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 Übersetzung für 'Munster' von Englisch nach Deutsch
Munster {adj}münsterisch
hist.relig.
Münster / Munster Circle
Kreis {m} von Münster [katholischer Salon um A. v. Gallitzin]
2 Übersetzungen
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  • Familie Munster = The Munsters Today / The New Munsters
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Anwendungsbeispiele Englisch
  • Despite not earning a contract when he graduated from the Munster Academy in 2008, Hurley signed a one-year training contract with Munster in July 2013.
  • After the 1998 Tournament he joined Munster. His initial stint at Munster ended in 2002, when he left to become Ireland's assistant coach. He was replaced at Munster by Alan Gaffney.
  • Lord Munster married Hilary Wilson in 1928. Lord Munster died in August 1975, aged 69, and was succeeded in his titles by his second cousin, Edward Charles FitzClarence, 6th Earl of Munster.
  • The Munster Schools Senior Cup or Munster Senior Cup is the under-age rugby union competition for schools affiliated to the Munster Branch of the IRFU.
  • Rokita grew up in Munster, Indiana and attended Munster High School.

  • He served as vice-chairman of the Munster Council from 1992 and became chairman of the Munster Council in 1995, after Tom Boland.
  • If a Munster team wins the Joe McDonagh Cup, they playoff against the team that finished bottom in the Munster championship for the right to play in next year's Munster championship, thereby ensuring that only Munster teams compete in the Munster hurling championship.
  • Paddy Ryan joined the Munster Rugby academy, ultimately playing for the Munster Under-20 and Munster A sides.
  • Munster Sports Club is a sports complex in Munster which offer bowls, tennis and squash facilities. Munster is also home to the Glenmore Ski-Boat Club.
  • The constituent communities of Orthofen, Neuorthofen, Lindach, Münster und Neumünster are to be found within Egmating.

  • Rheinmünster is a municipality in the district of Rastatt in Baden-Württemberg in Germany. Formed in 1974, the town is an amalgamation of the former independent councils of Greffern, Schwarzach and Stollhofen. The name comes from the Rhine ("Rhein"), the river neighbouring the town and the cathedral (Münster), a Benedictine abbey that fell to secularisation in 1803.
  • The Münster Matthew is a printed version of the Gospel of Matthew, written in Hebrew published by Sebastian Münster in 1537 and dedicated to King Henry VIII of England. It is disputed as to whether Münster's prefatory language refers to an actual manuscript that he used. Münster's text closely resembles the "Du Tillet Matthew". Since the places where Münster altered the text are indeterminate, using the Münster text for textual criticism is problematic.
  • 1252—Countess Jutta von Vechta-Ravensberg sells her possessions to the Bishop of Münster. Meppen becomes part of the "Niederstift Münster" (i.e. Lower Prince-Bishopric of Münster).
  • In 1547 the Benedictines of the Altmünster Abbey (founded in 1083 by Conrad I and destroyed in 1543) took over the hospice. They had to build a new hospital there, which was completed in 1550. It turned out that the new building was too small and not suitable for the purpose it was intended to serve. The fact that the hospital was used as a plague hospital in 1626 prevented other patients from being cared for there. In 1667 the hospital was completely dismantled and the title 'parish church' was taken away from the church in favour of the new Neumünster Abbey built next to it. The financial situation was so bad that the provincial council and the city of Luxembourg asked the inhabitants to donate. This action was a great success and in 1669 new buildings could be erected in the rue Münster. It was at this time that for the first time there was direct mention of doctors and nurses who worked in the hospital.
  • The first documented mentions of the village name dates back to 1236 and 1238, when two Burgmannen of Landeck Castle, a Konrad of Ingenheim and a Heinrich von Ingenheim, acted as witnesses to a gift of goods from the town of | Münster] to the Klingenmünster Abbey. The knights of Ingenheim appear quite frequently in documents of this time up to the middle of the 15th century.

  • Due to its location before the gates, the collegiate was completely destroyed by Swedish attacks 1631 in the Thirty Years' War. , and is to be seen on the north side portal of Saint Peter as paintings, 1631 at the Swedish attacks completely destroyed. At the behest of Archbishop Johann Philipp von Schönborn a reconstruction was not considered. For over a century the collegiate community had no own building. It was only in 1749 Archbishop Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein decided for a new building. The collegiate was moved to its present location near the palace church St. Gangolph, later vanished in the Napoleonic era. At this location there was previously a romanesque church, the so-called ″Odenmünster″ or ″St. Mari underm Münster″. This has not been used since 1724 and was left to decay.
  • To distinguish it from other places with the name "Münster" ("minster"), the municipality of Klingenmünster was named after the stream.
  • The Benedictines then moved to the Hospice of Saint John, until a new abbey opened in 1606 under the abbot Petrus Roberti, not far from the old one in the Grund area. The original monastery (münster) thus became the Altmünster, and the new one became Neumünster Abbey.
  • The route is now part of DB's "Münster-Ostwestfalen" (Münster-East Westphalia) regional network (MOW), which has its headquarters in Münster.
  • Brüggemann is believed to have been born in Walsrode near Hanover around 1480 and to have perfected his art by travelling to Bremen, Münster, the lower Rhine and Antwerp before returning to Husum where he established his workshop. Few details of his life remain but there is a contract from 1523 between the parish council of Walsrode and Hans Brüggemann commissioning him to produce a small altarpiece for the local church. Brüggemann is remembered above all for his fine Bordesholm Altar, designed for Bordesholm Abbey near Neumünster but moved to Schleswig Cathedral in 1666. An inscription on the altarpiece states that it was completed in 1521. Other works include the figure of St George for St Mary's Church in Husum (now in the National Museum of Denmark) and the so-called "Little Bordesholm Altar", originally produced for Brügge/Holstein but later (in 1666) moved to Bordesholm Abbey Church to replace the great altarpiece. It can now be seen in the museum at Gottorf Castle. Other works ascribed to Brüggemann without any certainty include the wooden sculpture of St Christopher with the infant Jesus in Schleswig Cathedral and a few other altarpieces in Northern Germany. Brüggemann's work is said to have been inspired by Albrecht Dürer.

  • Münster Zentrum Nord is a railway station located in Münster, Germany.
  • The Münster rebellion ([...] , "Anabaptist dominion of Münster") was an attempt by radical Anabaptists to establish a communal sectarian government in the German city of Münster [...] then under the large Prince-Bishopric of Münster in the Holy Roman Empire.
  • Müller was born in Salmünster, Hesse, the youngest of seven children of the local cantor and teacher Damien Müller and his wife Augusta. After obtaining his "Abitur" degree, he served as a volunteer in World War I, interrupted by a serious injury. After the war he resolved to become a preacher; two of his brothers also were ordained Catholic priests. He went on to study theology at the University of Münster and proceeded with his brother Oskar to the Diocese of Hildesheim. Both attended the Hildesheim seminary from 1921 and received the holy orders from Bishop Joseph Ernst in the following year.
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© dict.cc English-German dictionary 2024
Enthält Übersetzungen von der TU Chemnitz sowie aus Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (nur Englisch/Deutsch).
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