Juel (other)
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Juel (other)
Juel is a Nordic surname and also a name of the family belonging Danish and Norwegian nobility. Notable people with this surname include: * Anne Juel, French-British physicist * Celine Juel (born 1993), Danish badminton player * Christian Juel (1855-1935), Danish mathematician * Dagfin Juel (1909-1985), Norwegian politician * Dagny Juel (1867-1901), Norwegian writer * Donald Juel (1942-2003), American educator * Erik Juel (1591-1657), Danish courtier * Jacob Juel (1744-1800), Norwegian timber trader * Jens Juel (other), several people * Karin Juel (1900-1976), Swedish artist * Inger Juel (1926–1979) Swedish actress * Maren Juel Maren Juel (18 March 1749 – 20 February 1815) was a Norwegian landowner, regarded as the wealthiest woman in Norway at her time. She was born in Christiania (now Oslo) as the daughter of timber trader and civil servant Hans Juel (1702–17 ... (1749-1815), Norwegian landowner * Niels Juel (1629-1697), Danish-Norwegian admiral * Povel ...
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Coat Of Arms Entrance Gate Roskilde Priory 2015-03-30-4769
A coat typically is an outer garment for the upper body as worn by either gender for warmth or fashion. Coats typically have long sleeves and are open down the front and closing by means of buttons, zippers, hook-and-loop fasteners, toggles, a belt, or a combination of some of these. Other possible features include collars, shoulder straps and hoods. Etymology ''Coat'' is one of the earliest clothing category words in English, attested as far back as the early Middle Ages. (''See also'' Clothing terminology.) The Oxford English Dictionary traces ''coat'' in its modern meaning to c. 1300, when it was written ''cote'' or ''cotte''. The word coat stems from Old French and then Latin ''cottus.'' It originates from the Proto-Indo-European word for woolen clothes. An early use of ''coat'' in English is coat of mail (chainmail), a tunic-like garment of metal rings, usually knee- or mid-calf length. History The origins of the Western-style coat can be traced to the sleeved, ...
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Danish Nobility
Danish nobility is a social class and a former estate in the Kingdom of Denmark. The nobility has official recognition in Denmark, a monarchy. Its legal privileges were abolished with the constitution of 1849. Some of the families still own and reside in castles or country houses. A minority of nobles still belong to the elite, and they are as such present at royal events where they hold court posts, are guests, or are objects of media coverage, for example Kanal 4's TV-hostess Caroline Fleming née Baroness Iuel-Brockdorff. Some of them own and manage companies or have leading positions within business, banking, diplomacy and NGOs. Historians divide the Danish nobility into two categories: ancient nobility ( da, uradel) and letter nobility ( da, brevadel) based on the way they achieved nobility. Another status based categorization distinguishes between higher and lower nobility ( da, højadel, lavadel). "Ancient nobility" refer to those noble families that are known from t ...
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Aristocracy Of Norway
Aristocracy of Norway refers to modern and medieval aristocracy in Norway. Additionally, there have been economical, political, and military elites thatrelating to the main lines of Norway's historyare generally accepted as nominal predecessors of the aforementioned. Since the 16th century, modern aristocracy is known as nobility ( no, adel). The very first aristocracy in today's Norway appeared during the Bronze Age (1800 BC500 BC). This bronze aristocracy consisted of several regional elites, whose earliest known existence dates to 1500 BC. Via similar structures in the Iron Age (400 BC793 AD), these entities would reappear as petty kingdoms before and during the Age of Vikings (7931066). Beside a chieftain or petty king, each kingdom had its own aristocracy. Between 872 and 1050, during the so-called unification process, the first national aristocracy began to develop. Regional monarchs and aristocrats who recognised King Harald I as their high king, would normally recei ...
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Anne Juel
Anne Juel is a physicist known for her research on fluid mechanics, the dynamics of surfaces in fluids, instability in fluid dynamics, viscous fingering, and convection. She has also studied the way ribbons curl when a scissor blade is run along them. She is Professor of Fluid Dynamics in the School of Physics & Astronomy at the University of Manchester, where she directs the Manchester Centre for Nonlinear Dynamics. Education and career Juel earned a Diplôme d'études universitaires générales in mathematics and physics at Pierre and Marie Curie University in 1991, a master's degree in physics jointly between Pierre and Marie Curie University and the École normale supérieure (Paris) in 1994, and a Diplôme d'études approfondies in the physics of liquids at Pierre and Marie Curie University in 1994. She earned a doctorate (D.Phil.) at the University of Oxford in 1998. After postdoctoral research at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Manchester, she join ...
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Celine Juel
Celine Juel (born 4 February 1993) is a Danish badminton player. Achievements BWF International Challenge/Series ''Women's doubles'' : BWF International Challenge tournament : BWF International Series tournament : BWF Future Series The BWF Future Series is a grade 3 and level 3 tournaments part of Continental Circuit of BWF tournaments along with International Challenge (level 1) and International Series (level 2), sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF) since 2007. ... tournament References External links * 1993 births Living people Danish female badminton players {{Denmark-badminton-bio-stub ...
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Christian Juel
Christian Sophus Juel (25 January 1855, Randers – 24 January 1935, Copenhagen) was a Danish mathematician, specializing in geometry. Education and career Juel went to school in Svendborg and from 1871 studied at the Technical University of Denmark. From 1876 he studied mathematics at the University of Copenhagen; there he received In 1879 his undergraduate degree in mathematics and in 1885 his Ph.D. (promotion) with thesis ''Inledning i de imaginaer linies og den imaginaer plans geometrie''. From 1894 he was a docent at the Technical University of Denmark, where he became in 1897 a full professor; during this time he also sometimes lectured at the University of Copenhagen. Juel did research on projective geometry, algebraic curves, polyhedra, and surfaces of revolution from ovals. In projective geometry, he generalized results of Karl von Staudt and independently obtained results similar to those of Corrado Segre. In addition to a monograph on projective geometry, Juel wrote tex ...
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Dagfin Juel
Dagfin Juel (23 February 1909 – 4 June 1985) was a Norwegian civil servant and politician for the Labour Party. He graduated as cand.oecon., in 1932. He was hired in the Ministry of Social Affairs in 1938, and was later promoted to assistant secretary. He moved to the Ministry of Trade in 1949, and was promoted from assistant secretary to assistant director in 1954. From 1956 to 1965, during the third and fourth cabinet Gerhardsen, Juel served as state secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister. The tenure was only interrupted by the cabinet Lyng The Lyng Cabinet governed Norway between 28 August 1963 and 25 September 1963. It was the first in 28 years not to be led by the Norwegian Labour Party. It was a centre-right coalition government of the Conservative Party, Centre Party, Chris ... administration for a month in 1963. After the fourth cabinet Gerhardsen fell in 1965, Juel continued his career as a civil servant. References 1909 births 1985 deaths Norw ...
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Dagny Juel
Dagny Juel-Przybyszewska (8 June 1867 – 5 June 1901) was a Norwegian writer, famous for her liaisons with various prominent artists, and for the dramatic circumstances of her death. She was the model for some of Edvard Munch's paintings. She had relationships with Munch and briefly with Swedish playwright and painter August Strindberg. In 1893, she married the Polish writer Stanisław Przybyszewski. Together they had two children. She was shot in a hotel room in Tbilisi, Georgia in 1901, three days before her thirty-fourth birthday. Family background Dagny was born in Kongsvinger, Norway, the second of four daughters of Doctor Hans Lemmich Juell and his wife Mindy (née Blehr). As a young woman Dagny changed the spelling of her name from 'Juell' to 'Juel'. The oldest sister, Gudrun, was beautiful and self-confident; Dagny was second born; third-born was a son, Hans Lemmich, who only lived one year; then came Astrid who was something of an invalid, who remained unmarried and ...
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Donald Juel
Donald Harrisville Juel (March 4, 1942 – February 23, 2003) was an American educator and New Testament scholar. Donald Harrisville Juel was born in Alton, Illinois. His education included B.A. from St. Olaf College (1964), B.D. from Luther Seminary (1968), and Ph.D. in New Testament from Yale University (1973). He was Richard J. Dearborn Professor of New Testament Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary from 1995 until his death. He had previously taught at Indiana University (1972–1974) and had served as Professor of New Testament at Luther Seminary (1978 to 1995). Juel was a member of the Society for the Study of the New Testament and the Society of Biblical Literature. In 2005, a ''Festschrift In academia, a ''Festschrift'' (; plural, ''Festschriften'' ) is a book honoring a respected person, especially an academic, and presented during their lifetime. It generally takes the form of an edited volume, containing contributions from the h ...'' was published in his ...
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Erik Juel
Erik Juel, often referred to as Erik Juel to Hundsbæk and Alsted (1591 – 13 February 1657), was a Danish courtier, seignory and Privy Councillor, the father of Admiral Niels Juel and of the politician and diplomat Jens Juel. Biography Erik Juel was born in 1591 at Alsted, the son of Peder Juel of the noble Danish Juel family and his wife Margrethe née Ulfstand. From 1610 to 1616 he held the office of secretary to the Danish Chancellery, with a break during the Kalmar War from 1611 to 1613 when he was ''Hofjunker''. During the siege of Kalmar he had a horse shot under him. After the war, in his capacity of secretary of the Chancellery, he was also appointed Canon of Ribe Cathedral. In 1623 he was appointed provincial judge in Jutland and also held several other local posts and offices. He was granted Gudum Convent by the Crown (until 1651). During the ''Kejserkrigen'', the Danish outshoot of the Thirty Years' War, he had to flee his estates in 1627, travelling to Zealand ...
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Jacob Juel
Jacob Juel (1744 – 21 April 1800) was a Norwegian timber trader and civil servant. He was born in Christiania as the son of timber trader and civil servant Hans Juel and Else Sophie Dorothea Rasch. He was the brother of Maren Juel Maren Juel (18 March 1749 – 20 February 1815) was a Norwegian landowner, regarded as the wealthiest woman in Norway at her time. She was born in Christiania (now Oslo) as the daughter of timber trader and civil servant Hans Juel (1702–17 .... He was assigned the title of ''Zahlkasserer'' in 1774. He also owned large land properties and a shipyard. He was arrested in 1784, after a deficience in the cash balance of 556,000 Rdlr, but eventually managed to escape and later lived in exile in Sweden. References 1744 births 1800 deaths Juel family Businesspeople from Oslo 18th-century Norwegian businesspeople Norwegian businesspeople in timber Norwegian civil servants Norwegian prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment Escapees fr ...
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Jens Juel (other)
Jens Juel may refer to: People * Jens Juel (diplomat) (1631–1700), Danish diplomat * Jens Juel (painter) (1745–1802), Danish painter * Jens Hermansson Juel (1580–1634), Danish nobleman * Jens Juel-Vind (1694-1726), Baron of Juellinge, Danish chamberlain and landowner * Jens Krag-Juel-Vind (1724-1776), Baron of Juellinge, Danish Supreme Court justice and landowner * Jens Juel (1897–1978), owner of Petersgaard Other uses * Jens Juel series, notes of Danish krone See also * Juel (other) * Jens (other) Jens may refer to: * Jens (given name), a list of people with the name * Jens (surname), a list of people * Jens, Switzerland, a municipality * 1719 Jens, an asteroid See also * Jensen (other) * Jenssi Joensuu (; krl, Jovensuu; ) i ...
{{disambiguation, hn=Juel, Jens ...
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