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Creutz Vapp
Creutz may refer to: People * Creutz family, a family in the Swedish and Finnish nobility * Gustaf Philip Creutz (1731–1785), Swedish statesman, diplomat and poet * Max Creutz (1876–1932), German art historian and museum director * Michael Creutz (born 1944), American theoretical physicist * Rudolf Creutz (1896–1980), Austrian Nazi and high-ranking member of the SS * Edvard Sylou-Creutz Edvard Sylou-Creutz (7 May 1881 – 11 May 1945) was a Norwegian classical pianist, composer and radio personality, who was especially active in Nazi-controlled radio in Germany and occupied Norway between March 1940 and the autumn of 1942. ... (1881–1945), Norwegian classical pianist, composer and radio personality Science * Creutz-Taube Ion, a metal complex with the formula Ru(NH3)5]2(C4H4N2)5+ See also * Kreuz (other) * Kreutz (other) {{disambiguation ...
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Creutz Family
Creutz () is a Swedish noble family with the title ''friherre'' (roughly equivalent to baron) with its roots in Swedish-governed Finland. The family, both a branch of counts and a baronial branch, continues in Finland and Sweden.''Creutz'' (Nordisk familjebok)''Creutz'' (Suomen Ritarihuone)


History

The Creutz family is attested in source from the late 15th century. They had their seat at the manor of Malmgård in Pernå, eastern

Gustaf Philip Creutz
Count Gustaf Philip Creutz (; 1 May 1731 in Anjala, Finland – 30 October 1785 in Stockholm), was a Swedish statesman, diplomat and poet. Biography Creutz was born in Finland and after concluding his studies at the Royal Academy of Turku he received a post in the Privy Council Chancery at Stockholm in 1751. Here he met Count Gustaf Fredrik Gyllenborg, with whom his name is indissolubly connected. They were closely allied with Hedvig Charlotta Nordenflycht, and their works were published in common; to their own generation they seemed equal in fame, but posterity has given the palm of genius to Creutz. His greatest work is contained in the 1762 volume, the idyll of ''Atis och Camilla''; the exquisite little pastoral entitled ''Daphne'' was published at the same time, and Gyllenborg was the first to proclaim the supremacy of his friend. In 1763, Creutz practically closed his poetical career; he went to Spain as ambassador, and after three years to Paris in the same capacity unti ...
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Max Creutz
Max Creutz (8 December 1876 – 13 March 1932) was a German art historian and curator of the Museum für Angewandte Kunst Köln and the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Museum in Krefeld where he worked from 1922 until his death. In Cologne, in 1914 he was instrumental in the first exhibition of the Deutscher Werkbund, Deutsche Werkbundausstellung. In Krefeld, he succeeded in acquiring modern art exhibits, including works by Max Ernst, Wassily Kandinsky, and Alexej von Jawlensky. He included a substantial collection of art, crafts and design from the Bauhaus. Life and work Creutz was born in Aachen and attended the Progymnasium in Jülich, and then the Gymnasium in Düren, where he graduated in 1897. His father, also Max Creutz was Königlicher Kreis-Rentmeister. Creutz studied art history in Vienna, and attended a school for painting. In Munich and then at the Humboldt University of Berlin he studied art history and philosophy, and trained himself in painting. Meanwhile, he traveled exten ...
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Michael Creutz
Michael John Creutz (born November 24, 1944) is an American theoretical physicist at Brookhaven National Laboratory specializing in lattice gauge theory and computational physics. Background Creutz was born in 1944 in Los Alamos, New Mexico. His father, Edward Creutz, was also a physicist and was working on the Manhattan Project to help build the atomic bomb at the time of Michael's birth. Creutz graduated with honor with a bachelor's degree in physics from Caltech in 1966. He did his graduate work at Stanford University under a NSF Graduate Fellowship, graduating in 1970. His thesis was done at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center and his adviser was the noted physicist Sidney Drell. After his graduation he served shortly as a research associate at SLAC before moving to the Center for Theoretical Physics at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he was a fellow from 1970-1972. In 1972 he joined the High Energy Theory Group at Brookhaven National Laboratory, becoming a ...
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Rudolf Creutz
Rudolf Creutz (6 April 1896 – 8 July 1980) was an Austrian Nazi and a high-ranking member of the SS during World War II. He was involved in the implementation of racial resettlement programs in the Occupied Territories and was convicted of war crimes by the Allies in 1948. Life Rudolf Creutz was born in the city of Trieste on 6 April 1896, when it was part of Austria-Hungary. He married the Countess Marie Margarethe Christiane Rességuier von Miremont and the couple had one son. Creutz became a member of the Nazi party (member no. 2,367,675) and the SS (member no. 77,813), reaching the rank of SS-Brigadeführer on 9 November 1943. Ernst Klee: ''Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich – Wer war was vor und nach 1945.'' 2nd Edition (Frankfurt am Main, 2007) p. 96 Creutz became a deputy of Ulrich Greifelt, an SS Major General and Chief of Staff of the ''Reichskommissariat for the Consolidation of German Nationhood'' (german: Reichskommissariat für die Festigung des deutsch ...
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Edvard Sylou-Creutz
Edvard Sylou-Creutz (7 May 1881 – 11 May 1945) was a Norwegian classical pianist, composer and radio personality, who was especially active in Nazi-controlled radio in Germany and occupied Norway between March 1940 and the autumn of 1942. Pre-World War II life and career Born in Kristiania (present-day Oslo) and named Edvard Kreutz, he changed his surname in the early 1900s. Initially, he used "Sylow-Kreutz" and "Sylou Kreutz" interchangeably. He was however sued by Colonel Carl Christian Weinwich Sylow in 1911, who claimed that he did not have the right to use the Sylow family name. Kristiania City Court concluded the case on 2 October 1911, with the verdict being that, according to the Norwegian name law, he could not use the Sylow name. The court found that he would however be allowed to use the name Sylou, which he claimed had been the surname of an early 19th-century ancestor who had emigrated to Norway. He studied in Norway under the supervision of Agathe Backer-Gr ...
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Kreuz (other)
Kreuz is the German word for "Cross", and may refer to: People *Al Kreuz (1898–1975), American football fullback * Arnošt Kreuz (1912–1974), Czech football forward * Emil Kreuz (1867–1932), German violinist, violist, teacher, conductor and composer *Erwin Kreuz (born 1927), German tourist who achieved international celebrity in the late 1970s for mistaking the city of Bangor, Maine for San Francisco, California *Markus Kreuz (born 1977), German football player who plays for WAC St. Andrä. *Wilhelm Kreuz (born 1949), former Austrian footballer Places Towns *Kreuz, historic German name for the town of Krzyż Wielkopolski, Poland * Hohes Kreuz, a municipality in Thuringia, Germany * a village in the municipality of Maitenbeth, Germany * a village in the municipality of Preetz, Schleswig-Holstein *a village in the municipality of Velden, Bavaria * Krížová Ves, German: Kreuz, a village in north Slovakia Autobahn interchanges *Frankfurter Kreuz, an Autobahn interchange in ...
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