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... Joint partner with his two brothers Dominik and Franz (sons of August Artaria, 1807‒93) of the music publishing of the firm Artaria at Kohlmarkt 9 in Vienna's first district. August was one of the original shareholders of Universal Edition, and as ...
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... Distinguished Austrian mathematician, pupil of Moriz Violin and of Heinrich Schenker. Career Summary The son and only child of architect Theodor Schreier (1873‒1943) and his wife Anna (née Turnau, 1878‒1942), Otto was born in Vienna on March 3, 1901 ...
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... Vienna in 1923 was related to the family is unclear. ...
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... Pleasure establishment, located at the Grüner Berg (Grünberg) [Green Hill] in Obermeidling, in the 12th district (Meidling) of Vienna, opened in 1830 and in use until the beginning of World War II. The Tivoli comprised a large building with halls ...
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... Town in northern Upper Styria [Obersteiermark], near the border with Lower Austria [Niederösterreich], approx. 75 km (c. 45 miles) due north of Graz and 90 km (c. 50 miles) south-west of Vienna. A center for winter sports, it is also a major ...
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... Vienna. Schenker's mother, Julia Schenker, was buried inthe Jewish cemetery there. Her gravestone was erected there in 1923, and Jeanette and Heinrich visited it on September 13, 1923 (OJ 3/4, pp. 2566-2567; OJ 5/45, [4]). A Jewish religious community ...
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... The largest city in the Slovenian region of Lower Styria [Niedersteiermark], 55 km (c. 35 miles) south-south-east of Graz, approx. 190 km (c. 120 miles) south-south-west of Vienna. It formed part of Austria until 1918, when Lower Styria under the ...
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... their house was destroyed in early September 1914, when they fled first to Vienna. The family returned there after 1918. ...
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... Viennese art exhibition hall. The Künstlerhaus Wien is located at Karlsplatz 5, in the first district (Innere Stadt) of Vienna, next to the Musikvereinsgebäude (Music Society Building). The Künstlerhaus was built in Renaissance palazzo style between ...
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... Capital city of the province of Moravia, the second-largest city of the present Czech Republic, lying 110 km (c. 70 miles) due north of Vienna. Moravia was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the 18th and 19th centuries; by declaration of ...