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Bähr
Bähr (transliterated Baehr) is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Barbara Baehr (born Hoffmann, 1953), German research scientist, entomologist, arachnologist, and spider taxonomist * Bettina Bähr-Losse (born 1967), German lawyer and politician * Eduardo Bähr (born 1940), Honduran writer and actor * Ferdinand Baehr (1822–1892), American politician * George Bähr (1666–1738), German architect * Herman C. Baehr (1866–1942), American politician * Johann Bähr (1655–1700), Austrian author, court official and composer * Johann Christian Felix Baehr (1798–1872), German philologist * Johann Karl Bähr (1801–1869), German painter and writer * Klaus-Dieter Bähr (born 1941), German rower * Ludwig Baehr, German officer, diplomat and artist * Markus Bähr (born 1974), German former professional footballer * Martin Baehr (1943–2019), German entomologist * Mathias Bähr (born 1960), German neurologist * Otto Bähr (1817–1895), German legal scholar ...
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Mathias Bähr
Mathias Bähr (born 1960) is a German neurologist. Career Mathias Bähr joined the Medical School in Tübingen, in the South of Germany, where he passed his Medical Licensing Examination in 1985. He obtained his MD in neuropathology at the Institute for Brain Research Tübingen in 1986 supervised by the late Prof. Jürgen Peiffer. For his initial training in Neurology he moved to the Department of Neurology at the University Hospital Düsseldorf (with Prof. H.J.Freund). In 1987 he obtained a Research Fellowship from the German Research Council (DFG) for which he joined the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in Tübingen (with Prof. F. Bonhoeffer). In 1988 a Max-Planck-Fellowship was granted and allowed him to join the Group of the late Prof. R.P. Bunge (Department of Neurobiology) at the Washington University in St. Louis . Back in Tübingen in 1989 he continued his training in Neurology at the University Hospital Tübingen (with Prof. J.Dichgans) and built up his own ...
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Otto Bähr
Otto Bähr (2 June 1817 – 17 February 1895) was a German legal scholar and liberal parliamentarian. He supported the view, not always well accepted by governments, that since the State was part of society, it must be judged in the same courts as individual citizens. Life Early years Bähr was born in Fulda, then as now a small historic town slightly more than 100 km (65 miles) north-east of Frankfurt in a region of the former Holy Roman Empire, at the time still with a somewhat ambiguous constitutional status, known as the Electorate of Hesse. His father was an army doctor. He devoted his own student studies to Jurisprudence and Cameralism (''Kameralwissenschaften'') at Göttingen and Marburg. Legal career In 1848 Otto Bähr was a member of a commission established to codify the administration of civil justice in the Electorate of Hesse. In 1844 he had obtained a post as a junior Hugh Court judge (''Obergerichts-Assessor''), and in 1849 he became a more senior Hi ...
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George Bähr
George Bähr (15 March 1666 – 16 March 1738) was a German architect. Life George Bähr was born into a poor family in Fürstenwalde (now a part of Geising, Saxony), the son of a weaver. The village priest, however, helped pay for his education, and Bähr was able to become a carpenter's apprentice in Lauenstein, Saxony. In 1690, Bähr went to Dresden to start work as a carpenter. His dream was to go to Italy and see the famous buildings there, so in his spare time he studied mechanics, calling himself both an artist and a mechanic, and designing not only castles and palaces but also sketches of organs. In 1705, aged 39, Bahr was named Dresden's City Master Carpenter, although he did not even have a master carpenter's certificate. One of Bähr's main goals was to modernise the city's churches. He believed that the existing buildings did no justice to Protestant church services in particular. His first building was the parish church in the Loschwitz area of Dresden, a building ...
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Johann Karl Bähr
Johann Karl Bähr (1801–1869) was a German painter and writer. Life Bähr was born in Riga on 18 August 1801. He studied under Matthaei in Dresden and completed his art education with a visit to Italy in 1827–29. He married in Dresden, then spent some time back in Riga, before settling permanently in Dresden in 1832. He was made a Professor at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts in 1840. Enthusiastic about poetry, he moved in the circle of Ludwig Tieck in Dresden, and was a close friend of Julius Mosen. He then worked again in Riga and finally went to Dresden for good in 1836. Here he taught at the Art Academy from 1840, where he was appointed professor in 1846. Bähr was in demand as a portraitist, and also painted some historical works. He wrote several books: ''Die Gräber der Liven'' (1850), a report on some archaeological excavations in Livonia which he undertook in 1846; ''Lectures on Dante's Divine Comedy'' (1853); ''Lectures on the Colour Theories of Newton and Goethe ...
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Bettina Bähr-Losse
Bettina Bähr-Losse (born 28 January 1967) is a German lawyer and politician (SPD). From 1 October 2016 until the end of the 2017 legislative period, she was a member of the Bundestag. Early life and career Bettina Bähr-Losse was born in Braunschweig, where she obtained her early education at the Jugenddorf-Christophorusschule Braunschweig. She went on to study law at the universities in Regensburg, Göttingen and Bonn. After the legal clerkship in the district of the Higher Regional Court of Cologne she is a lawyer in Sankt Augustin with family law as a focal point of her law practice.Bettina Bähr-Losse, SPD
bundestag.de


Political career

Bähr-Losse is deputy leader of the SPD parliamentary group in the district council of

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Eduardo Bähr
Eduardo Bähr (born 1940 in Tela, Honduras) is a Honduran writer, scriptwriter and actor. In 1996, along with Mexico's Octavio Paz, Spain's Rafael Alberti, and Nicaragua's Ernesto Cardenal, he was one of 50 intellectuals awarded the Gabriela Mistral Medal by the government of Chile. For many years he taught Honduran and Latin-American Literature at the National University of Honduras, where he also directed the University Theater Company. Segments of his novel ''El cuento de la guerra'' (The War Story) have been translated into English, French and German. The book's theme is the armed conflict between Honduras and El Salvador in 1969. Bähr is a member of "Artistas de la Gente", a collective of five artists of different generations and disciplines who develop critical political art. He is currently living in Tegucigalpa, where he runs a non-profit editorial service to promote publication among low-income Honduran and Central American artists and students. Bibliography 1969, ...
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Klaus-Dieter Bähr
Klaus-Dieter Bähr (born 9 September 1941) is a German rower who represented East Germany. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City Mexico City ( es, link=no, Ciudad de México, ; abbr.: CDMX; Nahuatl: ''Altepetl Mexico'') is the capital and largest city of Mexico, and the most populous city in North America. One of the world's alpha cities, it is located in the Valley o ... with the men's eight where they came seventh. References 1941 births Living people Rowers from Berlin German male rowers Olympic rowers of East Germany Rowers at the 1968 Summer Olympics World Rowing Championships medalists for East Germany European Rowing Championships medalists {{Germany-rowing-bio-stub ...
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Markus Bähr
Markus Bähr (born 10 September 1974) is a German former professional footballer who played as a midfielder A midfielder is an outfield position in association football. Midfielders may play an exclusively defensive role, breaking up attacks, and are in that case known as defensive midfielders. As central midfielders often go across boundarie .... References 1974 births Living people German footballers Association football midfielders Germany youth international footballers Karlsruher SC players 1. FC Köln players SC Pfullendorf players Bundesliga players 2. Bundesliga players {{Germany-footy-midfielder-stub ...
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Baer
Baer (or Bär, from german: bear, links=no) or Van Baer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Baer * Alan Baer, American tuba player * Arthur "Bugs" Baer (1886–1969), American journalist and humorist * Buddy Baer (1915–1986), American boxer * Byron Baer (1929–2007), American politician * Carl Baer (1918–1996), American basketball player * Clara Gregory Baer (1863–1938), American inventor of netball, Newcomb ball and author of first rules of women's basketball * Dale Baer (1950–2021), American character animator * Donald M. Baer (1931–2002), American developmental psychologist * Eric Baer (born 1932), American polymer researcher * George A. Baer (1903–1994), German/Swiss/American bookbinder * George Baer Jr. (1763–1834), American politician * George Frederick Baer (1842–1914), American lawyer and executive * Harold Baer Jr. (1933–2014), American judge * Jack Baer (1914–2002), American college baseball coach * Jack Baer (art dealer) (1924†...
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Johann Christian Felix Baehr
Johann Christian Felix Baehr or Bähr (June 13, 1798 – November 29, 1872) was a German philologist. Life Born at Darmstadt, he studied at the Gymnasium and the University of Heidelberg, where he was appointed professor of classical philology in 1823, chief librarian in 1832, and on the retirement of G. F. Creuzer, became director of the philological seminary. He died at Heidelberg. His earliest works were editions of Plutarch's ''Alcibiades'' (1822), ''Philopoemen, Flamininus, Pyrrhus'' (1826), the fragments of Ctesias (1824), and Herodotus (1830–1835, 1855–1862). But most important of all were his works on Roman literature Latin literature includes the essays, histories, poems, plays, and other writings written in the Latin language. The beginning of formal Latin literature dates to 240 BC, when the first stage play in Latin was performed in Rome. Latin literature ... and humanistic studies in the Middle Ages: ''Geschichte der römischen Litteratur'' ("History of Roma ...
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Johann Beer
Johann Beer (also spelled Bähr, Baer, or Behr, Latinized as Ursus or Ursinus; (28 February 1655, in Sankt Georgen – 6 August 1700, in Weissenfels) was an Austrian author, court official and composer. Biography Beer was born in Austria to Protestant parents. In 1676 he entered the service of Augustus, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels as a countertenor. In 1700 he died, aged 45, as the result of a hunting accident. His comic writings are reminiscent of Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen (1621/22 â€“ 17 August 1676) was a German author. He is best known for his 1669 picaresque novel ''Simplicius Simplicissimus'' (german: link=no, Der abenteuerliche Simplicissimus) and the accompanyi .... His work of music theory ''Musikalische Discurse'' reveals German baroque performance practice. Works and editions Comic novels * ''Der Simplicianische Welt-Kucker.'' The Simplician World-Observer 4 Vols. Halle and Saale 1677–79 * ''Der Aben ...
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Behr
Behr is a given name and surname that derives from the German ''Bär'' (''bear''). Older forms of the name, ''Bela'' and ''Belo'' (related to the old High German ''Belo''), occur in the Memorbuch. The diminutive forms ''Baeril'' ''(Berel)'' and ''Baerush'' ''(Berush)'' are used among Polish and Russian Jews. An additional origin of the name is from Middle Dutch ''baer'' meaning ''naked'' or ''bare'', possibly indicating someone who wore rags. Given name * Behr Perlhefter (1650–1713), Jewish scholar and rabbi Surname * Barbara Behr, photographer, film director and magazine editor * Bernd Behr (born 1976), German artist * Bill Behr (1919–1997), American professional basketball player * Bram Behr (1951–1982), Surinamese journalist * Carel Jacobus Behr (1812–1895), Dutch painter, watercolorist and draftsman * Carl Behr (1874–1943), German ophthalmologist * Carlos Boloña Behr (1950–2018), Peruvian politician * Christoph Behr (born 1989), German footballer * Dani Behr ...
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