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... ) refers to him in his diary for April 1908, where he is portrayed as an "honest" and "steadfastly naive" participant in an anecdote that shows up Mandyczewski as dishonest. He refers to him again in the diary for September 15, 1920 (S. "earns 500 Kronen ...
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... /38, [53]). The couple’s first child, Hilde, arrived in mid-March 1929, and second child, Edith, in early May 1932. In 1938 and 1939 Oskar and Frieda were living in Czernowitz (OJ 11/31, [1]), and in November 1938 Oskar is reported as asking why Sophie and ...
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... German publisher, proprietor of the J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung (J. G. Cotta's Book Dealership) from 1889 to his death in 1911 under the name J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger (Successor(s) to J. G. Cotta's Book Dealership). In 1861, Kröner ...
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... Czech pianist and piano teacher. Career Summary Malvine Burstein made her debut in Vienna in 1868, having studied with Carl Tausig and Franz Liszt. In 1871 she married medical doctor and writer Moriz Brée (1842‒1916). In the 1870s she studied with ...
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... German soprano. Marie Schoder took vocal studies at the Grand Ducal Music School in Weimar in the 1880s. She was a member of the Weimar Court Opera between 1891 and 1900. In 1899 she married the conductor of the Weimar Court Theater, Gustav Gutheil ...
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... months after Jeanette, yet despite the closeness in age there is no known contact between the two beyond at latest 1910. There is only one reference to him in Heinrich Schenker’s diary (September 13, 1919), which indicates that Louis was in contact with ...
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... mother. Trude Schiff is not mentioned in Heinrich’s diary. She is not to be confused with Trude Kaff, Trude Kral (pupils of Henrich), or Trude Kahn. ...
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... Bavarian nobleman, and soldier, later a Brigadier General in the Chilean army. Johann von Kiesling was born in Munich, attended military school there in the 1890s rising to the rank of Full Lieutenant, and qualified to join the General Staff. In ...
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... the commercial center of St George, an area in which fishing, canning, shipping, and formerly shipbuilding, were principal industries. From the 1880s onward it became increasingly a haven for artists and for summer visitors escaping the cities, and ...
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... In the 1900s, Schenker frequently took the train to Purkersdorf ‒ then still in the countryside ‒ and hiked from there to nearby villages and features, following waymarked paths. ...