Hans Schröder (other)
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Hans Schröder (other)
Hans Schröder may refer to: * Hans Schröder (footballer) (1906–1970), German international footballer * Hans Schröder (artist) (1931–2010), German sculptor and painter See also * Schröder * Han Schröder (1918–1992), Dutch architect and educator * Hans Schrader (1869–1948), German archaeologist and art historian * Johann Samuel Schroeter (1753–1788), German pianist and composer * Johann Samuel Schröter (1735–1808), German pastor, conchologist, mineralogist and palaeontologist * Johann Hieronymus Schröter (1745–1816), German astronomer *Hans Wilhelm Schrøder Hans Wilhelm Schrøder (24 June 1810 – 14 April 1888) was a Danish architect. Biography Schrøder was born in Kalundborg, Denmark. He was the son of Carl Gram Schrøder and Anna Marie Margrethe Born Kihl. He attended the Royal Danish Academy ...
(24 June 1810 – 14 April 1888), Danish architect {{hndis, Schroder,Hans ...
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Hans Schröder (footballer)
Hans Schröder (4 September 1906 – 6 January 1970), nicknamed Hanne, was a German footballer who played as a forward and made one appearance for the Germany national team. Career Schröder earned his first and only cap for Germany on 18 April 1926 in a friendly against the Netherlands. The home match, which was played in Düsseldorf Düsseldorf is the capital city of North Rhine-Westphalia, the most populous state of Germany. It is the second-largest city in the state after Cologne and the List of cities in Germany with more than 100,000 inhabitants, seventh-largest city ..., finished as a 4–2 win for Germany. Personal life Schröder died on 6 January 1970 at the age of 63. Career statistics International References External links * * * * 1906 births 1970 deaths Footballers from Berlin German men's footballers Germany men's international footballers Men's association football forwards Tennis Borussia Berlin players 20th-century German sportsmen
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Hans Schröder (artist)
Hans Schröder (28 July 1931 in Saarbrücken – 6 April 2010) was a German sculptor and painter. Awards *1953 Auszeichnung des Hanauer Goldschmiedehauses *1958 Ehrenpreis der École Française *1982 Albert-Weisgerber-Preis für Bildende Kunst der Stadt St. Ingbert St. Ingbert (; sometimes spelled in full as Sankt Ingbert; or ''Dimbert'') is a town in the Saarpfalz district in Saarland, Germany with a population of 34,971 (2021). It is situated approximately 10 km north-east of Saarbrücken and 10&nb ... *2001 Saarländischer Verdienstorden Literature * Hans Schröder. Plastiken und Graphiken 1970 – 1980. München: Wolf, ca. 1980. 84 S., Abb. * Hans Schröder. usstellungskat. Moderne Galerie des Saarland-Museums Dillingen: Krüger, 1982. 131 S., zahlr. Abb. * Hans Schröder – Plastiken, Zeichnungen, Fotocollagen u. Gemälde 1950–1988. Freren: Luca Verlag, 1989. 272 S., zahlr. Abb. * Hans Schröder it einem Vorwort des Künstlers o.O., Verl. u. Jahr. 47 S., zah ...
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Schröder
Schröder (Schroeder) is a German language, German surname often associated with the Schröder family. Notable people with the surname include: * Arthur Schröder (1892–1986), German actor * Atze Schröder, stage name of German comedian Hubertus Albers * Bernd Schröder (born 1942), German football manager * Björn Schröder (curler), Björn Schröder (born 1968), German and Swiss curler and coach * Björn Schröder (born 1980), German cyclist * Bob Schroder (born 1944), American baseball player * Brigitte Schröder (1917–2000), German politician * Carly Schroeder (born 1990), American actress * Christa Schroeder (1908–1984), Adolf Hitler's personal secretary * Christian Mathias Schröder (1778–1860), German politician * Corina Schröder (born 1986), German footballer * Dennis Schröder (born 1993), German basketball player * Diana Schröder (born 1975), German artistic gymnast * Dominik Schröder (1910–1974), German ethnologist * Doris Schröder-Köpf (born 1963), German ...
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picture info

Han Schröder
Johanna Erna Else Schröder (16 July 1918 – 20 March 1992) was a Dutch architect and educator. After becoming one of the first women to practice architecture in the Netherlands, she opened her own architecture and interior design firm in Amsterdam. In the 1963, she immigrated to the United States where she went on to teach interior design at Adelphi University, Parsons School of Design, New York Institute of Technology and Virginia Commonwealth University."Han Schroeder Dies; Interior Designer, 1973"
''New York Times'', April 2, 1992. Retrieved 28 February 2012.


Early life and education

Schröder lived in the Schröder House in ...
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Hans Schrader
Johann (Hans) Hermann Schrader (15 February 1869, Stolp – 5 November 1948, Berlin) was a German classical archaeologist and art historian. He was a student at the Universities of Marburg and Berlin, where he was a pupil of Reinhard Kekulé von Stradonitz. After obtaining his doctorate, he, along with Theodor Wiegand, received a travel grant from the German Archaeological Institute (DAI). Subsequently, he relocated to Athens, where under the leadership of Wilhelm Dörpfeld, he took part in excavations at the Athenian Acropolis. Here, he was entrusted with processing ancient marble sculptures, a main theme of his future research.Schrader, Hans (eigentlich Johann Herrmann)
@ NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie
In 1896, under the leadership of

Johann Samuel Schroeter
Johann Samuel Schroeter or Schröter (2 March 1753 – 2 November 1788) was a German pianist and composer, active in London from 1772. Life Schröter was born in Guben to Johann Friedrich Schröter (1724–1811), an oboist for Augustus III of Poland, the Elector of Saxony, and his wife Marie Regine Hefter (died 1766); the family were brought up as musicians, with Corona Schröter being his elder sister. After 1763, they were in Leipzig and taught by Johann Adam Hiller. In 1771 and 1772, they were in London, where Johann Samuel Schröter remained. Initially, organist at the Royal German Chapel, Schröter became a protege of Johann Christian Bach. With connections to the court, he became a celebrated pianist. In 1782, after Bach's death, he became music-master to the Queen. He fell ill in 1786 and died in 1788. Works Through William Napier of Strand, London The Strand (commonly referred to with a leading "The", but formally without) is a major street in the City of Westmi ...
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Johann Samuel Schröter
Johann Samuel Schröter (25 February 1735, Rastenberg – 24 March 1808, Buttstädt) was a German Protestant pastor since 1763, who was also a conchologist, mineralogist and palaeontologist. He was a member of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. Schröter studied natural sciences as well as theology at the University of Jena. After finishing his studies he served as rector (academia), rector at the school in Dornburg. In 1763 he became a pastor in Blankenhain, Thangelstedt, and later on, a preacher in Weimar. At the time of his death, he was superintendent and first preacher in Buttstädt. Taxa described Taxa described by Johann Samuel Schröter include: * ''Eustrombus goliath'' (Schröter, 1805). Schröter J. S. (1805). "Berichtigungen für meine Einleitung in die Conchylienkenntniss nach Linné. Zwente Fortsetzung". ''Archiv für Zoologie und Zootomie'' 4(2137160. ''Strombus goliath'' is on pag139 * ''Isognomostoma isognomostomos'' (Schröter, 1784). Selected works * '' ...
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Johann Hieronymus Schröter
Johann Hieronymus Schröter (30 August 1745, Erfurt – 29 August 1816, Lilienthal) was a German astronomer. Life Schröter was born in Erfurt, and studied law at Göttingen University from 1762 until 1767, after which he started a ten-year-long legal practice. In 1777 he was appointed Secretary of the Royal Chamber of George III in Hanover, where he made the acquaintance of two of William Herschel's brothers. In 1779, he acquired a three-foot-long (91 cm, almost one metre) achromatic refractor with lens (50 mm) to observe the Sun, Moon, and Venus. Herschel's discovery of Uranus in 1781 inspired Schröter to pursue astronomy more seriously, and he resigned his post and became chief magistrate and district governor of Lilienthal. In 1784, he paid 31 Reichsthaler (about 600 Euros of today) for a Herschel reflector of 122 cm focal length and 12 cm aperture. He quickly gained a good name from his observational reports in journals, but was not satisfie ...
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