「Warsaw」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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During World War II, he lived and died in | Warsaw, a victim of the Holocaust. |
Michel Adam Lisowski (1950, | Warsaw), a Jewish Polish-French businessman |
e Plozk Department became part of the Duchy of | Warsaw, a French client state |
ly exist side by side, with the Grand Duchy of | Warsaw a French satellite state neighbouring Russia. |
Henryk Grynberg (born 1936, | Warsaw), a Jewish Polish writer and actor |
As the German army was retreating from | Warsaw a soldier threw a live grenade into a shelter |
mission driver Franz Mawick wrote in 1942 from | Warsaw about what he saw: "Uniformed Germans [...] ga |
Writing to his parents in | Warsaw about his success, he said that "everyone clap |
of Technology in 1964 and later studied at the | Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. |
As a member of | Warsaw Aero Club of the Polish Aero Club, he was espe |
the Uprising, during the desperate defence of | Warsaw against Prince Paskievich (September 27, 1831) |
Bielicka died from natural causes in | Warsaw, aged 90. |
Rapacki died in | Warsaw, aged 60, in 1970. |
The Zelazna was developed at | Warsaw Agricultural University. |
e therapy (1983), post-graduate studies at the | Warsaw Agricultural University in Environmental Prote |
. Vedeneev) to advance northward (northeast of | Warsaw) aiming to turn the German defenders' left fla |
Warsaw Airport | |
Planet Airlines has bases in Vilnius Airport, | Warsaw Airport, Katowice Airport and Milan-Malpensa A |
1942, the League had 320 well-armed members in | Warsaw alone. |
1943 it already had roughly 500 men at arms in | Warsaw alone. |
retained their positions to the south-east of | Warsaw along the Vistula river, barely 10 km away fro |
Maria Sadowska (born June 27, 1976 in | Warsaw), also credited as Marysia Sadowska or simply |
gave guest concerts in Saint Petersburg, Riga, | Warsaw, Amsterdam, Vienna, as well as at the 1867 Exp |
In 1940, Frydman was arrested by the Nazis in | Warsaw, and died in a concentration camp. |
Polish politics of the time, was sent first to | Warsaw and then to the Kremlin to negotiate with Mosc |
oszcz, Gdansk, Lodz, Katowice, Krakow, Poznan, | Warsaw and Wroclaw. |
n the Visitationist Sisters boarding-school in | Warsaw and in 1680 she was admitted at the court as a |
Yiddish Rep, and the others are in Bucharest, | Warsaw and Tel Aviv. |
She studied in Krakow, | Warsaw and Paris. |
s guitar took place at the Kokszoman Studio in | Warsaw and were engineered by Marecki and the keyboar |
nd Germany, at the National Philharmonic Hall, | Warsaw and Stadtkasino, Basel. |
n the Frederic Chopin State School of Music in | Warsaw, and is a member of the European Piano Teacher |
vember 1807 he joined the army of the Duchy of | Warsaw and quickly advanced through its ranks. |
1953 European Amateur Boxing Championships in | Warsaw, and the bronze medal at the 1955 European Ama |
of Russia, (which gained most of the Duchy of | Warsaw) and Prussia, which acquired Westphalia and th |
In 1946, the orphanage moved to | Warsaw and merged into the existing Nasz Dom orphanag |
r the European Amateur Boxing Championships in | Warsaw, and eventually clinched Gold, beating Polish |
1965 and 1967, he studied at the University of | Warsaw and received a doctorate in physics. |
national Frederick Chopin Piano Competition in | Warsaw; and he won a Liszt prize in Budapest. |
with proletarian and small town environment of | Warsaw and Silesia. |
ozdovsky served in the Life Guards Regiment in | Warsaw and was promoted to lieutenant in 1904. |
e member of the German Historical Institute in | Warsaw and as member of the Working Group on the Baro |
In 1978 he founded the Museum of Caricature in | Warsaw and was its first director (it would be named |
He was born in | Warsaw and was killed in the Katyn massacre. |
skes fon Der Tunkeler, B. Klatzkin Publishers, | Warsaw and Wilno, 1931. |
She studied in | Warsaw and Siena, where she was a pupil of Gino Bechi |
altica, the London Sinfonietta and the Munich, | Warsaw and Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestras. |
s is the tallest building in Poland outside of | Warsaw and the tallest residential building in the co |
Upon the death of his father he returned to | Warsaw, and assumed the management of his commercial |
lish government in 1938 Bierut settled down in | Warsaw and worked as a bookkeeper in a cooperative. |
His travels continued: London, | Warsaw, and then back to London, where he died in 188 |
professor at the National Academy of Music in | Warsaw and from 1958 was Head of the Department of Co |
articipated in the capture of Bialystok and of | Warsaw and fought at Lutzen and Bautzen, where a seve |
s born in Tula, Russia, and studied singing in | Warsaw and acting in Moscow. |
ilsit made him a subject of the Grand Duchy of | Warsaw, and as such he fought in the War of the Fifth |
His wife had been born in | Warsaw and took part in the Warsaw Uprising. |
Mokotow (born about 1774, died 18 Jan 1842 in | Warsaw) and Tauba Moskowicz (born about 1770). |
amous for his 1960s performances in both Legia | Warsaw and the Polish National Team. |
In 1920 he emigrated to | Warsaw, and in 1928 he moved to Tehran where he died |
national Frederick Chopin Piano Competition in | Warsaw, and two years later he placed in the Alfredo |
d former Sister Bertranda, now living alone in | Warsaw, and six nuns from her convent were awarded th |
earned her M.S. in 1968 from the University of | Warsaw, and her Ph.D. from the same university in 197 |
igsberg, Berlin, Bonn, Cologne, Zurich, Paris, | Warsaw and England. |
o 1782 they performed in Switzerland, Dresden, | Warsaw and St. Petersburg. |
t the end of 1810 he became French resident at | Warsaw and was for a couple of years supreme in the a |
He specialized in the history of | Warsaw and history of the Polish peasants. |
She gave her first public recitals in | Warsaw and Paris in 1810. |
round production of Vis barrels was started in | Warsaw, and several hundred Vis pistols were assemble |
les being the Palace of Culture and Science in | Warsaw and the Press Palace in Bucharest. |
He took part in the cultural life of | Warsaw and organized meetings of artists and writers. |
of hostilities carried out convoys to Prague, | Warsaw and Moscow. |
rch Battalion of the 36th Regiment was left in | Warsaw and served as a core of the Polish 336th Infan |
the University of Lwow, and lectured there, in | Warsaw and in Poznan. |
He was imprisoned at the Pawiak Prison in | Warsaw and executed by the Germans in 1941 at Palmiry |
sity (MSc in mathematics, 1966), University of | Warsaw and the University of Edinburgh (PhD in comput |
ormance of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 in | Warsaw and soon after toured Europe and the Americas |
studied in two faculties of the University of | Warsaw and was expelled from both. |
She was born in | Warsaw and graduated from the Maria Konopnicka High S |
Anielewicz and Josef Glazman as heroes of the | Warsaw and Vilna ghettos. |
She studied music and literature in Cracow, | Warsaw and Paris. |
809 he entered the Polish army of the Duchy of | Warsaw and took part in most of the Napoleonic campai |
t the paper's foreign bureaus in Buenos Aires, | Warsaw and Jerusalem. |
s born in Borowka, Ukraine, and studied at the | Warsaw and Lemberg (Lviv) Conservatories, and then in |
He later returned to | Warsaw and played there in various nightclubs. |
ucator and art critic (criticism) related with | Warsaw and over Vistula Kazimierzem. |
captured by the Soviet Army and being sent to | Warsaw and working as a camp prisoner helping in the |
s born to Rabbi Joseph H. Feldman, a native of | Warsaw and scion of a rabbinical family. |
However, on 1 October 1939, after both | Warsaw and Modlin had capitulated, Admiral Unrug deci |
n Regiment and fought in the crucial Battle of | Warsaw and at Rudniki Forest (Puszcza Rudnicka) and t |
in books about humanitarian aid to the Jews of | Warsaw and elsewhere during the occupation. |
He served as an officer in the Duchy of | Warsaw and took part in Napoleon's Russia Campaign. |
took hold of a bridge over the Vistula between | Warsaw and its suburb Praga. |
In 1927 he moved to | Warsaw and began teaching at Myetshislav Karlovitsh's |
In 1935 he won the title of | Warsaw, and contributed to the Polish victory over Ge |
He was Senator-Voivode of the Duchy of | Warsaw and the Polish (Congress) Kingdom from 1810 un |
In July and August 1915, it fought around | Warsaw and then participated in the siege of Modlin F |
wski, he participated in the Four-Year Sejm in | Warsaw, and became Sejm Marshal from October 6, 1788, |
tored order in the camp, and the transports of | Warsaw and Radom Jews began to arrive again on Septem |
Never having returned to Berlin, he moved to | Warsaw and became a member of the Royal Chapel at the |
d with partisans until they were told to go to | Warsaw and fight with the Dirlewanger Brigade. |
e Guerre in Paris and the Higher War School in | Warsaw, and then returned to his previous post in the |
She was born in | Warsaw and studied with Leopold Meyer. |
In 1939, he tied for 6-7th in | Warsaw, and tied for 5-8th in Margate (B tournament). |
by noted Rabbis, including the Chief Rabbi of | Warsaw, and soon served as rabbi in Siedlce. |
907 to 1912, but after five years she moved to | Warsaw and began studying medicine. |
In 1794, was appointed ambassador to | Warsaw and the commander of Russian troops in Poland. |
concert hall took place on January 5, 1958 in | Warsaw and as one may expect, it featured Melomani . |
o a concentration camp for inmates from beyond | Warsaw and Poland, equipped with a gas chambers and c |
egions of Belarus, as well as in Moscow, Kiev, | Warsaw and Vilnius. |
After the World War I she lived in | Warsaw and later married changing her last name to Me |
to be buried in the Genesha Street cemetery in | Warsaw, and 500 Jews attended his funeral. |
After the war, Munk returned to | Warsaw and joined the reopened Faculty of Architectur |
During World War I, in 1915, he returned to | Warsaw and joined Warsaw University as a professor of |
f many scientific societies, such as the Lviv, | Warsaw and Vilnius Medical Associations. |
Marconi, professor of Lviv University born in | Warsaw, and his son in law, sculptor Antoni Popiel. |
Zygmunt Noskowski was born in | Warsaw and was originally trained at the Warsaw Conse |
ly 20th century Jewish life in St. Petersburg, | Warsaw, and Moscow. |
He was born in | Warsaw and died in Warsaw. |
of the Hogan Lovells merger, attorneys in the | Warsaw and Geneva offices of Hogan & Hartson announce |
ny grew to become the largest beer producer in | Warsaw and one of the largest in Poland. |
During that time, Lolli travelled to | Warsaw and toured Germany and Scandinavia. |
He lived in Berlin, Paris, London, | Warsaw and Rome before returning to Russia. |
st Diploma from the Chopin Academy of Music in | Warsaw and a Performance Certificate from the Centre |
He traveled to | Warsaw and then to Vienna, reaching Rome (where he en |
born to a wealthy family in either Volhynia or | Warsaw, and attended school in Krzemieniec (modern-da |
Wayne; and as pastor of Sacred Heart Church in | Warsaw and of St. John the Baptist Church in Fort Way |
It is located about 20 km south of downtown | Warsaw and is a part of the metropolitan area of that |
May Laws, he helped found the Hovevei Zion in | Warsaw, and convinced Baron Edmond James de Rothschil |
He was born in 1908 in | Warsaw, and became a glove worker at the age of fourt |
Congress Poland, and took part in the siege of | Warsaw and Modlin Fortress. |
ing his academic pursuits at the University of | Warsaw and the Main School of Planning and Statistics |
of Sciences' Institute of Political Studies in | Warsaw; and, at the John Paul II Catholic University |
His atrocities in | Warsaw appalled even his Gestapo superiors. |
Warsaw are not in Russia. | |
largest Polish armored units of that time, the | Warsaw Armoured Motorized Brigade. |
Warsaw Armoured Motorized Brigade (Warszawska Brygada | |
urned to Poland and served as commander of the | Warsaw Arsenal of the Kingdom of Poland Army. |
Its name was coined after the | Warsaw Arsenal, in front of which the action took pla |
e Pope's homily at a Mass on Victory Square in | Warsaw as “an image that [he] cannot forget...it was |
At first he was made an instructor pilot in | Warsaw as he was skilled in German aircraft pilotage, |
She debuted at the theatre in | Warsaw as an actress in 1777 and as a singer in 1779. |
armies of the Austrian Empire and the Duchy of | Warsaw as a part of the War of the Fifth Coalition in |
The Kotwica was first painted on walls in | Warsaw, as a psychological-warfare tactic against the |
It was started in November 1939 in | Warsaw as the main press release of the SZP, the firs |
In early 1862, Konstantin arrived in | Warsaw as the new Namestnik of the Kingdom of Poland. |
taken root… The appearance of a new… church in | Warsaw as a boundary and pillar of Orthodox Russia wi |
hille Ratti as papal nuncio who was already in | Warsaw as his representative. |
h conference held in the Kabaty Woods south of | Warsaw, at which the Polish Cipher Bureau initiated t |
Baszanowski died in | Warsaw at the age of 75. |
It fought near Vistula and | Warsaw, at Pomerania and in the battle of Berlin. |
last, unforgettable game of interwar Poland - ( | Warsaw, August 27, 1939, Poland - Hungary 4-2). |
In 1956, with Serocki, he founded the | Warsaw Autumn international contemporary music festiv |
Cover for the CD of the 2001 | Warsaw Autumn festival. |
Proms at the Royal Albert Hall in London, the | Warsaw Autumn festival, the Paris Festival d'Automne, |
At home, the orchestra performs in the | Warsaw Autumn International Festival of Contemporary |
ti) is a Roman Catholic church located at 3680 | Warsaw Avenue, in Price Hill, in Cincinnati, Ohio. |
The | Warsaw Ballroom, or more commonly referred to simply |
dent Lech Kaczynski, who was then the mayor of | Warsaw, banned the city's annual gay-pride parade, sa |
In the Duchy of | Warsaw, barred from public activity, he sought to pre |
WHS serves the communities of | Warsaw, Basco, Colusa, Nauvoo, Niota, Sutter, and Tio |
He co-organized the | Warsaw Battalion of Academic Legion, and in 1919 was |
unable to study at the Polish Conservatoire in | Warsaw because of his Jewish faith. |
ar, he studied philosophy at the University of | Warsaw before moving to Berlin in 1921 to continue hi |
the Second World War, Levin helped refugees in | Warsaw, before immigrating to Mandate Palestine in 19 |
s shot to death by the cadets on the street of | Warsaw before the eyes of his wife Sophie Lafontaine |
ted her modeling career with Eastern Models in | Warsaw before moving to Paris and finally the US as s |
During the Grossaktion | Warsaw, beginning on July 22, 1942, Jews were deporte |
cted to three successive terms as the mayor of | Warsaw beginning in 1853. |
After a short stay in | Warsaw, Berdyczewski returned to Germany in 1911, whe |
They were held in | Warsaw, between December 15 and December 17, 2000. |
Theatre Square in | Warsaw between 1890 and 1905 |
ghtclubs, coffee houses and restaurants across | Warsaw between the wars. |
Aldrich was the first postmaster of | Warsaw between 1834 and 1838. |
ears 1901-1918 by the Chemistry Section of the | Warsaw Branch of the Russian Society for the Promotio |
sociation (where he served as the Chair of its | Warsaw branch from 1972 to 1978). |
offices in London, Shanghai, Istanbul, Prague, | Warsaw, Bucharest, Kiev, and Bratislava. |
Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Basel, Bern, Amsterdam, | Warsaw, Budapest, Bucharest and Brussels among others |
1939, the Fabryka Karabinow (Rifle Factory) in | Warsaw built 7,861 ckm wz.30, most of them for the Po |
In 1792 he became the president of | Warsaw, but was overthrown by the confederation of Ta |
He started high school in | Warsaw but after the Nazi invasion of Poland, the Ger |
Wieniawski International Violin Competition in | Warsaw, but suffered a memory lapse; he received an h |
In 1880 Grodner and Mogulesko toured to | Warsaw, but soon Mogulesko had taken over the troupe |
the Faculty of Humanities in the University of | Warsaw but graduated with a degree in anthropology. |
on in favor of the revolutionary government of | Warsaw, but his policy of peace did not exclude energ |
The player was tracked by Legia | Warsaw, but joined the Russian Premier League newcome |
ontact with the Polish underground movement in | Warsaw but, after parting company, Davies-Scourfield |
A Hebrew annual, that was published in | Warsaw by the "Ahiasaf" Publication Society. |
Ahiasaf A Hebrew annual, that was published in | Warsaw by the "Ahiasaf" Publication Society. |
mbol was introduced, it was painted all around | Warsaw by a 400-strong dedicated team. |
4th Panzer then advanced to the outskirts of | Warsaw by September 8, the first German force to reac |
TZN Xenna was founded in August 1981 in | Warsaw by Zygzak, Gogo Szulc and Piotr Dubiel. |
ay 27, 2006, Schudrich was attacked in central | Warsaw by a 33-year-old Polish neo-Nazi, who confesse |
Warsaw, c. 1648) was an early baroque Polish composer | |
a in the Qui Pro Quo theater (1922) and in the | Warsaw cabaret Adria (1931-1939). |
As a captain in command of the | Warsaw Cadets in the Illinois militia, Grover was acc |
Chamber Soloists, the Cracow Philharmonic, the | Warsaw Camerata, and the North Czech Philharmonic amo |
Grace College - | Warsaw Campus |
sociology from the Central European University | Warsaw campus on a scholarship from the Soros-funded |
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