「weimar」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Lower Franconia, and moved with his mother to | Weimar after his father's death in 1627, to get away |
| He remained in | Weimar after his retirement and died there in 1904, s |
| In Jena, Berlin, | Weimar, and Rudolstadt, these were Abeken's most acti |
| s taken into Soviet captivity from his home in | Weimar and in common with other Generals captured by |
| Krebs was born near | Weimar, and died in the same area. |
| d later worked in several locations, including | Weimar and Jena. |
| 1823 in a coach which carried him from Cheb to | Weimar and by his arrival on 12 September, it was fin |
| Modernism: Technology, Culture and Politics in | Weimar and the Third Reich, Herf coined the term “rea |
| ecame friends with Johann Gottfried Walther in | Weimar, and borrowed his works on music theory; he la |
| He studied cello and piano in | Weimar, and later taught piano there. |
| gy, he stayed successively in Aix-la-Chapelle, | Weimar and Brunswick. |
| He went to | Weimar, and was received by Franz Liszt, who appointe |
| Together with the communities of Fronhausen, | Weimar and Ebsdorfergrund, Lohra forms the southern p |
| nt on a concert tour with her father to Gotha, | Weimar and Rudolstadt, during which her father remarr |
| cholar from Schmalkalden who held positions in | Weimar and Halle. |
| ok Eisenach and Coburg; John Williamm received | Weimar; and John Frederick III inherited Gotha. |
| ok Altenburg and some towns, and John retained | Weimar and Jena. |
| died at the Institute for Teacher Formation in | Weimar and was afterwards active as a Educator until |
| ecause of its vicinity to the cultural capital | Weimar and the numerous historical figures, Bad Berka |
| ts are now recognized as among the best of the | Weimar and Dessau Bauhaus. |
| ive in Schleswig until 1821, when she moved to | Weimar and befriended Charlotte von Stein. |
| Bach began the composition during his time in | Weimar, and an unfinished fugue, probably by Bach, wa |
| He studied at Halle, and taught at | Weimar and Hanau. |
| as Music Director of Deutsches Nationaltheater | Weimar and Chief Conductor of the Staatskapelle Weima |
| sic director of the Deutschen Nationaltheaters | Weimar and the Staatskapelle Weimar from 1996 to 2002 |
| ossherzogliches Theater (now the Staatskapelle | Weimar) and the work premiered in Weimar in 1857. |
| ist Review, credit earned by Griggs courses at | Weimar appear on Griggs University transcripts. |
| In 1897, Steiner left the | Weimar archives and moved to Berlin. |
| 1890 Count von Kalckreuth was professor at the | Weimar art school. |
| author of a fechtbuch of c. 1480, preserved in | Weimar as MS Q566. |
| In | Weimar, Bach was the Konzertmeister of Johann Ernst v |
| artist and poet Rene Halkett, of the original | Weimar Bauhaus school of art and design. |
| later followed Itten to study and teach at the | Weimar Bauhaus. |
| baret, 1972 - set in the early 1930s depicting | Weimar Berlin from the writings of Christopher Isherw |
| When he looks into the cultural life of | Weimar Berlin, he is horrified at the "internationali |
| for some years the office of court-preacher at | Weimar, but owing to theological disputes was compell |
| He next visited | Weimar, but, being coldly received by Goethe, abandon |
| sflammende Wunschopfer, which was performed at | Weimar castle in 1697. |
| The | Weimar Classicism period in Germany is commonly consi |
| Secret Societies and | Weimar Classicism - scholarly essay discusses "Stuttg |
| tural policy (German: Kulturpolitik) promoting | Weimar classicism as the foundation of Germany's cult |
| voting in the 1925 presidential election, the | Weimar Coalition parties all supported the candidacy |
| In 1978, | Weimar College opened on the semester system, offerin |
| Weimar College is not accredited. | |
| In 1854 Franz Liszt conducted the work at | Weimar, composing a symphonic poem of his own to repl |
| his version was performed on April 19, 1854 in | Weimar, conducted by Liszt. |
| Whereas the | Weimar Constitution provided the president with far-r |
| e of Saxony from 1918 until 1919, when the new | Weimar Constitution of Germany provided for the repla |
| athed the democratic system established by the | Weimar constitution and aimed to replace it by an aut |
| The | Weimar constitution created a system in which the cab |
| y's fortunes, and eventually, to overthrow the | Weimar constitution and install an authoritarian form |
| Due to the | Weimar Constitution from 1919, the Bavarian ministry |
| It was not clearly defined in the | Weimar constitution whether the authority to define l |
| The second part (Zweiter Hauptteil) of the | Weimar Constitution laid out the basic rights (Grundr |
| t would rule by decree under Article 48 of the | Weimar Constitution) and almost succeeded, had it not |
| With the | Weimar Constitution, it was replaced in 1919 by the R |
| von Hindenburg according to Article 48 of the | Weimar Constitution. |
| e of a "minimal dwelling" written into the new | Weimar Constitution. |
| Ebert using the authority of Article 48 of the | Weimar constitution. |
| g his death, his library was taken over by the | Weimar court library. |
| From 1789 to 1811 the | Weimar court theatrical company gave performances her |
| He played in the | Weimar court orchestra for some years. |
| Theobald von Oer: The | Weimar Court of the Muses (1860); Schiller reads at S |
| At the | Weimar court, Maria Benda met the Hofkonzertmeister E |
| al mechanic (herzoglicher Hofuhrmacher) at the | Weimar court. |
| it into German, and Goethe acted in it at the | Weimar court. |
| Although a resounding success with the | Weimar critics and audience, the opera was not immedi |
| Yet, despite the liberal attitudes of the | Weimar democracy, the public and private sentiment to |
| s, Paris), Germany (Universities of Bremen and | Weimar), Denmark (Copenhagen Business School, Roskild |
| nd lived for the next few years alternately in | Weimar, Dresden and Munich, until, in 1890, he took u |
| Born as Constanze Scandolo in | Weimar, East Germany, she started skating at the SC T |
| s from other editions of Luther's works in the | Weimar edition of Luther's works) |
| z Liszt, who spent a great deal of his life in | Weimar, encouraged the founding of a school in 1835 f |
| e to get past the years of conflict during the | Weimar era and the central points of the postwar deve |
| the "gaudily tragic" expressionist art of the | Weimar era, with portraits of " figures whose faces s |
| he Communist Party of Germany (KPD) during the | Weimar Era, but later grew disenchanted with Communis |
| a German Social Democrat politician during the | Weimar era. |
| d Dusseldorf via Halle, Weissenfels, Naumburg, | Weimar, Erfurt, Gotha, Eisenach and Bebra. |
| pion, William Hayes, which was revived for the | Weimar Festival in 2006. |
| He composed a first version, BWV 70a, in | Weimar for the second Sunday in Advent of 1716 and ex |
| Leonrod was born in Munich and joined the | Weimar German Reichswehr on 1 April 1926 in the Caval |
| Hanson left Luther in 1891 to studied music in | Weimar, Germany from 1891-1892. |
| Hajnal was born in | Weimar Germany as the son of Jewish Hungarian-born pa |
| Unforgotten (Beacon Press, 1957), a memoir of | Weimar Germany and the Nazi years. |
| After the Nazi takeover of power in | Weimar Germany he vehemently opposed aligning the Sta |
| nnedys likened disco to the cabaret culture of | Weimar Germany for its apathy towards government poli |
| He was born in | Weimar, Germany and learned music under the consultat |
| the NSDAP it was the main nationalist party in | Weimar Germany composed of nationalists, monarchists |
| Jung regarded | Weimar Germany as teetering on the brink of revolutio |
| the 65th liberation ceremony at Buchenwald in | Weimar, Germany during April 2010. |
| In 1929, he was sent to | Weimar Germany by Xinjiang's next leader Jin Shuren, |
| Disaster K.F.W. is a | Weimar, Germany based death metal band signed to the |
| His family moved to | Weimar Germany and he was raised in Dresden, but his |
| In 1919, the parts remaining in | Weimar Germany were reorganized into the two province |
| His images are frequently portraits from | Weimar Germany in the years preceding World War II, t |
| This version was performed in | Weimar, Germany on the centennial of Johann Wolfgang |
| International Spohr-Wettbewerb Competition, | Weimar, Germany (2007, 2010) |
| Machtergreifung-the Nazi takeover of power in | Weimar Germany on 30 January 1933. |
| ntarism to be inevitable as the instability of | Weimar Germany was unfolding before his eyes. |
| On 1 June 1932 he was appointed | Weimar Germany's Minister of Nutrition and Agricultur |
| by Vera Lachmann's idealism, her upbringing in | Weimar Germany, and her finding at Catawba a haven fr |
| e Bolsheviks and Poland, the Vatican turned to | Weimar Germany, which played crucial role in diplomat |
| egion remained in the Free State of Prussia in | Weimar Germany, however. |
| ajko Gronish), leading stage and film actor in | Weimar Germany, died at 52 while establishing himself |
| urifaber (Vimariensis; 1519-1575), was born in | Weimar, Germany, and thus dubbed Vimariensis or Vinar |
| onnection between East Prussia and the rest of | Weimar Germany. |
| important leader of the Trotskyist movement in | Weimar Germany. |
| op manager at the famous Bauhaus art school in | Weimar, Germany. |
| mous poster for the 1923 Bauhaus Exhibition in | Weimar, Germany. |
| d remained in the Free State of Prussia within | Weimar Germany. |
| gdo) was a large para-military organisation in | Weimar Germany. |
| Hans Sachse (1906-1985), member of the | Weimar Goethe-Gesellschaft. |
| The | Weimar government bought stock valued at 25 million R |
| Most of the | Weimar governments were minority cabinets of the cent |
| Born in | Weimar, he attended the Thomasschule in Leipzig, his |
| Born in | Weimar, he studied with Hans-Joachim Beyer, Dietrich |
| In | Weimar, he began his career as a singer. |
| In 1775, at Brunswick, and later at Berlin and | Weimar, he met and soon counted among his friends Esc |
| gh Liszt was no longer the musical director in | Weimar, he still exerted a powerful influence at the |
| During his period in | Weimar his fame as an organist grew, and he was visit |
| During his tenure at | Weimar his fame as an organist grew, and many student |
| 'art pour l'art (Jean Paul's conception of the | Weimar ideal); Gaspard encapsulates cold political ca |
| He was a younger son of | Weimar III of Weimar and Oda, daughter of Thietmar, M |
| Weimar Ilmpark Haus am Horn. | |
| so published in German as Analytische Zoologie | Weimar, Im Verlage des Landes-Industrie-Compto.In thi |
| he Deutsches Nationaltheater and Staatskapelle | Weimar in 1956. |
| It was written originally in | Weimar in 1716 (BWV 147a) for Advent and expanded in |
| was eventually given a performance by Liszt at | Weimar in 1853. |
| rn was a guest of the duke Charles Augustus of | Weimar in the Wartburg. |
| restigious Human Rights Award from the City of | Weimar, in Germany. |
| It was written originally in | Weimar in 1716 for Advent, BWV 186a, and expanded in |
| was issued twenty-three years later; viz., at | Weimar in 1897. |
| ife, Bach had two tenures in the small town of | Weimar in present day Germany. |
| After a trip to | Weimar in 1791 with Prince Franz, he visited the cour |
| r in Karlsruhe, and moved to the Hoftheater in | Weimar in 1873 as character role actor and director. |
| tron Grand Duke Karl August, were published at | Weimar in 1885. |
| He died in | Weimar in 1793. |
| l Music Director, or GMD) of the Staatskapelle | Weimar in 2005, a post he held for three years. |
| He died in | Weimar in 1832. |
| Westhoff died in | Weimar in April 1705. |
| He served as Liszt's copyist in | Weimar in January and February 1844, and he spent 18 |
| education in the community is provided by the | Weimar Independent School District. |
| Borden area schools were consolidated into the | Weimar Independent School District. |
| The | Weimar Independent School District serves Borden. |
| ing the leading of the Lord, Amazing Facts and | Weimar Institute voted on April 6, 2008 to proceed wi |
| pproved an agreement whereby the operations of | Weimar Institute will be administered by Amazing Fact |
| n 2008 Amazing Facts formed a partnership with | Weimar Institute to offer health ministries. |
| 8 Amazing Facts announced a joint venture with | Weimar Institute whereby the operations of Weimar Ins |
| excellent tutelary government which propelled | Weimar into the classical period. |
| areer as a boxer and trained a little later in | Weimar kickboxing. |
| He was and official in the | Weimar Kreis management of the Free German Youth. |
| designer Henry van de Velde in 1913-15 at the | Weimar Kunstgewerbeschule (Arts and Crafts School), i |
| him as a secretary for several weeks a year at | Weimar late in his life. |
| n several other German opera houses (Mannheim, | Weimar, Leipzig, Cologne, Karlsruhe and Schwerin) as |
| t of his fellow officers, he had supported the | Weimar liaison with Moscow. |
| ossherzogliches Theater (now the Staatskapelle | Weimar) making his debut as Lyonel in Flotow's Martha |
| In 1919 and 1920, he was a member of the | Weimar National Assembly. |
| erman National People's Party as member of the | Weimar National Assembly. |
| elected as a member of the Centre Party to the | Weimar National Assembly for the Danzig constituency |
| of its national board, and was elected to the | Weimar National Assembly. |
| He was a member of the | Weimar National Assembly (1919), the Reichstag in 191 |
| of Scheidemann, which had been elected by the | Weimar National Assembly (Weimar Republic). |
| Dresden via | Weimar, Naumburg, Leipzig and Riesa, |
| located half way between the City of Halle and | Weimar, near to the town Freyburg of witch it is an a |
| ing chorale is rare elsewhere, but appeared in | Weimar not only in this work, but also in a chorale p |
| Parts of the score were located in | Weimar, Nuremberg and Leningrad, and to the extent th |
| statues of Goethe and Schiller for the town of | Weimar, of Weber for Dresden and of Lessing for Braun |
| current Artizen artists include Paul "Shilts" | Weimar of Down to the Bone and Jackiem Joyner. |
| The opera premiered in | Weimar on December 23, 1893, under the baton of Richa |
| The opera received its premiere performance in | Weimar on 24 June 1854, conducted by Franz Liszt. |
| era was first performed at the Schlosstheater, | Weimar on 29 January 1770. |
| The symphony was premiered in | Weimar on September 5, 1857, for the inauguration of |
| She married Henry in | Weimar on 19 May 1853 and he then took her to live at |
| He died at | Weimar on the 3rd of December 1854. |
| John Albert was married twice firstly in | Weimar on 6 November 1886 to Princess Elisabeth Sybil |
| on 11 November 1889 with the orchestra of the | Weimar Opera, where he served as Court Kapellmeister. |
| ard Lassen, the director who followed Liszt at | Weimar, owed much of his success to his celebrated pr |
| The Freikorps were the key | Weimar paramilitary groups active during that post wa |
| an essay on the opera in advance of the first | Weimar performance, and also had made cuts to the sco |
| hat November Bauser spent the remainder of the | Weimar period in an unsuccessful attempt at building |
| During the | Weimar period he served as Interior Minister and Vice |
| pecialises in cabaret and popular songs of the | Weimar period in Germany and in American popular song |
| t of the German right wing during the interwar | Weimar period, Einstein left Germany for France in 19 |
| During the | Weimar period, Wegner became acquainted with Walter R |
| dolf Hitler took power, bringing to an end the | Weimar period, his activities were greatly curtailed. |
| ndon before again coming to Germany during the | Weimar period. |
| Art and Politics in the | Weimar Period: The New Sobriety 1917-1933. |
| Hamilton, Kenneth, "Early and | Weimar piano works" |
| In contrast to the | Weimar president, the new federal president can neith |
| omic problems deepened and the weakness of the | Weimar regime became apparent. |
| rka is a German city, situated in the south of | Weimar region in the state of Thuringia. |
| n of the DDP, and remained a member of the new | Weimar Reichstag until 6 June 1920. |
| any diverse locations, including Moscow, Kiev, | Weimar, Remagen, Eggenberg, Munich, Berlin, Jena, Sze |
| s Party and following the establishment of the | Weimar Republic he switched to the German Democratic |
| ing through a process of reconciliation to the | Weimar Republic but this ended under Hugenberg, who r |
| Life in the | Weimar Republic for the “first half of the 1920's was |
| He served as Minister of Justice during the | Weimar Republic era in the early 1930s. |
| utschlandlied", in 1922 during the time of the | Weimar Republic and is still used as the German natio |
| 5 he temporarily acted as head of state of the | Weimar Republic from 12 March 1925 until 12 May 1925 |
| m, was a response to the failure of the German | Weimar Republic under Chancellor Cuno to pay reparati |
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