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Brot Monroe
Brot may refer to: * ''Brot'' (TV series), Icelandic 2019 TV series * Brot., abbreviation in botanical name citations for Portuguese botanist Félix de Avelar Brotero * Bernd das Brot, "Berndt the Bread", a puppet character on the German children's television channel KI.KA *'' Das Brot'', a short story by Wolfgang Borchert Surname * Alphonse Brot (1807–1895), French author and playwright * Auguste Louis Brot (1821-1896), malacologist from Switzerland *Tzvika Brot Tzvika Brot (; born May 5, 1980) is the mayor of Bat Yam, Israel. He is a strategic advisor and former senior correspondent for Army Radio and Yedioth Ahronoth. Biography Tzvika Brot was born and raised in Bat Yam, the youngest son of Tova and Da ..., mayor of Bat Yam, Israel See also

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Brot (TV Series)
''The Valhalla Murders'' ( is, Brot, literally "violation") is an eight-episode police procedural television series produced in Iceland, originally airing there in 2019, then released worldwide in 2020 on Netflix and airing for free on BBC Four in the UK. This is the second Icelandic series to be featured on Netflix, ''Trapped'' (''Ófærð)'' being the first. The plot is loosely based on a real-life incident. As described in an article on the website MEAWW, "In the late 1940s, an almost similar event took place in remote Iceland. A state-run institution ... housed troubled, young boys, aged between seven and 14, where they were beaten and abused by the staff. Although in reality there was no murder, per se, as shown in the series, it caused quite a noise and the boys were eventually compensated in monetary terms." Cast * Nína Dögg Filippusdóttir as Kata * Björn Thors as Arnar * Sigurður Skúlason as Magnus * Bergur Ebbi Benediktsson as Erlingur * Tinna Hrafnsdóttir as ...
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Brot
Brot may refer to: * ''Brot'' (TV series), Icelandic 2019 TV series * Brot., abbreviation in botanical name citations for Portuguese botanist Félix de Avelar Brotero * Bernd das Brot, "Berndt the Bread", a puppet character on the German children's television channel KI.KA *'' Das Brot'', a short story by Wolfgang Borchert Surname * Alphonse Brot (1807–1895), French author and playwright * Auguste Louis Brot (1821-1896), malacologist from Switzerland *Tzvika Brot Tzvika Brot (; born May 5, 1980) is the mayor of Bat Yam, Israel. He is a strategic advisor and former senior correspondent for Army Radio and Yedioth Ahronoth. Biography Tzvika Brot was born and raised in Bat Yam, the youngest son of Tova and Da ..., mayor of Bat Yam, Israel See also

* {{disambig, surname ...
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Bernd Das Brot
Bernd das Brot ( en, Bernd the bread) is a puppet character, star mascot and cult figure of the German children's television channel KI.KA, currently featured in the programs ''Bernd das Brot'', '' Bravo Bernd'', and the KI.KA late night loop program. Role on KI.KA Bernd is a depressed, grumpy, curmudgeonly, constantly bad-tempered, surly, fatalistic, melancholic loaf of pullman bread speaking in a deep, gloomy baritone. He is small, rectangular and golden brown with hands directly attached to his body, rings around his eyes and a thin-lipped mouth. According to himself, he belongs to the species "Homo Brotus (= 'Breadus') Depressivus". His favourite activities include staring at his south wall at home, learning the pattern of his woodchip wallpaper by heart, reading his favourite magazine ''The Desert and You'', and enlarging his collection of the most boring railway tracks on video. Bernd sympathizes firstly with himself. His favorite expression is ''Mist.'', used in much ...
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Das Brot
"The Bread" ("Das Brot") is a short story by Wolfgang Borchert. The story takes places in 1945 post-war Germany where food was in short supply. Background Borchert wrote the story in 1946. The story was published for the first time in 1947 in a literature magazine called '' Das Karussell''. Plot Shortly after World War II in Germany, an older woman wakes up in the dark of the night and catches her husband who is eating an extra slice of their rationed bread. They don't talk about what happened and a perplexed conversation takes place. They end up with the fact that there was nothing and they both woke up because of the wind outside and the sound of the rain gutter. They go back to bed. While they are trying to sleep, she hears her husband secretly eating more bread. The next evening she prepares dinner and gives him an extra slice of her ration of bread under the pretext that in the evening she can't take the bread all that well. They avoid eye contact, after a while she sits do ...
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Alphonse Brot
Charles Alphonse Brot (12 April 1807 – 3 January 1895) was a prolific French author and playwright. Life Charles Alphonse Brot was born on 12 April 1807 in Paris. He studied at the Lycée Bonaparte (now the Lycée Condorcet), in the 9th arrondissement of Paris. Brot became a member of the romantic literary group ''les Jeunes-France'' (Young France), sometimes called ''les Bouzingos'', which also included Théophile Gautier, Gérard de Nerval, Jules Vabre, Petrus Borel, Philothée O’Neddy, Augustus McKeat, Aloysius Bertrand, Joseph Bouchardy, Louis Boulanger, Achille Devéria, Eugène Devéria, Célestin Nanteuil and Jehan de Seigneur. He wrote many well-received dramas. In 1836 a critic wrote of his work, "M. Alphonse Brot furiously loves women swimming in the ether. His heroines are always called Arièle, Stella; they are pure, they are heavenly, and the best eyes in the world would discover not the slightest blemish on their souls, or even on their white robes. ... His t ...
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Auguste Louis Brot
Auguste Louis Brot (September 18, 1821 ''Sevue Suisse de zoologies'', vol. 4, 1896-189"Auguste Louss Brot"/ref>- August 30, 1896) was a Swiss malacologist ( conchologist). ''The American Naturalist'', March 1897p.270/ref> After several years of studies in Zurich, Paris and Berlin, he earned the degree of Doctor in Medicine in 1845. Soon he became deeply interested in natural history, abandoned medicine, returned to Geneva and became a malacologist, with a special interest in terrestrial and aquatic molluscs. For over 40 years he was associated with the Natural History Museum of Geneva. He was an elected correspondent (1887) of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, formerly the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, is the oldest natural science research institution and museum in the Americas. It was founded in 1812, by many of the leading nat .... He is a conchological taxon authority and the name ...
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Malacologist
Malacology is the branch of invertebrate zoology that deals with the study of the Mollusca (mollusks or molluscs), the second-largest phylum of animals in terms of described species after the arthropods. Mollusks include snails and slugs, clams, and cephalopods, along with numerous other kinds, many of which have shells. One division of malacology, conchology, is devoted to the study of mollusk shells. Malacology derives . Fields within malacological research include taxonomy, ecology Ecology () is the study of the relationships between living organisms, including humans, and their physical environment. Ecology considers organisms at the individual, population, community, ecosystem, and biosphere level. Ecology overlaps wi ... and evolution. Applied malacology studies medical, veterinary, and agricultural applications; for example, mollusks as vectors of disease, as in schistosomiasis. Archaeology employs malacology to understand the evolution of the climate, the biota ...
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