe between the Early and High Middle Ages, when the territory of the former Carolingian Empire was threatened by invasion from multiple hostile forces, the Magyars (Hungarians) from the east, the Viking expansion from the north and the Arabs from the south.

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Hungarians

Hungarians, also known as Magyars (magyarok), are a nation and ethnic group native to Hungary (Magyarország) and historical Hungarian lands who share a common culture, history and speak the Hungarian language.

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I Royal Bavarian Corps

The I Royal Bavarian Army Corps / I Bavarian AK (I.) was a corps level command of the Royal Bavarian Army, part of the German Army, before and during World War I. As part of the 1868 army reform, the I Royal Bavarian Army Corps of the Bavarian Army was set up in 1869 in Munich as the Generalkommando (headquarters) for the southern part of the Kingdom.

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Ian Wiley

Ian Wiley (born 5 May 1968 in Chapelizod) is an Irish slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1986 to 2000.

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ICE 1

The ICE 1 is the first batch-produced German high-speed train and one of six in the InterCityExpress family.

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ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships

The ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships are an international event in canoeing organized by the International Canoe Federation.

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Iconoclasm

IconoclasmLiterally, "image-breaking", from κλάω.

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Ignatius von Weitenauer

Ignatius von Weitenauer (November 1, 1709 – February 4, 1783) was a German Jesuit writer, exegete, and Orientalist.

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Ignaz Anton Demeter

Ignaz Anton Demeter (1 August 1773 – 21 March 1842) was a Roman Catholic priest, talented as a teacher and church musician, who served as the Archbishop of Freiburg im Breisgau from 1836 till his death five years later.

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Ignaz Heinrich von Wessenberg

Ignaz Heinrich von Wessenberg (4 November 17749 August 1860) was a German writer and scholar, and liberal Catholic churchman as well as Vicar general and administrator of the Diocese of Constance.

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Ildikó Mádl

Ildikó Mádl (born 5 November 1969 in Tapolca) is a Hungarian chess player who holds the FIDE titles of International Master (IM) and Woman Grandmaster (WGM).

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Iller-Lech Plateau

The Iller-Lech Plateau (Donau-Iller-Lech-Platte), also known as the Upper Swabian Plateau (Oberschwäbische Hochebene), is one of the natural regions of Germany.

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Ilsesee

Ilsesee is a lake in Augsburg / Königsbrunn, Bavaria, Germany.

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Ilsung

The Ilsung, Ilsung or Illsung family was a patrician family from Augsburg in Germany.

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Images and Tour

Images and Tour was the first major concert tour by American Progressive metal/rock band Dream Theater, promoting their second album Images and Words.

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Imhoff family

The Imhoff or Im Hof family is one of the catholic patrician noble families in the German city of Nuremberg.

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Immurement

Immurement (from Latin im- "in" and murus "wall"; literally "walling in") is a form of imprisonment, usually for life, in which a person is placed within an enclosed space with no exits.

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Imperial Crowns of Charles VII

The Imperial Crowns of Charles VII are kept in the treasury at the Munich Residenz.

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Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)

The Imperial Diet (Dieta Imperii/Comitium Imperiale; Reichstag) was the deliberative body of the Holy Roman Empire.

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Imperial election, 1562

The imperial election of 1562 was an imperial election held to select the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.

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Imperial election, 1653

The imperial election of 1653 was an imperial election held to select the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.

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Imperial election, 1690

The imperial election of 1690 was an imperial election held to select the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.

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Imperial helmet

The Imperial helmet-type was a type of helmet worn by Roman legionaries.

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Imperial Military Constitution

The Imperial Military Constitution (Reichsheeresverfassung, also called the Reichskriegsverfassung) of the Holy Roman Empire, like the rest of the imperial constitution, grew out of various laws and governed the establishment of military forces within the Empire.

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Imperial Reform

Imperial Reform (Reformatio imperii, Reichsreform) is the name given to repeated attempts in the 15th and 16th centuries to adapt the structure and the constitutional order (Verfassungsordnung) of the Holy Roman Empire to the requirements of the early modern state and to give it a unified government under either the Imperial Estates or the emperor's supremacy.

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In jener letzten der Nächte

(In this last of nights), WAB 17, is a motet composed by Anton Bruckner.

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Incunable

An incunable, or sometimes incunabulum (plural incunables or incunabula, respectively), is a book, pamphlet, or broadside printed in Europe before the year 1501.

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Inge Viermetz

Inge Viermetz (born 7 March 1908 in Aschaffenburg – 23 April 1997 in Vaterstetten)) was responsible for the Lebensborn in Nazi Germany. As an assistant to Max Sollmann, head of the Lebensborn, she was acquitted at the RuSHA Trial.

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Ingetraut Dahlberg

Ingetraut Dahlberg (20 February 1927 – 24 October 2017) was a German information scientist and philosopher who developed the universal Information Coding Classification covering some 6,500 subject fields.

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Innsbruck

Innsbruck is the capital city of Tyrol in western Austria and the fifth-largest city in Austria.

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Intercity (Deutsche Bahn)

Intercity is the second-highest train classification in Germany, after the ICE.

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International Association of Wagner Societies

The International Association of Wagner Societies (Der Richard-Wagner-Verband International e.V., also known as "Der RWVI") is an affiliation of Wagner societies (Richard Wagner-Verband) that promotes interest and research into the works of Richard Wagner, raises funds for scholarships for young music students, singers, and instrumentalists, and supports the annual Bayreuth Festival.

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International School Augsburg

The International School Augsburg (ISA) is an English-speaking private all-day school in Gersthofen, a town near Augsburg.

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International Violin Competition Leopold Mozart in Augsburg

The International Violin Competition Leopold Mozart in Augsburg is an international violin competition, held every three years in commemoration of Leopold Mozart (1719-1787), the father of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

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Inverness

Inverness (from the Inbhir Nis, meaning "Mouth of the River Ness", Inerness) is a city in the Scottish Highlands.

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Irena Turkevycz-Martynec

Irena Turkevycz-Martynec (1899-1983) was born in Brody, Ukraine, and came to Canada, to Winnipeg, in 1960.

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Irmgard Möller

Irmgard Möller (born 13 May 1947) is a former member of the German militant group the Red Army Faction (RAF).

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Irmgard Seefried

Irmgard Seefried (9 October 191924 November 1988) was a distinguished German soprano who sang opera, sacred music, and lieder.

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Isaak Mazepa

Isaak Prokhorovych Mazepa (Ісаак Мазепа) (16 August 1884 in Kostobobriv – 18 March 1952 in Augsburg) was a Ukrainian politician.

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Isabelle Faust

Isabelle Faust (born 1972 in Esslingen, Germany) is a violinist who has won multiple awards.

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Isar

The Isar is a river in Tyrol, Austria and Bavaria, Germany.

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István Kertész (conductor)

István Kertész (28 August 192916 April 1973) was an internationally acclaimed Jewish Hungarian orchestral and operatic conductor who, throughout his brief but distinguished career led many of the world's great orchestras, including the Cleveland, Chicago, Philadelphia, New York, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Detroit, San Francisco and Minnesota Orchestras in the United States, as well as the London Symphony, Vienna Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic, and L'Orchestre de la Suisse Romande.

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Italian Baroque interior design

Italian Baroque interior design refers to high-style furnishing and interior decorating carried out in Italy during the Baroque period, which lasted from the early 17th to the mid-18th century.

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Italian exonyms

Below is list of Italian language exonyms for places in non-Italian-speaking areas of Europe: In recent years, the use of Italian exonyms for lesser known places has significantly decreased, in favour of the foreign toponym.

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J. P. Bemberg

J.

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Jack White (sculptor)

John "Jack" H. White (born July 6, 1940) is an American sculptor, Fresco painter and photographer.

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Jacob Anton Zallinger zum Thurn

Jacob Anton Zallinger zum Thurn was a philosopher and canonist, born in Bozen, 26 July 1735, died there, 11 January 1813.

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Jacob Bidermann

Jacob Bidermann (1578 – August 20, 1639) was born in the Austrian (at that time) village of Ehingen, about 30 miles southwest of Ulm.

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Jacob Campo Weyerman

Jacob Campo Weyerman (9 August 1677 - 9 March 1747) was an eccentric painter and writer during the period known as the Dutch Enlightenment.

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Jacob Hübner

Jacob Hübner (20 June 1761 – 13 September 1826, in Augsburg) was a German entomologist.

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Jacob Pollak

Rabbi Jacob Pollak (other common spelling Yaakov Pollack) was the founder of the Polish method of halakhic and Talmudic study known as the Pilpul; born about 1460; died at Lublin in 1541.

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Jacob Xaver Schmuzer

Jacob Xaver Schmuzer (1713–1775) was a German copper engraver particularly noted for his illustrating "Unterhaltungen aus der Naturgeschichte" ('Discourse on Natural History'), the monumental multi-volume work of the Bavarian clergyman and naturalist from Augsburg, Gottlieb Tobias Wilhelm (1758-1822).

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Jacobus de Kerle

Jacobus de Kerle (Ypres 1531/1532 - Prague 7 January 1591) was a Flemish composer and organist of the late Renaissance.

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Jacobus de Teramo

Jacobus Palladinus de Teramo (1349–1417), a member of the powerful family of Palladini, was an Italian canon lawyer and bishop.

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Jakob Andreae

Jakob Andreae (25 March 1528 – 7 January 1590) was a significant German Lutheran theologian and Protestant Reformer involved in the drafting of major documents.

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Jakob Friedrich Caflisch

Jakob Friedrich Caflisch (3 March 1817 – 9 May 1882) was a German botanist born near Memmingen.

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Jakob Fugger

Jakob Fugger of the Lily (Jakob Fugger von der Lilie) (6 March 1459 – 30 December 1525), also known as Jakob Fugger the Rich or sometimes Jakob II, was a major German merchant, mining entrepreneur and banker.

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Jakob Fugger the Elder

Jakob Fugger (1398 in Augsburg – 1469 in Augsburg) was a German master weaver, town councillor and merchant, as well as the founder of the Fugger dynasty.

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Jakob Grimminger

Jakob Grimminger (25 April 1892 – 28 January 1969) was a member of the Schutzstaffel (SS) known for carrying the Blutfahne, the ceremonial Nazi flag.

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Jakob Hassler

Jakob Hassler (18 December 1569 – 1 January 1622) was a German Renaissance composer.

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Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer

Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer (10 December 1790 – 26 April 1861) was a Tyrolean traveller, journalist, politician and historian, best known for his controversial Dream Nation: Enlightenment, Colonization, and the Institution of Modern Greece, Stathis Gourgouris p.142-143Sociolinguistic Variation and Change, Peter Trudgill, p.131The Fragments of Death, Fables of Identity: An Athenian Anthropography, Neni Panourgia - Social Science - 1995, p. 28 theories concerning the racial origins of the Greeks, and for his travel writings.

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Jakob Rem

Jakob Rem (June 1546 - 12 October 1618) was an Austrian member of the Society of Jesus, a Catholic evangelical organization, and an early member of the Congregation of Marian Fathers.

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Jakob Wilhelm Benedikt von Langenmantel

Jakob Wilhelm Benedikt von Langenmantel (16 March 1720 – 17 April 1790), also called Jakob Wilhelm Benedikt Langenmantel von Westheim und Ottmarshausen, was a patrician of the city of Augsburg in the Electorate of Bavaria, and mayor of the city.

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James Campbell (clarinetist)

James Campbell (b. Leduc, Alberta, near Edmonton, 10 August 1949) is a Canadian/American clarinetist.

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James Santee

James "Jimmie" Santee is an American former competitive figure skater.

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James W. Reese

James William Reese (April 16, 1920 – August 5, 1943) was a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the United States military's highest decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in World War II during the Battle of Troina in the Sicily campaign.

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Jan Cornelisz Vermeyen

Jan Cornelisz Vermeyen, or Jan Mayo, or Barbalonga (c. 1504 – 1559) was a Dutch Northern Renaissance painter.

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Jan Zach

Jan Zach, called in German Johann Zach (baptized 13 November 1699 – 24 May 1773) was a Czech composer, violinist and organist.

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Januarius Zick

Johann Rasso Januarius Zick (6 February 1730 – 14 November 1797) was a German painter and architect.

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January 1916

The following events occurred in January 1916.

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Japan women's national football team results and fixtures

This article lists the results and fixtures for the Japan women's national football team.

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Japanese garden

are traditional gardens whose designs are accompanied by Japanese aesthetic and philosophical ideas, avoid artificial ornamentation, and highlight the natural landscape.

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Javad Nekounam

Javad Nekounam (جواد نکونام; born 7 September 1980) is an Iranian retired footballer who played as a central midfielder, and is the current coach of F.C. Nassaji Mazandaran.

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Jazzfäst

Jazzfäst (pur on JazzFest Berlin "Ä" because the logo of Die Ärzte) is the 44th concert tour by the German punk rock band Die Ärzte, which also supports their eleventh studio album, Jazz ist anders.

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Jörg Breu the Elder

Jörg Breu the Elder (c. 1475–1537), of Augsburg, was a painter of the German Danube school.

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Jörg Breu the Younger

Jörg Breu the Younger (c. 1510 – 1547), son of Jörg Breu the Elder, was a painter of Augsburg.

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Jörg Wilhalm

Jörg Wilhalm was an early 16th-century German fencing master, hatmaker, and citizen of Augsburg.

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Jürgen Kübler

Jürgen Kübler is a former West German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1980s.

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Jürgen Möllemann

Jürgen Wilhelm Möllemann (15 July 1945 – 5 June 2003) was a German politician of the Free Democratic Party.

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Jean Heysterbach

Jean Heysterbach, O.P. (died 1447) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Auxiliary Bishop of Augsburg (1436–1447).

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Jean McNeil

Jean McNeil, born 1968, is a Canadian fiction and travel author.

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Jean-Baptiste Besard

Jean-Baptiste Besard (c.1567 – c.1625) was a Burgundian lutenist, composer and anthologistJulia Sutton: The Lute Instructions of Jean-Baptiste Besard, in: The Musical Quarterly vol.

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Jeremias Drexel

Jeremias Drexel S.J. (also known as Hieremias Drexelius or Drechsel) (August 15, 1581 – 19 April 1638) was a Jesuit writer of devotional literature and a professor of the humanities and rhetoric.

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Jettingen-Scheppach

Jettingen-Scheppach is a market community in the Günzburg Landkreis in the Schwaben (Swabia) Regierungsbezirk in Bavaria.

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Jewish hat

The Jewish hat also known as the Jewish cap, Judenhut (German) or Latin pilleus cornutus ("horned skullcap"), was a cone-shaped pointed hat, often white or yellow, worn by Jews in Medieval Europe and some of the Islamic world.

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Jinan

Jinan, formerly romanized as Tsinan, is the capital of Shandong province in Eastern China.

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Joachim Meyer

Joachim Meÿer (ca. 1537–1571) was a self described Freifechter (literally, Free Fencer) living in the then Free Imperial City of Strasbourg in the 16th century and the author of a fechtbuch Gründtliche Beschreibung der Kunst des Fechtens (in English, Thorough Descriptions of the Art of Fencing) first published in 1570.

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Joachim von Sandrart

Joachim von Sandrart (12 May 1606 – 14 October 1688) was a German Baroque art-historian and painter, active in Amsterdam during the Dutch Golden Age.

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Jochen Lettmann

Jochen Lettmann (born 10 April 1969 in Duisburg) is a German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1990s.

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Jodok Seitz

Jodok Seitz, O. Praem. (died 1471) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Auxiliary Bishop of Augsburg (1460–1471).

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Joel Patten

John Lawrence "Joel" Patten II (born February 7, 1958 in Augsburg, West Germany) is a former professional football player who played tackle for seven seasons in the National Football League: for the Cleveland Browns in 1980, Indianapolis Colts in 1987-1988, San Diego Chargers in 1989-1990, and Los Angeles Raiders in 1991-1992.

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Johan Banér

Johan Banér (23 June 1596 – 10 May 1641) was a Swedish Field Marshal in the Thirty Years' War.

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Johan Bara

Johan Bara (or Barra) (1581–1634) was a Dutch painter, designer and engraver.

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Johann Andreas Stein

Johann (Georg) Andreas Stein (16 May 1728 in Heidesheim – 29 February 1792 in Augsburg), was an outstanding German maker of keyboard instruments, a central figure in the history of the piano.

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Johann Andreas Streicher

Johann Andreas Streicher (13 December 1761 in Stuttgart – 25 May 1833 in Vienna) was a German pianist, composer and piano maker.

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Johann Augustanus Faber

John Augustanus Faber (c. 1470 – 1531) was a Swiss theologian, born in Fribourg.

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Johann Baptist von Keller

Johann Baptist von Keller (May 16, 1774 – October 17, 1845) was a German Catholic priest from Salem.

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Johann Baptiste Horvath

Johann Baptiste Horvath (Keresztély János Horváth, 13 July 1732 in Kőszeg – 20 October 1799 in Buda) was a Hungarian-born Jesuit Professor of Physics and Philosophy at the University of Trnava (Nagyszombat) in modern-day Slovakia, which was then part of the Kingdom of Hungary.

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Johann Bayer

Johann Bayer (1572 – 7 March 1625) was a German lawyer and uranographer (celestial cartographer).

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Johann Bämler

Johann Bämler (sometimes Johannes Bämler, Johann Baemler or Hans Bemler, 1430–1503) was a printer, illuminator and bookseller from Augsburg, Germany.

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Johann Caspar Aiblinger

Johann Caspar Aiblinger (23 February 1779 – 6 May 1867) was a German composer.

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Johann Caspar Seyfert

Johann Caspar Seyfert (1697, Augsburg, Germany – 26 May 1767, Augsburg, Germany) was a German composer, violinist and lute player.

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Johann Christoph von Freyberg-Allmendingen

Johann Christoph Reichsritter von Freyberg-Allmendingen (1616–1690) was the Prince-Provost of Ellwangen Abbey from 1660 to 1674, and the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1665 to 1690.

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Johann Christoph von Westerstetten

Johann Christoph von Westerstetten (6 January 1563 - 28 July 1637) was Prince-bishop of Eichstätt, Bavaria, during the Thirty Years' War.

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Johann Cochlaeus

Johann Cochlaeus (Cochläus) (1479 – January 10, 1552) was a German humanist, music theorist, and controversialist.

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Johann Eck

Johann Maier von Eck (13 November 1486 – 13 February 1543), often Anglicized as John Eck, was a German Scholastic theologian, Catholic prelate, and early counterreformer who was among Martin Luther's most important interlocutors and theological opponents.

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Johann Eglof von Knöringen

Johann Eglof von Knöringen (25 July, 1537 – 4 June, 1575) was Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1573 to 1575.

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Johann Elias Ridinger

Johann Elias Ridinger (16 February 1698, Ulm – 10 April 1767, Augsburg) was a German painter, engraver, draughtsman and publisher.

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Johann Ernst Eberlin

Johann Ernst Eberlin (27 March 1702 – 19 June 1762) was a German composer and organist whose works bridge the baroque and classical eras.

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Johann Evangelist Holzer

Johann Evangelist Holzer (December 24, 1709 – July 21, 1740) was an Austrian-German painter.

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Johann Faber of Heilbronn

Johann Faber of Heilbronn, also known as Johann Fabri (1504 – 27 February 1558) was a controversial Sixteenth century Catholic preacher.

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Johann Fischer (composer)

Johann Fischer (1646–1716) was a German violinist, keyboardist and composer of the baroque era.

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Johann Forster

Johann Forster Forsterus, Förster or Forstheim (10 July 1496, in Augsburg - 7 December 1558, in Wittenberg) was a Lutheran theologian, Protestant reformer and professor of Hebrew.

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Johann Friedrich Cotta

Johann Friedrich, Freiherr Cotta von Cottendorf (April 27, 1764 – December 29, 1832) was a German publisher, industrial pioneer and politician.

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Johann Georg Beck

Johann Georg Beck or Johann Georg Baek (24 April 1676 in Augsburg – 7 August 1722 in Braunschweig) was a German engraver.

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Johann Georg Bergmüller

Johann Georg Bergmüller (15 April 1688 – 2 April 1762) was a painter, particularly of frescoes, of the Baroque.

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Johann Georg Fischer (painter)

Johann Georg Fischer, an historical painter, was born at Augsburg in 1580.

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Johann Georg Melchior Schmidtner

Johann Georg Melchior Schmidtner (1625 - 1705) was a German Baroque painter.

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Johann Georg Mozart

Johann Georg Mozart (4 May 1679 – 19 February 1736) was a bookbinder who lived in Augsburg, Germany, in the 17th and 18th centuries.

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Johann Georg Schmidt (engraver)

Johann Georg Schmidt (23 August 1694, Augsburg - 15 March 1767, Braunschweig) was a German engraver.

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Johann Georg von Lori

Johann Georg von Lori (17 July 1723 – 23 March 1787) was a Bavarian high official, lawyer and historian.

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Johann Georg von Werdenstein

Johann Georg von Werdenstein (1542–1608), canon of Augsburg and Eichstätt, was the owner of a very substantial library consisting of tens of thousands of books.

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Johann Georg Wirsung

Johann Georg Wirsung (July 3, 1589 Augsburg – August 22, 1643 Padua) was a German anatomist who was a long-time prosector in Padua.

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Johann Gottfried Eckard

Johann Gottfried Eckard (Eckhardt) (21 January 1735 – 24 July 1809) was a German pianist and composer.

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Johann Hasler

Johann Hasler (born 1548, died after 1602), also known as Haslerus, was a 16th century Swiss theologian and physician.

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Johann Heinrich Schönfeld

Johann Heinrich Schönfeld (1609 – 1684) was a Baroque painter of Germany.

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Johann Jacob Haid

Johann Jacob Haid or Johann Jakob Haid (1704–1767) was a German engraver who worked in Augsburg.

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Johann Jakob Brucker

Johann Jakob Brucker (Jacobus Bruckerus; 22 January 1696 – 26 November 1770) was a German historian of philosophy.

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Johann Jakob Dorner the Elder

Johann Jakob Dorner the Elder, who was born at Ehrenstetten, near Freiburg in Breisgau, in 1741, was at first a pupil of Rösch at Freiburg and of Ignaz Bauer at Augsburg.

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Johann Jakob Fugger

Johann Jakob Fugger or Hans Jakob Fugger (23 December 1516, Augsburg - 14 July 1575, Munich) was a German banker and patron of the arts and sciences from the von der Lilie (of the Lily) line of the noted Fugger banking family.

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Johann Jakob Schalch

Johann Jakob Schalch (23 January 1723 – 21 August 1789) was a Swiss painter.

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Johann König

Johann König (21 October 1586 – 4 March 1642) was a German painter.

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Johann Kusser

Johann Sigismund Kusser or Cousser (baptised 13 February 1660 – before 17 November 1727) was composer of Hungarian parentage active in Germany, France, and Ireland.

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Johann Maria Farina gegenüber dem Jülichs-Platz

Johann Maria Farina gegenüber dem Jülichs-Platz GmbH (English: John Maria Farina opposite Jülich's Square) is the world's oldest eau de Cologne and perfume factory.

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Johann Matthias Hase

Johann Matthias (Matyhias) Hase (Haas, Haase) (Latinized as Johannes Hasius) (14 January 1684 – 24 September 1742) was a German mathematician, astronomer, and cartographer.

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Johann Matthias Kager

Johann Matthias Kager (1566–1634) was a German historical painter.

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Johann Melchior Dinglinger

Johann Melchior Dinglinger (26 December 1664 –6 March 1731) was one of Europe's greatest goldsmiths, whose major works for the elector of Saxony, Augustus the Strong, survived in the Grünes Gewölbe (the "Green Vaults"), Dresden.

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Johann Melchior Gletle

Johann Melchior Gletle (July 1626 – 6 September 1683) was a Swiss organist, Kapellmeister and composer.

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Johann Michael Feuchtmayer

Johann Michael Feuchtmayer (the Younger) (sometimes spelled Johann Michael Feuchtmayr or Feichtmayr) (1709 – June 4, 1772) was a German stuccoworker and sculptor of the late Baroque period.

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Johann Michael Nathanael Feneberg

Johann Michael Nathanael Feneberg, born in Oberdorf, Allgau, Bavaria, February 9, 1751; died October 12, 1812.

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Johann Michael Raich

Johann Michael Raich (Ottobeuren in Bavaria, 17 January 1832 – Mainz, 28 March 1907) was a Catholic theologian.

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Johann Michael Voltz

Johann Michael Voltz (16 October 1784 in Nördlingen – 17 April 1858 in Nördlingen) was a German painter, graphic artist and political cartoonist.

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Johann Moritz Rugendas

Johann Moritz Rugendas (29 March 1802 – 29 May 1858) was a German painter, famous for his works depicting landscapes and ethnographic subjects in several countries in the Americas, in the first half of the 19th century.

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Johann Most

Johann Joseph "Hans" Most (February 5, 1846 in Augsburg, Bavaria – March 17, 1906 in Cincinnati, Ohio) was a German-American anarchist politician, newspaper editor, and orator.

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Johann Otto von Gemmingen

Johann Otto von Gemmingen (23 October 1545 – 6 October 1598) was the Bishop of Augsburg from 1591 to 1598.

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Johann Peter Spaeth

Johann Peter Spaeth, also known as Moses Germanus or Moses Ashkenazi (1st half of the 17th century in Vienna – April 27, 1701 in Amsterdam) was an Austrian theologian that converted to Judaism.

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Johann Philipp Palm

Johann Philipp Palm or Johannes Philipp Palm (17 December 1768 – 26 August 1806) was a German bookseller and a strong anti-French agitator and freedom fighter executed during the Napoleonic Wars at Napoleon's orders.

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Johann Rynmann of Augsburg

Johann Rynmann of Augsburg, also referred to as John Rynmann of Augsburg, (died 1522) is considered to be the first non-printing publisher.

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Johann Sebastian von Drey

Johann Sebastian von Drey (16 October 1777 – 19 February 1853) was a German Catholic professor of theology at the University of Tübingen.

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Johann Speth

Johann (Johannes) Speth (9 November 1664 – after 1719) was a German organist and composer.

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Johann Stridbeck the Younger

Johann Stridbeck the Younger (1665, Augsburg - 19 December 1714, Augsburg) was a German draughtsman, engraver and publisher.

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Johann Ulrich Kraus

Johann Ulrich Kraus (also Krauss, Krauß, 1655–1719) was an early German illustrator, engraver and publisher in Augsburg.

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Johann Ulrich Mayr

Johann Ulrich Mayr (1629, Augsburg – 1704, Augsburg), was a German Baroque painter.

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Johann von Klenau

Johann von Klenau (13 April 1758 – 6 October 1819), also called Johann Josef Cajetan von Klenau und Janowitz, was a field marshal in the Habsburg army.

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Johann von Leuchselring

Johann von Leuchselring was Chancellor for the Free Imperial City of Augsburg from 1636 through 1645 and a leading Catholic negotiator in the Peace of Westphalia.

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Johann Wilhelm Baur

Johann Wilhelm Baur, Joan Guiliam Bouwer, or Bauer (Strasbourg, 31 May 1607 - Vienna, 1 January 1640) was a German engraver, etcher and miniature painter.

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Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner

Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner (1702 in Ebbs, Tirol; † September 7 1761 in Augsburg) was an Austrian-German Rococo painter.

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Johanna Langefeld

Johanna Langefeld (5 March 1900, Kupferdreh, Germany – 26 January 1974) was a German female guard and supervisor at three Nazi concentration camps: Lichtenburg, Ravensbrück, and Auschwitz.

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Johanna Sibylla Küsel

Johanna Sibylla Kraus or Johanna Sibylla Küsel (1650 – 1717) was a printmaker from Augsburg.

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Johanne Seizberg

Johanne Seizberg (1732–1772) was a Danish artist, drawing artist, and illustrator, and a teacher.

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Johannes de Thurocz

Johannes de Thurocz (Thuróczy János; Ján z Turca or Ján de Turocz, Johannes de Thurocz., variant contemporary spelling: de Thwrocz) (c. 1435 – 1488 or 1489), was a Hungarian historian and the author of the Latin Chronica Hungarorum ("Chronicle of the Hungarians"), the most extensive 15th-century work on Hungary, and the first chronicle of Hungary written by a layman.

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Johannes Eccard

Johannes Eccard (1553–1611) was a German composer and kapellmeister.

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Johannes Engel

Johannes Engel (2 March 1453 – 29 September 1512), also known as Johannes Angelus, was a doctor, astronomer and astrologer from Aichach, near Augsburg, which at that time was a Free Imperial City within the Holy Roman Empire.

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Johannes Gossner

Johannes Evangelista Gossner (14 December 1773 – 20 March 1858), German divine and philanthropist, was born at Hausen near Augsburg.

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Johannes Martin Kränzle

Johannes Martin Kränzle (born 1962) is a German baritone in opera and concert who has made an international career.

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Johannes Oecolampadius

Johannes Oecolampadius (also Œcolampadius, in German also Oekolampadius, Oekolampad; 1482 in Weinsberg, Electoral Palatinate in the Holy Roman Empire – 24 November 1531 in Basel, Canton of Basel in the Old Swiss Confederacy) was a German Protestant reformer in the Reformed tradition from the Electoral Palatinate.

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Johannes Schüssler

Johannes Schüssler was a fifteenth century German bookprinter from Augsburg.

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Johannes Widmann

Johannes Widmann (c. 1460 – after 1498) was a German mathematician.

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John Balmer

John Raeburn Balmer, (3 July 1910 – 11 May 1944) was a senior officer and bomber pilot in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF).

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John Cheke

Sir John Cheke (Cheek) (16 June 1514 – 13 September 1557) was an English classical scholar and statesman.

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John Dering Nettleton

Squadron Leader John Dering Nettleton VC (28 June 1917 – 13 July 1943) was a South African recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

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John E. Butts

John Edward Butts (August 4, 1922 – June 23, 1944) was a United States Army second lieutenant and rifle platoon leader who received the Medal of Honor posthumously for his actions above and beyond the call of duty during the Normandy Campaign in World War II.

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John Evangelist Stadler

John Evangelist Stadler (December 24, 1804 in Parkstetten, in the Diocese of Regensburg – December 30, 1868 in Augsburg) was a Bavarian hagiographer.

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John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg

John Frederick (Johann Friedrich; 25 April 1625 in Herzberg am Harz – 18 December 1679 in Augsburg) was duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg.

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John I, Count of Waldeck

John I, Count of Waldeck (1521 or 1522 – 9 April 1567 at Landau Castle in Arolsen) was the founder of the younger line of Waldeck-Landau.

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John of Palatinate-Mosbach

John of Palatinate-Mosbach (1 August 1443 - 4 October 1486, Jerusalem) was a prince of the house of Wittelsbach and Dompropst or canon of Augsburg Cathedral and Regensburg Cathedral.

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John Pennel

John Thomas Pennel (July 25, 1940 – September 26, 1993) was an American pole vaulter, and four-time world record holder.

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John Rastell (Jesuit)

John Rastell (1532–1577) was an English Jesuit.

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John S. Hilliard

John Stanley Hilliard (b. Hot Springs, Arkansas, 1947) is an American composer.

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John Schaller

John Schaller was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.

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John W. O'Daniel

Lieutenant General John Wilson O'Daniel (February 15, 1894 – March 27, 1975), nicknamed "Iron Mike", was a senior United States Army officer who served in World War I, World War II, and the Korean War.

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John, Margrave of Brandenburg-Küstrin

John of Brandenburg-Küstrin (Johann von Brandenburg-Küstrin, or Hans von Küstrin; 3 August 1513 – 13 January 1571), was a member of the House of Hohenzollern and a Margrave of Brandenburg-Küstrin.

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Johnny Cecotto Jr.

Johnny Amadeus Cecotto, more commonly known as Johnny Cecotto Jr. (born 9 September 1989 in Augsburg, West Germany) is a racing driver.

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Jon Lugbill

Jon Phillip Lugbill (born May 27, 1961 in Wauseon, Ohio) is a whitewater canoe slalom racer.

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Jonas Umbach

Jonas Umbach, painter, designer, and engraver, was born at Augsburg about 1624.

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Jos Punt

Jozef Marianus "Jos" Punt (born 10 January 1946) is the current Roman Catholic bishop of Haarlem-Amsterdam in the Netherlands.

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Josef Bulva

Josef Bulva (born January 9, 1943 in Brno, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, now the Czech Republic) is a Czech pianist.

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Josef Frühmesser

Josef Frühmesser (1929–1995) born in Gutach in the Black Forest was a German painter who studied at the Kunstschule Düsseldorf and later worked in Augsburg.

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Josef Goubeau

Josef Goubeau (31 March 1901 in Augsburg, Germany – 18 October 1990 in Stuttgart) was a German chemist.

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Josef Mayr

Josef Mayr (June 16, 1900 in Augsburg – August 2, 1957 in La Spezia, Italy) was the mayor of Augsburg, Germany, between 1934 and 1945.

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Josef Priller

Josef "Pips" Priller (27 July 1915 – 20 May 1961) was a German military aviator in the Luftwaffe during World War II, a fighter ace credited with 101 enemy aircraft shot down in 307 combat missions.

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Josel of Rosheim

Josel of Rosheim (alternatively: Joselin, Joselmann, Yoselmann, Josel von Rosheim, יוסף בן גרשון מרוסהים Joseph ben Gershon mi-Rosheim, or Joseph ben Gershon Loanz; c. 1480 – March, 1554) was the great advocate ("shtadlan") of the German and Polish Jews during the reigns of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I and Charles V. Maximilian I appointed him as governor of all Jews of Germany, a position which was confirmed after his death by his grandson, Charles V. His stature among the Jews, and the protected status he gained for himself and for the Jews within the Holy Roman Empire, rested in part on his skills as an advocate and in part from the Jewish role in financing the expenses of the emperor.

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Joseph Anton Feuchtmayer

Joseph Anton Feuchtmayer (6 March 1696 (baptized) – 2 January 1770) was an important Rococo stuccoist and sculptor, active in southern Germany and Switzerland.

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Joseph Christoph Kessler

Joseph Christoph Kessler (26 August 180014 January 1872), also seen as Kötzler, was a German pianist and composer who was active mostly in the Austrian Empire.

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Joseph Francis of Weckert

Joseph Franz of Weckert (12 September 1822 in Wallerstein, 13 March 1889 in Passau) was 76th Bishop of Passau.

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Joseph Franz von Allioli

Joseph Franz von Allioli (10 August, 1793 at Sulzbach, Germany – 22 May, 1873 at Augsburg, Germany), was a Roman Catholic theologian and orientalist.

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Joseph Heintz the Elder

Joseph Heintz (or Heinz) the Elder (11 June 1564 – 15 October 1609) was a Swiss painter, draftsman and architect.

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Joseph Heintz the Younger

Joseph Heintz the Younger or Joseph Heintz (II) (1600 – 1678) was a German painter.

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Joseph Ignaz Philipp von Hessen-Darmstadt

Joseph Ignaz Philipp von Hessen-Darmstadt (1699–1768) was the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1740 to 1768.

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Joseph Schmid

Joseph Beppo Schmid Born 24 September 1901, Died 30 August 1956, was a German General serving in the Luftwaffe during World War II and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, awarded by Nazi Germany for successful military leadership.

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Joseph Vilsmaier

Joseph Vilsmaier (born 24 January 1939) is a German film director.

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Joseph Wilhelm Ernst, Prince of Fürstenberg

Joseph Wilhelm Ernst (born 1699 in Augsburg - died 1762 in Vienna) was a prince of Fürstenberg-Fürstenberg who changed his residence to Donaueschingen, at the head of the Danube, and thus converted the existing settlement into a town.

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Joseph-Ernst Graf Fugger von Glött

Joseph-Ernst Graf Fugger von Glött, since 1940: Fürst Fugger von Glött (October 26, 1895, Kirchheim in Schwaben – May 13, 1981, Miesbach) was a German politician and representative of the Christian Social Union of Bavaria.

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Jost de Negker

Jost de Negker (c. 1485–1544) was a cutter of woodcuts and also a printer and publisher of prints during the early 16th century, mostly in Augsburg, Germany.

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Juan Carlos Gómez

Juan Carlos Gómez (born July 26, 1973) is a Cuban former professional boxer who competed from 1995 to 2014.

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Julia Fischer

Julia Fischer (born) is a German classical violinist and pianist.

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Julia Schruff

Julia Schruff (born 16 August 1982) is a retired professional German tennis player.

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Julius Berger (cellist)

Julius Berger (born 1954) is a German cellist, musicologist and an academic of chamber music and cello at the Leopold Mozart Centre of the Augsburg University.

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Julius Motteler

Julius Motteler (18 June 1838 – 29 September 1907) was a pioneering German Socialist and Businessman.

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Julius Schaxel

Julius Christoph Ehregott Schaxel (March 24, 1887 - July 15, 1943) was a German biologist who was a native of Augsburg.

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Julius Schiller

Julius Schiller (c. 1580 – 1627) was a lawyer from Augsburg, who like his fellow citizen and colleague Johann Bayer published a star atlas in celestial cartography.

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July 1945

The following events occurred in July 1945.

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Juraj Kucka

Juraj Kucka (born 26 February 1987) is a Slovak footballer who plays as a midfielder for Turkish club Trabzonspor and the Slovakia national football team.

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Juthungi

The Juthungi (Greek: Iouthungoi, Latin: Iuthungi) were a Germanic tribe in the region north of the rivers Danube and Altmühl in the modern German state of Bavaria.

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Kaiserliche Reichspost

Kaiserliche Reichspost (Imperial Mail) was the name of the country-wide postal service of the Holy Roman Empire.

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Kaiserpfalz

The term Kaiserpfalz ("imperial palace") or Königspfalz ("royal palace", from Middle High German phalze to Old High German phalanza from Middle Latin palatia to Latin palatium "palace") refers to a number of castles and palaces across the Holy Roman Empire that served as temporary, secondary seats of power for the Holy Roman Emperor in the Early and High Middle Ages.

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Kaisersee

Kaisersee is a lake in Augsburg, Schwaben, Bavaria, Germany.

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Kanupark Markkleeberg

Kanupark Markkleeberg, built in 2006, is the second of two artificial whitewater canoe/kayak slalom courses in Germany, and the only one powered by pumps.

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Karen Like

Karen Theresa Like (born 14 October 1966 in Cinderford) is a British slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s.

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Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg

Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg (26 June 1760 – 25 March 1799) was an Austrian military commander.

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Karl Baur

Karl Baur (November 13, 1911 – October 12, 1963) was a German Test Pilot, flight instructor and engineer.

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Karl Grönsfelder

Karl Grönsfelder (18 January 1882 - 20 February 1964) was a Bavarian political activist and politician (KPD).

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Karl Haberstock

Karl Haberstock (born 19 June 1878 in Augsburg; died 6 September 1956 in Munich) was a Berlin art dealer who was a member of the degenerate art Disposal Commission.

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Karl Ludwig Giesecke

Carl Ludwig Giesecke FRSE (6 April 1761 in Augsburg – 5 March 1833 in Dublin) was a German actor, librettist, polar explorer and mineralogist.

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Karl May

Karl Friedrich May (also Carl; 25 February 1842 – 30 March 1912) was a German writer best known for his adventure novels set in the American Old West.

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Karl Schröder (canoeist)

Karl Schröder is a retired West German slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s.

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Karl Valentin

Karl Valentin (born Valentin Ludwig Fey, 4 June 1882, Munich – 9 February 1948, Planegg) was a Bavarian comedian, cabaret performer, clown, author and film producer.

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Karl von Moll

Karl Maria E(h)renbert Freiherr von Moll (21 December 1760, in Thalgau – 1 February 1838, in Augsburg) was an Austrian naturalist and statesman.

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Karl von Weishaupt

Carl also Karl Romanus von Weishaupt (11 August 1787 – 18 December 1853) was a Bavarian lieutenant general and War Minister under Maximilian II of Bavaria from 5 April to 21 November 1848.

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Karl Wahl

Karl Wahl (24 September 1892 – 18 February 1981) was the Nazi Gauleiter of Swabia from the Gau inception in 1928 until the collapse of Nazi Germany in 1945.

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Karl Widemann

Karl Widemann or Carl Widemann or Carolus Widemann, was a German author, physician and collector of manuscripts, from Augsburg, and secretary of the English alchemist Edward Kelley, at the court of Emperor Rudolph II.

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Karl-Heinz Greisert

Karl-Heinz Greisert (2 February 1908 – 22 July 1942) was an officer in the Luftwaffe.

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Kaspar Deutschenbaur

Kaspar Deutschenbaur was the mayor of Augsburg, Germany, between 1919 and 1929.

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Kathy Lynch

Kathleen "Kathy" Lynch (born 23 April 1957) is a retired competitive cyclist from New Zealand who competed both on and off the road.

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Katja Mayer

Katja Mayer (born 4 January 1968 in Augsburg) is a former German triathlete and Ironman winner (1999).

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Kazimierz Deyna

Kazimierz Deyna (23 October 1947 – 1 September 1989) was a Polish footballer, who played as an offensive midfielder in the playmaker role and was one of the most highly regarded players of his generation, due to his excellent vision.

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Königsbrunn

Königsbrunn (Swabian: Kenigsbrunn) is the largest town in the district of Augsburg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Kees Christiaanse

Kees Christiaanse (born 1953, Amsterdam) is an architect and urban planner from the Netherlands.

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Keimfarben

KEIMFARBEN GMBH is a medium-sized company based in Diedorf near Augsburg.

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Kempten

Kempten is the largest town of Allgäu, in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Kerman carpet

Kerman carpets (sometimes "Kirman") are one of the traditional classifications of Persian carpets.

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Kern AG

KERN Global Language Services is an internationally active language service provider of German origin.

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Kerstin Preßler

Kerstin Marie-Luise Preßler (born February 2, 1962 in Augsburg, Bayern) is a former female long-distance runner from Germany, who represented West Germany at the 1988 Summer Olympics.

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Keswick, Cumbria

Keswick is an English market town and civil parish, historically in Cumberland, and since 1974 in the Borough of Allerdale in Cumbria.

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Kilian family

Kilian is the name of a dynasty of German engravers from Augsburg, Germany, that were active there for over a century.

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Kingdom of Bavaria

The Kingdom of Bavaria (Königreich Bayern) was a German state that succeeded the former Electorate of Bavaria in 1805 and continued to exist until 1918.

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Kinzig (Rhine)

The Kinzig is a river in southwestern Germany, a right tributary of the Rhine.

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Kiprian (Borisevich)

Archbishop Kiprian (secular name Boris Pavlovich Borisevich, Борис Павлович Борисевич, Borys Borisewicz; August 15, 1903 - December 14, 1980) was bishop of the Orthodox Church in America, archbishop of Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvania since 1964.

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Kirchheim in Schwaben

Kirchheim or Kirchheim in Schwaben (engl. Kirchheim in Swabia) is a municipality and a market town in the district of Unterallgäu in the region of Swabia (Schwaben) in the south-west of Bavaria, Germany.

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Kissing, Bavaria

Kissing is a municipality in the Aichach-Friedberg district, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Kitty Kat

Katharina Löwel (born 22 January 1982 in Berlin, Germany), better known under her stage name Kitty Kat or Kitten Ket, is a German rapper and singer.

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Klassik Radio

Klassik Radio is a radio station in Germany.

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Klein-Venedig

Klein-Venedig (Little Venice) was the most significant territory of the German colonization of the Americas, from 1528 to 1546, in which the Welser banking family of the Free Imperial City of Augsburg obtained colonial rights in the Province of Venezuela in return for debts owed by Charles I of Spain (counted Charles V as Emperor).

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Kleiner Klebeband

The Kleiner Klebeband ("little glued binder") is a collection of over 120 drawings from the 15th and 16th century, which were combined into a leathern binder in the 19th century.

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Konrad Bollstatter

Konrad Bollstatter, also known as Konrad Müller (born in the 1420s, died 1482/1483) was a professional scribe of Augsburg, employed in chancellaries in Öttingen and Höchstädt.

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Konrad Peutinger

Conrad Peutinger (14 October 1465 – 28 December 1547) was a German humanist, jurist, diplomat, politician, and economist.

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Kontron

Kontron AG is a German-based multinational company which designs and manufactures embedded computer modules, boards and systems.

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Koreans in Germany

Koreans in Germany numbered 31,248 individuals, according to the statistics of South Korea's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

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Kreisliga Schwaben-Augsburg

The Kreisliga Schwaben-Augsburg is currently the eighth tier of the German football league system in the Augsburg region of the Bavarian Regierungsbezirk of Swabia (German: Schwaben).

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Krisztina Tóth

Krisztina Tóth (born 29 May 1974 in Miskolc, Hungary) is a Hungarian table tennis player from Gödöllő (Hungary), who currently resides in Augsburg, Germany.

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Krumbach, Bavaria

Krumbach (also: Krumbach (Schwaben)) is a town with 13,000 residents in the district Günzburg in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Krystyna Borowicz

Krystyna Borowicz (25 January 1923, Kalisz – 30 May 2009, Warsaw) was a Polish actress.

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Krzysztof Miszczak

Krzysztof Miszczak (born 24 July 1955 in Milanówek) – Polish scientist, political scientist, Germanist, sinologist, professor extraordinarius, diplomat.

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Kuhsee

Kuhsee is a lake in Augsburg-Hochzoll-Süd, Bezirk Schwaben, Bavaria, Germany.

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KUKA

KUKA is a German manufacturer of industrial robots and solutions for factory automation.

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KUKA Systems

KUKA Systems GmbH, a division of KUKA Aktiengesellschaft, Augsburg, is an international supplier of engineering services and flexible automated manufacturing solutions with around 3,900 employees in twelve countries globally.

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Kulturhaus Abraxas

Kulturhaus Abraxas is a cultural institution of the city of Augsburg.

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Kurt Gribl

Kurt Gribl (born August 29, 1964 Augsburg, Germany) is the Mayor of Augsburg, Bavaria, an office he has held since May 1, 2008.

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Laienspiegel

The work commonly referred to as Laienspiegel is a book of law.

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Lambert Sustris

Lambert Sustris (c. 1515-1520 – c. 1584) was a Dutch painter active mainly in Venice.

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Lamoral II Claudius Franz, Count of Thurn and Taxis

Lamoral II Claudius Franz, Count of Thurn and Taxis (14 February 1621 (baptized) – 13 September 1676) was a German nobleman and Imperial Postmaster.

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Land mine

A land mine is an explosive device concealed under or on the ground and designed to destroy or disable enemy targets, ranging from combatants to vehicles and tanks, as they pass over or near it.

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Landeck

Landeck is a town in the Austrian state of Tyrol, the capital of the district of Landeck.

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Landesrabbiner

Landesrabbiner (Rav Medinah) are spiritual heads of the Jewish communities of a country, province, or district, particularly in Germany and Austria.

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Landsberg am Lech

Landsberg am Lech (Landsberg on the river Lech) is a town in southwest Bavaria, Germany, about 65 kilometers west of Munich and 35 kilometers south of Augsburg.

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Landsberg Prison

Landsberg Prison is a penal facility located in the town of Landsberg am Lech in the southwest of the German state of Bavaria, about west of Munich and south of Augsburg.

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Langweid am Lech

Langweid am Lech is a municipality in the district of Augsburg in Bavaria in Germany.

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Larger urban zone

The larger urban zone (LUZ), or Functional Urban Area (FUA), is a measure of the population and expanse of metropolitan areas in Europe and OECD countries.

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Lars-Jacob Krogh

Lars-Jacob Krogh (26 September 1938 – 14 April 2010) was a Norwegian anchorman and television presenter.

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Latin exonyms

Below is list of Latin exonyms for places in Europe and Middle East.

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Laufersweiler

Laufersweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Laurence Aldersey

Laurence Aldersey (1546–1597/8) was an English explorer who made two journeys to the Levant, the accounts of which, ‘set downe by himself,’ are preserved in Principall Navigations by Richard Hakluyt.

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Lech (river)

The Lech (Licca) is a river in Austria and Germany.

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Lechfeld Air Base

Lechfeld Air Base is a German Air Force (Luftwaffe) base located 1 km east of Lagerlechfeld in Bavaria, about 20 km south of Augsburg on the Bundestrasse 17.

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Lechrain

Lechrain is the name of an informally defined region of Germany extending southwards from Augsburg towards the foothills of the Alps along the Lech river, mainly on the east bank.

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Legacy of the Roman Empire

The legacy of the Roman Empire includes the set of cultural values, religious beliefs, technological advancements, engineering and language.

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Legio III Italica

Legio tertia Italica ("Italian Third Legion") was a legion of the Imperial Roman army founded in AD 165 by the emperor Marcus Aurelius (r. 161-80), for his campaign against the Marcomanni tribe.

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Legio XIII Gemina

Legio tertia decima Geminia, in English the 13th Twin Legion, also known as Legio tertia decima Gemina, was a legion of the Imperial Roman army.

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Lehel

Lehel (Lél; died 955), a member of the Árpád dynasty, was a Magyar chieftain and, together with Bulcsú, one of the most important figures of the Hungarian invasions of Europe.

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Leipheim

Leipheim is a town in the district of Günzburg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Leipzig

Leipzig is the most populous city in the federal state of Saxony, Germany.

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Leipzig Trade Fair

The Leipzig Trade Fair (Leipziger Messe) is a major trade fair, which traces its roots back for nearly a millennium.

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Leo Feld

Leo Feld (14 February 1869, Augsburg - 5 September 1924) was an Austrian librettist, dramaturge, stage director, and writer.

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Leon Sibul

Leon H. Sibul (August 30, 1932 – February 19, 2007) was with Pennsylvania State University’s Applied Research Laboratory from 1964 to 2002, where he retired as a senior scientist and professor of acoustics.

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Leonhard Beck

Leonhard Beck (c. 1480 – 1542) was a painter and designer of woodcuts in Augsburg, Germany.

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Leonhard Helmschrott

Leonhard Helmschrott (born 5 June 1921 (Unterthürheim); died 28 October 2011 (Berlin) was a German journalist and politician. He was a founding member of the National Committee for a Free Germany (NKFD / '' Nationalkomitee Freies Deutschland''). Between 1948 and 1989 he was the chief editor of the Bauernecho (''Farmer's Echo'').

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Leonhard Rauwolf

Leonhard Rauwolf (also spelled Leonhart Rauwolff) (21 June 1535 – 15 September 1596) was a German physician, botanist, and traveller.

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Leonhard von Hohenhausen

Leonhard Freiherr von Hohenhausen und Hochhaus (June 28, 1788 – March 25, 1872) was a Bavarian military and Acting War Minister from March 1, 1847 to February 1, 1848.

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Leonid Skirko

Leonid Skirko Ukr. Леонід Миколайович Скірко (27 April 1939 – 8 June 2012) was a Canadian bass-baritone opera singer of Ukrainian origin.

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Leopold Mozart Centre

The Leopold Mozart Centre (German: Leopold-Mozart-Zentrum (LMZ) in Augsburg, Germany, is a university of music, founded as part of the University of Augsburg in 2008. It is located in the buildings of the former Musikhochschule as well as buildings on the university campus. The Leopold Mozart Centre was founded after the model of the Hochschule für Musik Mainz as part of the University of Mainz. It is focused on the interchange of music and science, offering music pedagogy, music therapy, mental training and improvisation, among others. The centre offers the common artistic and pedagogical bachelor and master courses such as string instruments, keyboard instruments, voice, wind instruments, percussion, conducting and musicology. All studies include elementary courses in psychology, sociology and political studies. The Collegium Musicum offers possibilities of music making in groups such as the orchestra, choir, chamber choir, big band, and various chamber music ensembles.

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Letters on Sunspots

Letters on Sunspots (Istoria e Dimostrazioni intorno alle Macchie Solari) was a pamphlet written by Galileo Galilei in 1612 and published in Rome by the Accademia dei Lincei in 1613.

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Levin Schücking

Levin Schücking (full name: Christoph Bernhard Levin Matthias Schücking; September 6, 1814 – August 31, 1883) was a German novelist.

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Liberal Conservative Reformers

The Liberal Conservative Reformers (Liberal-Konservative Reformer, LKR) is a centre-right political party in Germany which was known from July 2015 to November 2016 as ALFA.

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Liberec

Liberec (Reichenberg) is a city in the Czech Republic.

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Lieser, Germany

Lieser is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Life of Franz Liszt

Franz Liszt (October 22, 1811July 31, 1886) was a prolific 19th-century Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor, music teacher, arranger, organist, philanthropist, author, nationalist and a Franciscan tertiary.

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Lilleba Lund Kvandal

Annbjørg Helene "Lilleba" Lund Kvandal (21 April 1940 – 30 September 2016) was a Norwegian soprano singer and song teacher.

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Lindau

Lindau (officially in German: Lindau (Bodensee)) is a major town and an island on the eastern side of Lake Constance (Bodensee in German).

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Linienzugbeeinflussung

Linienzugbeeinflussung (or LZB) is a cab signalling and train protection system used on selected German and Austrian railway lines as well as the AVE in Spain.

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Linux Kongress

The Linux Kongress was an annual conference of Linux developers from around the world, that took place every year from 1994 to 2010.

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Lisa De Vanna

Lisa Marie De Vanna (born 14 November 1984) is an Australian professional soccer player living in Sydney who currently plays for Sydney FC in Australia's W-League, and co-captains the Australian national team as a forward.

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List of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft (1940–44)

This is a list of notable accidents and incidents involving military aircraft grouped by the year in which the accident or incident occurred.

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List of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft (1945–49)

This is a list of notable accidents and incidents involving military aircraft grouped by the year in which the accident or incident occurred.

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List of Ahmadiyya buildings and structures

This is a list of mosques, hospitals, schools and other structures throughout the world that are constructed/owned by the Ahmadiyya Community, arranged according to their respective countries.

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List of airports by IATA code: A

The DST column shows the months in which Daylight Saving Time, a.k.a. Summer Time, begins and ends.

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List of airports by ICAO code: E

Format of entries is.

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List of airports in Germany

This is a list of airports in Germany, sorted by location.

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List of Alamannic pagi

The following is a list of pagi (the Latin term glossing Old High German gowe, corresponding to English shire) of the Frankish duchy of Alamannia.

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List of ancient Celtic peoples and tribes

This is a list of Celtic tribes, listed in order of the Roman province (after Roman conquest) or the general area in which they lived.

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List of Archbishops of Freiburg

The following men have been Archbishops of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Freiburg.

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List of art museums

Algeria.

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List of artificial whitewater courses

The first whitewater slalom race took place on the Aar River in Switzerland in 1933.

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List of artists in the collection of the Mauritshuis

This is an incomplete list of artists in the collection of the Mauritshuis, with the number of artworks represented, and sorted by century of birth.

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List of autobahns in Germany

The German federal motorways are now numbered according to a clear system.

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List of banking families

Banking families are families which have been involved in banking for multiple generations, in the modern era generally as owners or co-owners of banks, often named for their families.

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List of basilicas in Germany

This is an incomplete list of basilicas of the Roman Catholic Church in Germany.

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List of botanical gardens in Germany

This is a list of botanical gardens in Germany.

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List of busiest railway stations in Germany

This is a list of the busiest railway stations in Germany, with all stations being considered as major stations or hubs, and are also classified as either Category 1 or Category 2 stations.

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List of car-free places

The areas in this list of car-free places make up a sizeable fraction of a city, town, or island; public transport connections do not in themselves constitute a car free area.

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List of castles in Bavaria

Numerous castles are found in the German state of Bavaria.

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List of castra by province

Castra (Latin, singular castrum) were military forts of various sizes used by the Roman army throughout the Empire in various places of Europe, Asia and Africa.

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List of cathedrals in Germany

This is the list of cathedrals in Germany sorted by denomination.

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List of Catholic basilicas

This is a complete list of basilicas of the Roman Catholic Church.

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List of cemeteries in Germany

The following is a list of cemeteries in Germany.

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List of Christmas markets

This is a list of Christmas markets from around the world.

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List of cities and towns in Germany

This is a complete list of the 2,060 towns and cities in Germany (as of January 1, 2018).

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List of cities founded by the Romans

This is a list of cities and towns founded by the Romans.

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List of cities in Germany by population

As defined by the German Federal Institute for Research on Building, Urban Affairs and Spatial Development, a Großstadt (large city) is a city with more than 100,000 inhabitants.

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List of city name changes

This is a list of cities and towns whose names were officially changed at one or more points in history.

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List of civic divisions of Augsburg

This is a list of civic divisions of Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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List of co-operative banks in Germany

This is a list of co-operative banks in Germany according to the information provided by the Bundesverband der Deutschen Volksbanken und Raiffeisenbanken (BVR) umbrella organisation.

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List of Cold War pilot defections

During the Cold War, a number of pilots from various nations (Eastern Bloc, Western Bloc, and non-aligned) defected with their aircraft to other countries.

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List of companies of Germany

Germany is a federal parliamentary republic in central-western Europe.

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List of contributors to Marxist theory

This is a list of those who contributed to Marxist theory, principally as authors; it is not intended to list politicians who happen(ed) to be a member of a nominally communist political party or other organisation.

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List of countries by population in 1500

This is a list of countries by population in 1500.

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List of cycling tracks and velodromes

This is a list of cycling tracks and velodromes for track cycling worldwide.

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List of Czech exonyms for places in Germany

This is a list of Czech language exonyms for towns located in Germany.

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List of Denmark national football team results – 1970s

This is a list of Association football games played by the Denmark national football team between 1970 and 1979.

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List of DFB-Pokal finals

The list of DFB-Pokal finals contains all of the finals of the DFB-Pokal since the introduction of the competition as the Tschammerpokal in 1935.

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List of dialling codes in Germany

Country Code: +49 International Call Prefix: 00 Trunk Prefix: 0 Area codes in Germany (German Vorwahl) have two to five digits, not counting the leading trunk access code 0.

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List of districts of Germany

Germany is divided into 401 administrative districts; these consist of 294 rural districts (German: Kreise and Landkreise), and 107 urban districts (German: Kreisfreie Städte or, in Baden-Württemberg only, Stadtkreise – cities that constitute districts in their own right).

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List of English exonyms for German toponyms

This list is a compilation of German toponyms (i.e., names of cities, regions, rivers, mountains and other geographical features situated in a German-speaking area) that have traditional English exonyms.

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List of European stadiums by capacity

This is a list of the largest European stadiums.

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List of European tornadoes and tornado outbreaks

Parent article: List of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks These are some notable tornadoes, tornado outbreaks, and tornado outbreak sequences that have occurred in Europe.

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List of executioners

This is a list of people who have acted as official executioners.

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List of Fairtrade settlements

Fairtrade Town is a status awarded by a recognized Fairtrade certification body (i.e. The Fairtrade Foundation in the UK, TransFair Canada in Canada etc.) describing an area which is committed to the promotion of Fairtrade certified goods.

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List of FC Augsburg seasons

FC Augsburg, formed on 1 June 1969 when the BC Augsburg and the football department of TSV Schwaben Augsburg merged, is a German football club from Augsburg, Bavaria.

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List of firsts in aviation

This is a list of firsts in aviation.

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List of florilegia and botanical codices

A timeline of illustrated botanical works to 1900.

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List of football clubs in Germany

No description.

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List of football stadiums in Germany

The following is a list of football stadiums in Germany with a total capacity of at least 20,000 spectators.

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List of free imperial cities

There were 51 Free Imperial Cities in the Holy Roman Empire as of 1792.

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List of French exonyms for German toponyms

This list shows the French exonyms for German toponyms.

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List of Gaelic games clubs outside Ireland

This is a list of Gaelic games clubs across the world outside Ireland, organised by the GAA county they are associated with.

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List of Gothic brick buildings in Germany

This list is a part of the international List of Gothic brick buildings.

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List of honorary citizens of Munich

The honorary citizenship (Ehrenbürgerrecht) is the highest decoration of the city of Munich.

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List of Imperial abbeys

An Imperial abbey (Reichsabtei, Reichskloster, Reichsstift, Reichsgotthaus) was a religious establishment within the Holy Roman Empire which enjoyed the status of imperial immediacy (Reichsunmittelbarkeit) and therefore was answerable directly to the Emperor.

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List of Imperial Diet participants (1792)

The Holy Roman Empire was a highly decentralized state for most of its history, composed of hundreds of smaller states, most of which operated with some degree of independent sovereignty.

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List of Imperial German artillery regiments

This is a list of Imperial German artillery regiments before and during World War I. In peacetime, the Imperial German Army included 100 regiments of Field artillery (plus the Lehr instruction unit) and 24 regiments of Foot artillery (plus another Lehr instruction unit) who manned the heavier pieces.

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List of Imperial German cavalry regiments

This is a List of Imperial German cavalry regiments before and during World War I. In peacetime, the Imperial German Army included 110 regiments of cavalry.

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List of Imperial German infantry regiments

This is a List of Imperial German infantry regiments before and during World War I. In peacetime, the Imperial German Army included 217 regiments of infantry (plus the instruction unit, ''Lehr'' Infantry Battalion).

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List of indoor arenas

The following is a list of indoor arenas.

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List of indoor arenas in Germany

The following is a list of indoor arenas in Germany.

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List of Intercity-Express railway stations

This is a list of all the Intercity-Express-stations in Europe.

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List of international goals scored by Abby Wambach

Abby Wambach is a retired professional soccer player who competed as a forward for the United States women's national soccer team from 2001 to 2015.

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List of Jewish architects

This is a list of Jewish architects.

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List of Joan Baez concerts

This is a partial list of concerts and concert tours held by Joan Baez, the American folk singer.

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List of largest European cities in history

No description.

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List of Latin names of cities

Users of Neo-Latin have taken the Latin language to places the Romans, and consequently, their language, never spread to, and consequently, have created a need to construct Latin city names in these places.

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List of Latin place names in Continental Europe, Ireland and Scandinavia

This list includes European countries and regions that were part of the Roman Empire, or that were given Latin place names in historical references.

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List of libraries in Germany

This is a list of libraries in the Federal Republic of Germany.

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List of literary descriptions of cities (before 1550)

Literary descriptions of cities (also known as urban descriptiones) form a literary genre that originated in Ancient Greek epideictic rhetoric.

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List of mannerist structures in Northern Poland

The mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland have two major traditions – Polish/Italian and Dutch/Flemish, that dominated in northern Poland.

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List of massacres in Germany

The following is an incomplete list of massacres that have occurred in present-day Germany and its predecessors.

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List of mayors of Augsburg

thumb This is a list of holders of the office of mayor of the German city of Augsburg.

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List of medallists

A medallist (British English) or medalist (American English) is an artist who designs medals, plaquettes, badges, coins and similar small works in relief in metal.

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List of medieval Gaue

The following is a list of German Gaue which existed during the Middle Ages.

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List of member fraternities of the Cartellverband

These fraternities are all members of the Cartellverband.

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List of members of the Frankfurt Parliament

On 18 May 1848, elected deputies of the Frankfurt National Assembly gathered in the Kaisersaal and walked solemnly to the Paulskirche to hold the first session of the new Parliament, under its chairman (by seniority) Friedrich Lang.

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List of metropolitan areas in Europe

This is a list of metropolitan areas in Europe, with their population according to three different sources.

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List of municipalities in Germany

Below is a list of municipalities in Germany with over 20,000 inhabitants in the year 2000.

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List of museums in Germany

This is a list of museums and galleries in Germany.

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List of New Testament minuscules (2001–)

A New Testament minuscule is a copy of a portion of the New Testament written in a small, cursive Greek script (developed from Uncial).

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List of Northern Exposure episodes

A list of episodes for the television series Northern Exposure.

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List of oldest continuously inhabited cities

This is a list of present-day cities by the time period over which they have been continuously inhabited.

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List of Olof Palme memorials

This is a list of memorials and places named in honor of Olof Palme, the assassinated Prime Minister of Sweden.

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List of operas by Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's operas comprise 22 musical dramas in a variety of genres.

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List of operas by Weber

This is a complete list of the operas of the German composer Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826).

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List of painters in the collection of the Rijksmuseum

This is an incomplete list of painters in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, with the number of artworks represented, and sorted by century of birth.

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List of paintings by Hans Holbein the Younger

Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1497–1543) was a German artist and printmaker who worked in a Northern Renaissance style.

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List of pastoral visits of Pope John Paul II

During his reign, Pope John Paul II ("The Pilgrim Pope") made 104 foreign trips, more than all previous popes combined.

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List of places in Germany named after people

This is a list of inhabited places in Germany which are named after people.

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List of places named after people

There are a number of places named after famous people.

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List of planetariums

This entry is a list of permanent planetariums, including software and manufacturers.

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List of Portuguese exonyms

Below is a list of Portuguese language exonyms for places in non-Portuguese-speaking areas of Europe.

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List of postal codes in Germany

Postal codes in Germany, Postleitzahl (plural Postleitzahlen, abbreviated to PLZ; literally "postal routing number"), since 1 July 1993 consist of five digits.

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List of preserved steam locomotives in Germany

no.

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List of radio stations in Germany

The List of radio stations in Germany lists all radio stations broadcast in Germany, sorted first by legal status, then by area.

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List of railway electrification systems

This is a list of the power supply systems that are, or have been, used for tramway and railway electrification systems.

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List of railway museums

A railway museum is a museum that explores the history of all aspects of rail related transportation, including: locomotives (steam, diesel, and electric), railway cars, trams, and railway signalling equipment.

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List of railway museums in Germany

This list of railway museums in Germany shows those locations where a heritage railway or tramway is operated or a railway museum or streetcar museum exists.

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List of red-light districts

Red-light districts are areas associated with the sex industry and sex-oriented businesses (e.g. sex shops and strip clubs).

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List of rivers of Germany

This is a list of rivers, which are at least partially located in Germany.

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List of rugby union clubs in Germany

This is a List of rugby union clubs in Germany.

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List of rulers of Brandenburg

This article lists the Margraves and Electors of Brandenburg during the period of time that Brandenburg was a constituent state of the Holy Roman Empire.

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List of Second World War Victoria Cross recipients

The Victoria Cross (VC) is a military decoration awarded for valour "in the face of the enemy" to members of armed forces of some Commonwealth countries and previous British Empire territories.

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List of sister cities in Ohio

This is a list of sister states, regions, and cities in the U.S. state of Ohio.

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List of speeches given by Adolf Hitler

This list of speeches given by Adolf Hitler is an attempt to aggregate all of Adolf Hitler's speeches.

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List of star forts

This is a list of star forts.

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List of stars in Andromeda

This is the list of notable stars in the constellation Andromeda, sorted by decreasing brightness.

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List of state leaders in 1692

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1693

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1694

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1695

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1696

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1697

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1699

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1702

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1703

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1704

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1710

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1711

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1712

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1713

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1714

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1715

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1716

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1717

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1719

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1720

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1721

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1722

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1723

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1724

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1725

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1726

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1727

No description.

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List of state leaders in 1728

No description.

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List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (A)

This is a list of states in the Holy Roman Empire beginning with the letter A.

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List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (K)

This is a list of states in the Holy Roman Empire beginning with the letter K.

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List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (S)

This is a list of states in the Holy Roman Empire beginning with the letter S.

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List of street view services

This is a list of online mapping services that provide 360-degrees panorama around the world, it is grouped by region.

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List of streets named after Adolf Hitler

This is a partial list of streets and squares named after Adolf Hitler during the era of Nazi Germany.

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List of subcamps of Dachau

Below is the list of subcamps of the Dachau complex of Nazi concentration camps.

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List of summer schools of linguistics

This is a list of summer schools of linguistics.

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List of tallest buildings in Germany

This lists ranks the tallest buildings in Germany that stand at least tall.

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List of tallest church buildings

From the Middle Ages until the advent of the skyscraper, Christian church buildings were often the world's tallest buildings.

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List of terms used for Germans

There are many alternative terms for the people of Germany.

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List of The Settlers of Catan products

The Settlers of Catan series is a line of games spanning multiple media designed principally by Klaus Teuber.

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List of top-division football clubs in UEFA countries

The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) is the administrative and controlling body for European football.

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List of tornadoes striking downtown areas of large cities

This article is a list of tornadoes that have impacted the central business district (downtown or city centre) of a large city (that is, one having at least 50,000 people, not counting suburbs or outlying communities, at the time of the storm).

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List of towns and cities with 100,000 or more inhabitants/cityname: A

This is a list of towns and cities in the world believed to have 100,000 or more inhabitants, as of 2006.

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List of towns and cities with 100,000 or more inhabitants/country: G-H-I-J-K

This is a list of towns and cities in the world in alphabetical order, beginning with the letters G, H, I, J and K, by country believed to have 100,000 or more inhabitants.

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List of tram and light rail transit systems

The following is a list of cities that have current tram/streetcar (including heritage trams/heritage streetcars), or light rail systems as part of their regular public transit systems.

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List of trolleybus systems in Germany

This is a list of trolleybus systems in Germany by Land.

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List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany

This is a list of places in Germany which have standing links to local communities in other countries, or in other parts of Germany (mostly across the former inner German border).

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List of twin towns and sister cities in Scotland

No description.

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List of United States Army airfields

This is a list of United States Army airfields.

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List of United States Army installations in Germany

The United States Army has approximately 36 military bases in Germany.

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List of universities in Europe founded after 1945

This list of modern universities in Europe since 1945 comprises all universities which have been founded in Europe since the end of World War II.

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List of university and college schools of music

This is a list of university and college schools of music by country.

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List of university hospitals

A university hospital is an institution which combines the services of a hospital with the education of medical students and with medical research.

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List of urban tram networks in Germany

This is a list of town tramway systems in Germany by Land.

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List of US places named for non-US places

This is a list of US places named for non-US places.

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List of Victoria Cross recipients by nationality

This is a list of recipients of the Victoria Cross by nationality.

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List of Victoria Cross recipients of the Royal Air Force

The Victoria Cross (VC) is a military decoration awarded for valour "in the face of the enemy" to members of armed forces of some Commonwealth countries and previous British Empire territories.

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List of watchmakers

This chronological list of famous watchmakers is a list of those who influenced the development of horology or gained iconic status by their creations.

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List of Where Is My Friend's Home episodes (2015)

Where Is My Friend's Home (Korean: 내 친구의 집은 어디인가) is a South Korean reality television-travel show, part of JTBC's Saturday night lineup.

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List of World Heritage Sites in Germany

There are 43 official UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Germany, 40 cultural and 3 natural, with one additional previous site struck from the list.

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List of world records in track para-cycling

This is the list of world records in track para-cycling.

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List of zoos in Germany

This list of zoos, animal parks, wildlife parks, bird parks and other public zoological establishments in Germany is sorted by location.

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Live and Let Live (2013 film)

Live and Let Live is a 2013 documentary film by German filmmaker and director Marc Pierschel.

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Livia Bitton-Jackson

Livia Bitton-Jackson (born February 28, 1931) is an author and a Holocaust survivor.

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Loesche GmbH

Loesche is an owner-managed engineering company founded in Berlin in 1906 and currently based in Düsseldorf, Germany that designs, manufactures and services vertical roller mills for grinding of coal, cement raw materials, granulated slag, industrial minerals and ores.

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Lola Blanc

Kandice Melonakos (born December 20, 1987 in Augsburg), better known by her stage name Lola Blanc, is an American singer, songwriter, actress, writer, and model.

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Long Market

The Long Market (Długi Targ, Langer Markt) in Gdańsk, Poland, is one of the most notable tourist attractions of the city.

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Loosdorf

Loosdorf is a little town in the district of Melk in the Austrian state of Lower Austria.

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Lorber

Lorber or Lorbeer is a surname with German roots (Lorbeer means Laurel in German).

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Lorenz Helmschmied

Lorenz Helmschmied or "Helmschmid" (active 1467-1515) was a German armorer and a member of the Helmschmied family of armourers from Augsburg.

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Lorenzino de' Medici

Lorenzino de' Medici (March 23, 1514 – February 26, 1548), also known as Lorenzaccio, was an Italian politician, writer and dramatist, and a member of the Medici family.

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Lorenzo Magalotti

Lorenzo Magalotti (24 October 1637 – 2 March 1712) was an Italian philosopher, author, diplomat and poet.

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Lost city

A lost city is a settlement that fell into terminal decline and became extensively or completely uninhabited, with the consequence that the site's former significance was no longer known to the wider world.

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Louis François Perrin de Précy

Louis François Perrin, comte de Précy (14 January 1742 – 25 August 1820.. Sur le site du Musée d’Histoire Militaire.), was a French nobleman and soldier who lead royalist forces during the Siege of Lyon.

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Louis V, Elector Palatine

Louis V, Count Palatine of the Rhine (German: Ludwig V. von der Pfalz) (2 July 1478, in Heidelberg – 16 March 1544, in Heidelberg), also Louis the Pacific, was a member of the Wittelsbach dynasty was prince elector of the Palatinate.

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Louise von Gall

Louise von Gall (19 September 1815, Darmstadt – 16 March 1855, Augsburg) was a nineteenth-century German novelist and social critic.

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Lovro von Matačić

Lovro von Matačić (14 February 18994 January 1985) was a Croatian conductor and composer.

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Loy Hering

Loy Hering (b. 1484-85 in Kaufbeuren, d. 1 June 1564 in Eichstätt) was a German Renaissance sculptor.

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Lucas Cranach the Elder

Lucas Cranach the Elder (Lucas Cranach der Ältere, c. 1472 – 16 October 1553) was a German Renaissance painter and printmaker in woodcut and engraving.

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Lucas Kilian

Lucas Kilian (1579 – 1637) was a German engraver and member of the Kilian family of engravers in Augsburg.

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Lucidarius

The Lucidarius, an anonymous medieval book, was the first German language summa, written circa 1190-1195.

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Lucijs Endzelins

Lūcijs (Lucius) Endzelīns (21 May 1909, Dorpat (Tartu), Estonia – 27 October 1981, Adelaide, Australia) was a Latvian-Australian chess master.

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Ludwig Bölkow

Ludwig Bölkow (30 June 1912 – 25 July 2003) was one of the aeronautical pioneers of Germany.

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Ludwig Curtius

Ludwig Curtius (December 13, 1874 – April 10, 1954) was a German archaeologist born in Augsburg.

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Ludwig Ganghofer

Ludwig Ganghofer (7 July 1855 – 24 July 1920) was a German writer who became famous for his homeland novels.

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Ludwig Haetzer

Ludwig Haetzer (also Ludwig Hetzer, Ludwig Hätzer and sometimes Ludwig Hatzer) (1500 – 4 February 1529) was an Anabaptist.

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Ludwig Schongauer

Ludwig Schongauer (c. 1440–1494) was a German painter and engraver.

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Ludwig Senfl

Ludwig Senfl (born around 1486, died between December 2, 1542 and August 10, 1543) was a Swiss composer of the Renaissance, active in Germany.

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Ludwig Siebert

Ludwig Siebert (17 October 1874 in Ludwigshafen – 1 November 1942 in Stock am Chiemsee) was a Nazi politician and Bavarian prime minister from 1933 to 1942.

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Ludwig South-North Railway

The Ludwig South-North railway (Ludwig-Süd-Nord-Bahn), built between 1843 and 1854, was the first railway line to be constructed by Royal Bavarian State Railways.

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Ludwigsburg Palace

Ludwigsburg Palace, known natively as Residenzschloss Ludwigsburg, and as the "Versailles of Swabia," is a 452-room Baroque, Rococo, Neoclassical, and Empire palace on a estate located in Ludwigsburg, Germany.

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Luigi Wolff

Luigi Wolff, also known as Louis Wolff or Adolfo Wolff, was an Italian revolutionary of German birth and Jewish ancestry.

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Lujo Brentano

Ludwig Joseph Brentano (18 December 1844 – 9 September 1931) was an eminent German economist and social reformer.

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Luther (1973 film)

Luther is the 1974 American biographical drama film of John Osborne's biographical play, presenting the life of Martin Luther.

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Luther (2003 film)

Luther is a 2003 American-German epic historical drama film loosely based on the life of Martin Luther starring Joseph Fiennes.

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Lutheran Church in Mošovce

The Lutheran Church in Mošovce (Slovakia) belongs to the Augsburg Denomination of the Lutheran Church and was built in 1864 – 1871 after the acquisition of religious freedoms in the contemporary Hungary, allowing lutheran parishers to construct their own church with a tower.

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Lutheran World Federation

The Lutheran World Federation (LWF; Lutherischer Weltbund) is a global communion of national and regional Lutheran churches headquartered in the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva, Switzerland.

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Lutherstadt

Lutherstädte (German for "Luther cities"; singular: Lutherstadt) refer to cities where German protestant reformer Martin Luther visited or played an important role.

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Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991 Tour

Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991 Tour was a tour in support of the band's first post-plane crash album Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991.

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LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II

The Graf Zeppelin (Deutsche Luftschiff Zeppelin #130; Registration: D-LZ 130) was the last of the German rigid airships built by the Zeppelin Luftschiffbau during the period between the World Wars, the second and final ship of the ''Hindenburg'' class, and the second zeppelin to carry the name "Graf Zeppelin" (after the LZ 127) and thus often referred to as Graf Zeppelin II.

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Maffei (company)

Maffei was a manufacturer of railway locomotives based in Munich, Germany.

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Magda Schneider

Magda Schneider (17 May 1909 – 30 July 1996) was a German actress and singer; she was the mother of the actress Romy Schneider.

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Magdalena Heymair

Magdalena Heymair (variously Heymairin, Haymerin, Haymairus; c. 1535 – after 1586) was a teacher and Lutheran evangelical poet who wrote in the Middle Bavarian dialect.

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Magdeburg Centuries

The Magdeburg Centuries is an ecclesiastical history, divided into thirteen centuries, covering thirteen hundred years, ending in 1298; it was first published from 1559 to 1574.

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Magic lantern

The magic lantern, also known by its Latin name lanterna magica, is an early type of image projector employing pictures painted, printed or produced photographically on transparent plates (usually made of glass), one or more lenses, and a light source.

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Magnificat (Bach)

Johann Sebastian Bach's Magnificat is a musical setting of the biblical canticle Magnificat.

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Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie

Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie (15 October 1622 – 26 April 1686) was a Swedish statesman and military man.

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Magnus I, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg

Magnus I of Saxe-Lauenburg (Ratzeburg, 1 January 1470 – 1 August 1543, Ratzeburg) was a Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg from the House of Ascania.

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Mammendorf

Mammendorf is a municipality in Bavaria, Germany.

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MAN Diesel

MAN Diesel SE is a European manufacturer of large-bore diesel engines for marine propulsion systems and power plant applications.

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MAN Energy Solutions

MAN Energy Solutions is a multinational company based in Augsburg, Germany that produces large-bore diesel engines and turbomachinery for marine and stationary applications, as marine propulsion systems, power plant applications and turbochargers.

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MAN Lion's City

The MAN Lion's City is a range of low-floor and low-entry public buses built by German truck and bus manufacturer MAN Truck & Bus (previously MAN Nutzfahrzeuge) since 1996 primarily for the European market, but is also available in chassis-only variants worldwide.

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MAN SE

MAN SE (abbreviation of Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg), formerly MAN AG, is a German mechanical engineering company and parent company of the MAN Group.

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MAN steel house

The MAN steel house was a pre-fabricated building by MAN (Machine Works Augsburg-Nürnberg).

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Manfred Gurlitt

Manfred Gurlitt (6 September 1890 – 29 April 1972) was a German opera composer and conductor.

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Manfred Müller (bishop)

Manfred Müller (15 November 1926 – 20 May 2015) was a German Catholic bishop.

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Manfred Preis

Manfred Preis (born 1954 in Hengersberg) is a German bass clarinetist and saxophonist.

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Manfred Tripbacher

Manfred Tripbacher (born 23 February 1957) is a retired German footballer.

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Manhae Prize

The Manhae Prize is a series of awards in the following categories: Peace, Social Service, Academic Excellence, Art, Literature, and Buddhist Missionary Work awarded by The Society for the Promotion and Practice of Manhae's Thoughts in memory of Buddhist reformer and anti-Japanese independence activist Han Yong-un (1879–1944).

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Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland

Mannerist architecture and sculpture in Poland dominated between 1550 and 1650, when it was finally replaced with baroque.

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Manroland

Manroland AG manufactures newspaper web offset presses, commercial web offset presses, and sheetfed offset presses for commercial, publications and packaging printing.

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Manuel Hiemer

Manuel Hiemer (born 3 February 1985) is a German footballer.

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Manuel Köhler

Manuel Köhler (born April 25, 1969 in Salzburg) is an Austrian slalom canoeist who competed from the mid-1980s to the early 2000s (decade).

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Manuel Kindl

Manuel Kindl (born January 3, 1993) is a German professional ice hockey defenceman.

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Maracaibo

Maracaibo is a city and municipality in northwestern Venezuela, on the western shore of the strait that connects Lake Maracaibo to the Gulf of Venezuela.

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March 18 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

March 17 - Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar - March 19 All fixed commemorations below are observed on March 31 by Orthodox Churches on the Old Calendar.

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March 1948

The following events occurred in March 1948.

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March 2007 lunar eclipse

A total lunar eclipse took place on March 3, 2007, the first of two eclipses in 2007.

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March 9

No description.

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March of Carniola

The March (or Margraviate) of Carniola (Kranjska krajina; Mark Krain) was a southeastern state of the Holy Roman Empire in the High Middle Ages, the predecessor of the Duchy of Carniola.

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March of Friuli

The March of Friuli was a Carolingian frontier march against the Slavs and Avars, established in 776.

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March of Verona

The March of Verona and Aquileia was a vast march (frontier district) of the Holy Roman Empire in northeastern Italy during the Middle Ages, centered on the cities of Verona and Aquileia.

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Marcin Pochwała

Marcin Krzysztof Pochwała (born 14 February 1984 in Nowy Sącz) is a Polish slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 2001.

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Marco Thiede

Marco Thiede (born May 20, 1992) is a German footballer who plays for Karlsruher SC.

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Marcus Junkelmann

Marcus Junkelmann (* 2 October 1949 in Munich) is a German historian and experimental archeologist.

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Marcus Tanneberger

Marcus Tanneberger (born 1987 in Berlin) is a German violinist.

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Marek Hamšík

Marek Hamšík (born 27 July 1987) is a Slovak professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder and serves as the captain for Italian club Napoli, and the Slovakia national team, for which he is vice-captain.

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Margareta Ebner

Blessed Margareta Ebner (1291 – 20 June 1351) was a German professed religious from the Dominican Nuns.

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Margot Seidler

Margot Seidler is a former East German slalom canoeist who competed in the 1950s.

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Maria Anna Thekla Mozart

Maria Anna Thekla Mozart (September 25, 1758 – January 25, 1841), called Marianne, known as Bäsle ("little cousin"), was the cousin of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

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Maria Blum

Maria Blum (born Maria Holl: 27 October 1890 - 11 May 1965) was a German politician (KPD).

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Maria Caspar-Filser

Maria Caspar-Filser (7 August 1878 - 12 February 1968) was a German painter.

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Maria Sophie of Bavaria

Maria Sophie Amalie, Duchess in Bavaria (4 October 1841, Possenhofen Castle – 19 January 1925, Munich) was the last Queen consort of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.

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Mariánská Týnice

Mariánská Týnice is a former pilgrimage destination in Bohemia, now the Czech Republic, with the Baroque Church of the Annunciation and the Cistercian Provost Office built by Jan Santini Aichel in the 18th century.

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Marie Krøyer

Marie Triepcke Krøyer Alfvén (11 June 1867 – 25 May 1940), commonly known as Marie Krøyer, was a Danish painter.

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Marinho Chagas

Francisco das Chagas Marinho (8 February 1952 – 31 May 2014), generally known as Marinho Chagas or Francisco Marinho, was a Brazilian association footballer.

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Mario Gómez

Mario Gómez García (born 10 July 1985) is a German professional footballer who plays as a striker for VfB Stuttgart and the Germany national team.

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Mario Jeckle

Mario Jeckle (25 August 1974 – 11 June 2004) was a German computer scientist.

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Marisa Olson

Marisa Olson is an artist, writer, curator, and former punk singer.

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Mark Welser

Mark Welser (1558–1614) was a German banker, politician, and astronomer, who engaged in learned correspondence with European intellectuals of his time.

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Markus Ferber

Markus Ferber (born 15 January 1965) is a German politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from Germany.

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Markus Fugger

Markus Fugger (Marx Fugger) von der Lilie (14 February 1529 – 18 June 1597) was a German politician and businessman of the Fugger family.

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Markus Hansiz

Markus Hansiz, known in Slovene as Marko Hanžič (April 25, 1683 - September 5, 1766) was a Jesuit historian.

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Markus Keller (ice hockey)

Markus Keller (born 19 August 1989) is a German professional ice hockey goaltender.

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Markus Mehr

Markus Mehr (born 1965 in Augsburg, Bavaria) is a German electronic music composer and sound artist.

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Markus Thorandt

Markus Thorandt (born 1 April 1981 in Augsburg) is a German footballer who is currently a free agent and has most recently played for FC St. Pauli.

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Markus Weinzierl

Markus Weinzierl (born 28 December 1974) is a German football coach and former player.

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Marquard of Randeck

Marquard of Randeck (or of Randelle; Italian: Marquardo di Randeck; 1296 - 3 January 1381) was Patriarch of Aquileia from 1365 until his death.

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Marquard Rudolf von Rodt

Marquard Rudolf Reichsritter von Rodt zu Bußmannshausen, or Roth (9 April 1644, Konstanz, Holy Roman Empire – 10 July or 6 October 1704, Hegne) was, from 1689 to 1704, the prince-bishop of the Bishopric of Constance.

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Martial arts manual

Martial arts manuals are instructions, with or without illustrations, specifically designed to be learnt from a book.

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Martin Boos

Martin Boos (25 December 176229 August 1825) was a German Roman Catholic theologian.

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Martin Eder

Martin Eder (born 31 August 1968 in Augsburg) is a German artist.

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Martin Engelbrecht

Martin Engelbrecht (16 September 1684, Augsburg - 18 January 1756, Augsburg) was a German Baroque engraver and publisher.

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Martin Ness

Martin Ness was a male international table tennis player from Germany.

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Martin Roháč

Martin Roháč was a Czech soldier, later a robber and serial killer with the alleged highest number of victims in the Czech lands.

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Martin Schmid

Martin Schmid, also known as Esmid (September 26, 1694 – March 10, 1772) was a Swiss Jesuit, missionary, musician and architect, who worked mainly in the Chiquitos Province of what is now Bolivia.

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Martin Schongauer

Martin Schongauer (c. 1445, Colmar – 2 February 1491, Breisach), also known as Martin Schön ("Martin beautiful") or Hübsch Martin ("pretty Martin") by his contemporaries, was an Alsatian engraver and painter.

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Martin Schrot

Martin Schrot (Augsburg, ? – after 1581) was a German goldsmith and engraver from Augsburg.

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Martin Schwartz (mercenary)

Martin Schwartz (died 16 June 1487) was a German mercenary who died at the Battle of Stoke Field while fighting for Lambert Simnel, a Yorkist pretender to the English throne.

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Martina Müller (footballer)

Martina Müller (born 18 April 1980) is a retired German footballer.

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Martyrs' Synod

The Martyrs' Synod took place in Augsburg, Germany, from 20 to 24 August 1527.

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Mary Howe (singer)

Mary Howe (married names, Mary Howe-Lavin and Mary Howe Burton; 1870-1952) was an American operatic soprano, well known in Germany in the 1880s and 1890s.

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Mary Louise Kelly

Mary Louise Kelly is an American broadcaster and author.

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Mary Untier of Knots

Mary, Untier of Knots or Mary, Undoer of Knots is the name of both a Marian devotion and a Baroque painting (German: Wallfahrtsbild or Gnadenbild) which represents that devotion.

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Mass in G major, K. 140 "Pastoral"

The Missa brevisDavid Humphreys.

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Master MS

Master M. S. (M., Meister M. S., Majster M. S.) was a 16th-century painter who specialized in late Gothic art and in early Renaissance art.

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Mathias Röthenmund

Mathias Röthenmund (born 22 October 1974) is a Swiss slalom canoeist who competed in the 1990s and 2000s.

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Matteo Ricci

Matteo Ricci, S.J. (Mattheus Riccius Maceratensis; 6 October 1552 – 11 May 1610), was an Italian Jesuit priest and one of the founding figures of the Jesuit China missions.

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Matthaios Kamariotis

Matthaios Kamariotis (Ματθαῖος Καμαριώτης; died 1490) was a Greek scholar of the Renaissance era, from Thessaloniki.

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Matthäus Günther

Matthäus Günther (also Mathäus Günther) (7 September 1705 – 30 September 1788) was an important German painter and artist of the Baroque and Rococo era.

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Matthäus Lang von Wellenburg

Matthäus Lang von Wellenburg (1469 – 30 March 1540) was a statesman of the Holy Roman Empire, a Cardinal and Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg from 1519 to his death.

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Matthäus Schwarz

Matthäus Schwarz (19 February 1497 - c.1574) was a German accountant, best known for compiling his Klaidungsbüchlein or Trachtenbuch (usually translated as "Book of Clothes"), a book cataloguing the clothing that he wore between 1520 and 1560.

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Matthäus Seutter

Matthäus Seutter (1678-1757) was one of the most important and prolific German map publishers of the 18th century.

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Matthew Rader

Matthew Rader (also Matthäus, or Mathaeus) (1561 – 22 December 1634) was a Jesuit philologist and historian.

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Matthias Klostermayr

Matthias Klostermayr, also known as Bavarian Hiasl (in German Bayerischer Hiasl, in Austro-Bavarian Boarische Hiasl) (3 September 1736—6 September 1771), was a renowned German outlaw, poacher and social rebel who has come to be described, particularly in accounts written in the English-speaking world, as the Bavarian Robin Hood.

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Matthias Pfenninger

Matthias Pfenninger (1739 – 1813) was a Swiss draftsman and engraver.

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Maurice Stuckey

Maurice Stuckey (born 30 May 1990) is a German professional basketball player for s.Oliver Würzburg of the German League Basketball Bundesliga (BBL).

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Max Britzelmayr

Max Britzelmayr (January 7, 1839 – December 6, 1909) was a German mycologist and lichenologist who was a native of Augsburg.

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Max Schlosser (tenor)

Max Karl Schlosser (17 October 18352 September 1916) was a German opera singer.

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Max von Stephanitz

Max Emil Friedrich von Stephanitz (December 30, 1864 – 22 April 1936) was a German dog breeder who is credited with having developed the German Shepherd Dog breed as it is currently known, set guidelines for the breed standard, and was the first president of the Verein für Deutsche Schäferhunde (S.V.).

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Max Wünschig

Max Wünschig (born 4 April 1950) is a former professional tennis player from Germany.

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Max Wickert

Max Wickert (born May 26, 1938, Augsburg, Germany) is an American teacher, poet, translator and publisher.

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Maximilian C. Jehuda Ewert

Maximilian C. Jehuda Ewert (born 1974, Soltau, Germany) is a composer and violinist.

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Maximilian Hornung

Maximilian Hornung (born 1986 in Augsburg) is a German cellist.

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Maximilian Museum

The Maximilian Museum is a large, public museum housed in a palatial building erected in 1546 in Augsburg, Germany.

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Maximilian Oberst

Maximilian Oberst (October 6, 1849 – November 18, 1925) was a German physician and surgeon born in Regensburg.

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Maximilian Seyssel d’Aix

Maximilian "Max" Graf Seyssel d’Aix (November 20, 1776 – September 12, 1855) was a Bavarian Lieutenant General.

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Maximilianstraße (Augsburg)

The Maximilianstraße is a street in the old-town area of Augsburg in Germany.

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Maximilianus Transylvanus

Maximilianus Transylvanus (Transilvanus, Transylvanianus), also Maximilianus of Transylvania and Maximilian (Maximiliaen) von Sevenborgen (c. 1490 – c. 1538), was a sixteenth-century author based in Flanders who wrote the earliest account published on Magellan and Elcano's first circumnavigation of the world (1519–22).

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May 1931

The following events occurred in May 1931.

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May 1945

The following events occurred in May 1945.

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Männer haben kein Gehirn

Männer haben kein Gehirn (Men don't have Brains) is a promotional audiobook by German punk rock band Die Ärzte.

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Mühlbach im Pinzgau

Mühlbach im Pinzgau is a village and a cadastral parish (Katastralgemeinde) within the municipality of Bramberg am Wildkogel.

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München Hauptbahnhof

München Hauptbahnhof (German for Munich main railway station) is the main railway station in the city of Munich, Germany.

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München RFC

The München RFC is a German rugby union club from Munich, currently playing in the 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga.

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München-Nürnberg-Express

The München-Nürnberg-Express (literally: Munich-Nuremberg Express) is a RegionalExpress train service in the southern German state of Bavaria, connecting the two main cities of the state, Munich and Nuremberg.

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Mārtiņš Krūmiņš

Mārtiņš Krūmiņš (March 2, 1900 – 1992) was a Latvian-American Impressionist painter.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 30001–31000

004 | 30004 Mikewilliams || || Mike Williams (born 1952) was a lead engineer at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.

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Mechanical Galleon

The Mechanical Galleon is an elaborate nef or table ornament in the form of a ship, which is also an automaton and clock.

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Mechanische Baumwollspinnerei und Weberei Augsburg

The Mechanische Baumwollspinnerei und Weberei (Mechanical cotton spinning and weaving mill) is a cotton mill in Augsburg, Bavaria, Germany.

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Medal

A medal or medallion is a small portable artistic object, a thin disc, normally of metal, carrying a design, usually on both sides.

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Medical University of Varna

The Medical University of Varna (MU-Varna) is a Bulgarian state school for higher education dedicated to training specialists in the fields of medicine and healthcare who graduate with the educational and qualification degrees of Master, Bachelor and Professional Bachelor.

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Meinhard, Duke of Carinthia

Meinhard II (c. 1238 – 1 November 1295), a member of the House of Gorizia (Meinhardiner), ruled the County of Gorizia (as Meinhard IV) and the County of Tyrol together with his younger brother Albert from 1258, until in 1271 they divided their heritage and Meinhard became sole ruler of Tyrol.

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Meinrat Andreae

Meinrat O. Andreae, born in 1949 in Augsburg, is a German biogeochemist.

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Meistersinger

A (German for "master singer") was a member of a German guild for lyric poetry, composition and unaccompanied art song of the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries.

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Meitingen

Meitingen is a market town in the district of Augsburg, in Bavaria, Germany.

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Melchior Franck

Melchior Franck (c. 1579 – 1 June 1639) was a German composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Melchior Küsel

Melchior Küsel (1626, Augsburg – 1684, Augsburg), was a German engraver.

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Melchior Lorck

Melchior Lorck (or: Lorichs or: Lorich or: Lorch) (1526/27after 1583 in Copenhagen) was a renaissance painter, draughtsman, and printmaker of Danish-German origin.

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Members of the Red Army Faction

The Red Army Faction (RAF) existed in West Germany from 1970 to 1998, committing numerous crimes, especially in the autumn of 1977, which led to a national crisis that became known as the "German Autumn".

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Memento mori

Memento mori (Latin: "remember that you have to die"), Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition, June 2001.

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Memmingen Airport

Memmingen Airport, also known as Allgäu-Airport Memmingen, is an international airport in the town of Memmingerberg near Memmingen, in the Swabia region of Germany.

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Men's 200 metres European record progression

The following table shows the European record progression in the men's 200 metres, as ratified by the EAA.

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Mendeleyevo Microdistrict

Postcard of Juditten Church, ca. 1908 Mendeleyevo (Менделеево) is part of the Tsentralny District in Kaliningrad, Russia.

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Messerschmitt

Messerschmitt AG was a German aircraft manufacturing corporation (AG) named after its chief designer Willy Messerschmitt and known primarily for its World War II fighter aircraft, in particular the Bf 109 and Me 262.

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Messerschmitt Bf 110

--> The Messerschmitt Bf 110, often known non-officially as the Me 110, was a twin-engine heavy fighter (Zerstörer—German for "Destroyer") and fighter-bomber (Jagdbomber or Jabo) developed in Nazi Germany in the 1930s and used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

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Messerschmitt Bf 110 operational history

The Messerschmitt Bf 110, often (erroneously) called Me 110, was a twin-engine heavy fighter (Zerstörer – German for "Destroyer") in the service of the Luftwaffe during World War II.

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Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet

The Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet was a German rocket-powered interceptor aircraft.

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Messerschmitt Me 261

The Messerschmitt Me 261 Adolfine was a long-range reconnaissance aircraft designed in the late 1930s.

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Messerschmitt Me 262

The Messerschmitt Me 262, nicknamed Schwalbe (German: "Swallow") in fighter versions, or Sturmvogel (German: "Storm Bird") in fighter-bomber versions, was the world's first operational jet-powered fighter aircraft.

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Messerschmitt Me 410

The Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse ("Hornet") was a German heavy fighter and Schnellbomber used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

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Metropolitan regions in Germany

The metropolitan regions in Germany are eleven densely populated areas in the Federal Republic of Germany.

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Michael Aufhauser

Michael Aufhauser (born April 25, 1952 Augsburg) is a German animal rights activist and founder of Gut Aiderbichl, the largest sanctuary for animals in Austria, which houses more than 1,000 animals of a variety of species.

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Michael Bakos

Michael Bakos (born March 2, 1979 in Augsburg, West Germany) is a German professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for the Augsburger Panther of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.

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Michael Beetham

Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Michael James Beetham, (17 May 1923 – 24 October 2015) was a Second World War bomber pilot and a high-ranking commander in the Royal Air Force from the 1960s to the 1980s.

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Michael Brandner (actor)

Michael Brandner (born 22 January 1951) is a German actor.

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Michael Haußner

Michael Haußner (born 16 June 1954 in Augsburg) is a German lawyer and political civil servant.

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Michael Kitzelmann

Michael Kitzelmann (born 29 January 1916 in Horben, part of Gestratz, Westallgäu, Bavaria; died 11 June 1942 in Orel Prison) was a lieutenant in the German Army during World War II, who was executed for undermining military strength.

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Michael Kurt

Michael "Mike" Kurt (born 2 April 1980) is a Swiss slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1996 to 2016.

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Michael Lattke

Michael Stephan Lattke (born 12 May 1942) is a scholar of the New Testament and early Christianity.

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Michael Maschka

Michael Maschka (born 1962 in Augsburg) is a German painter, sculptor, graphic artist and designer.

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Michael Rösele

Michael Rösele (born 7 October 1974 in Augsburg) is a retired German football player.

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Michael Swierczek

Michael Swierczek (born 1961 in Hanover) is a German politician who lives in Munich.

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Michael Vehe

Michael Vehe (c. 1480–1539) was a German monk and theologian.

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Michal Ďuriš

Michal Ďuriš (born 1 June 1988) is a Slovak football striker who plays for Orenburg and the Slovakia national football team.

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Michelstadt

Michelstadt in the Odenwald is a town in the Odenwaldkreis (district) in southern Hesse, Germany between Darmstadt and Heidelberg.

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Mieming Plateau

The Mieming Plateau (Mieminger Plateau) is a mountain terrace between 850 and 1000 metres high above the Upper Inn valley in the Austrian state of Tyrol at the southern foot of the Mieming Chain.

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Mietek Pemper

Mieczysław "Mietek" Pemper (24 March 1920 – 7 June 2011) was a Polish-born Jew and a Holocaust survivor.

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Miha Štricelj

Miha Štricelj (born 6.6.1974 in Tacen) is a Slovenian slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 1990 to 1999.

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Mihailo Đurić

Mihailo Đurić (Serbian Cyrillic: Михаило Ђурић; 22 August 1925 – 25 November 2011) was one of Serbia's most prominent philosophers.

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Mikhail Umansky

Mikhail Markovich Umansky (Russian: Михаил Уманский; January 21, 1952 – December 17, 2010) was a Russian chess grandmaster of correspondence chess, who was the 13th ICCF World Champion in correspondence chess between 1989 and 1998.

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Military logistics

Military logistics is the discipline of planning and carrying out the movement and maintenance of military forces.

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Milled coinage

In numismatics, the term milled coinage (also known as machine-struck coinage) is used to describe coins which are produced by some form of machine, rather than by manually hammering coin blanks between two dies (hammered coinage) or casting coins from dies.

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Mina (German singer)

Mina (born 4 October 1993) is a German pop musician who became famous because of a video at the online portal Myvideo which was watched by four million viewers.

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Mindelheim

Mindelheim is a town in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany.

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Minuscule 426

Minuscule 426 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), Νλ49 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on cotton paper.

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Minuscule 427

Minuscule 427 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), Θε305 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament on parchment.

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Minuscule 428

Minuscule 428 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), Θε33 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on cotton paper.

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Minuscule 430

Minuscule 430 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), Νι11 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on a parchment.

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Minuscule 83

Minuscule 83 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 1218 (Soden), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment leaves.

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Minuscule 84

Minuscule 84 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 1219 (Soden), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment leaves.

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