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Reimann
Reimann (Hebrew: ריימן) is a German and Jewish surname, also Reiman, Reinman, Rhinemann. It is also commonly associated with Ashkenazi Jews. Notable people with the surnames include: * Aribert Reimann (1936–2024), German composer and pianist * Antonín Reimann (1888–1976), Czech American architect * Brigitte Reimann (1933–1973), German writer * Brody Reiman (born 1970), American artist of the collaborative team castaneda/reiman * Carola Reimann (born 1967), German politician * Gotthold Reimann (1859–1932), Australian teacher of music * Günter Reimann (1904–2005), German Jewish economist * Hans Reimann (writer) (1889–1969), German writer * Hans-Georg Reimann (born 1941), East German racewalker * Hobart Reimann (1897–1986), American virologist and physician * Heinrich Reimann (1850–1906), Musicologist * Joey Reiman (born 1953), American Jewish advertising businessman and author * Katya Reimann (born 1965), Novelist * Leonid Reiman (born 1957), Russian politic ...
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Hobart Reimann
Hobart Ansteth Reimann (1897–1986) was an American virologist and physician. Reimann made contributions to medicine with his 1938 landmark article on atypical pneumonia (the "first description of virus pneumonia"); and articles on periodic disease and the common cold (1948). He was active in the testing of streptomycin against typhoid, with "the first publicly reported successful experiments." From 1935 through 1962, he wrote The Journal of the American Medical Association's annual review of ''Significant Publications in the Field of Infectious Diseases,'' providing the AMA's synopsis of progress in the field. Post 1962, he continued this work in the ''Archives of Internal Medicine'' and the ''British Postgraduate Medical Journal'' through to 1975, "40 consecutive Annual Reviews." Post WWII, he was one of the early voices to speak against the overuse of and misuse of antibiotics, and he testified before the US Senate on this subject in the early 1960s. Life and career E ...
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Aribert Reimann
Aribert Reimann (born 4 March 1936) is a German composer, pianist and accompanist, known especially for his literary operas. His version of Shakespeare's ''King Lear'', the opera ''Lear (opera), Lear'', was written at the suggestion of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who sang the title role. His opera ''Medea (Reimann), Medea'' after Grillparzer's play premiered in 2010 at the Vienna State Opera. He was a professor of contemporary Lied in Hamburg and Berlin. In 2011, he was awarded the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize for his life's work. Life and career Reimann was born in Berlin. He studied musical composition, composition, counterpoint and piano at the Berlin University of the Arts, Musikhochschule Berlin with Boris Blacher and Ernst Pepping, among others. During his studies, he worked as a repetiteur at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Städtische Oper. His first appearances as a pianist and accompanist were in 1957. In the early 1970s, he became a member of the Akademie der Künste in Berli ...
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William Reimann
William Page Reimann (born 1935) is an American sculptor and arts educator, known for his large plexiglas and steel sculptures, stonework, metalwork, and figurative graphite and ink drawings. He was among the handful of "pioneering" sculptors who brought plastic materials to the New York art scene in the 1960s. In stone, his notable public works include the Radnor Gateway Project for the Blue Route in Radnor, PA, and the twenty-four granite panel series of the Piers Park ''Commons Pavilion'' in East Boston, MA. He taught design, sculpture, and drawing at Harvard University, in Cambridge, MA (1968-2002). His works are the permanent collection of MOMA, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art (J.D. Hatch Collection of American Drawings), the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and numerous private collections. Early life and education Reimann was born in Minneapolis, MN, to Hobart Reimann and Dorothy Sampson. He attended Yale College, graduating in 1957, and joi ...
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Gotthold Reimann
Immanuel Gotthold Reimann RAM, CMB (13 January 1859 – 19 March 1932), generally known as I. G. Reimann or Gotthold Reimann, was a South Australian musician and teacher of music. He founded the Adelaide College of Music, which became the Elder Conservatorium. History Reimann was born in Hahndorf, South Australia, second son of Bertha Leontine Reimann, née Schröder, and (Karl Friedrich) Eduard Reimann, a farmer, who arrived in South Australia on the ''Emmy'' from Hamburg in January 1850. He began studying singing and piano under T. W. Boehm at his Hahndorf Academy, and Mrs. B. J. Price. In 1880 he went to Berlin, where he continued his studies under Theodor Kullak and Hans Bischoff, and later at the Berlin Conservatorium under Xaver Scharwenka.Annegrit Laubenthal, 'Reimann, Immanuel Gotthold (1859–1932)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/reimann-immanuel-gotthold-8179/text14301, ...
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Max Reimann
Max Reimann (31 October 1898 – 18 January 1977) was a German communist politician and member of the Bundestag. Biography Reimann was born in Elbing (Elbląg), West Prussia (today Poland). He worked as a riveter at the Schichau yards in 1912–16 and was drafted into the German Army in the First World War. In 1913, he became a member of the German Metal Workers' Union and the Socialist Labourers Youth, in 1916 of the Spartakusbund. In 1918 he was sentenced to 1 year imprisonment for his participation in an anti-war demonstration at Elbing throughout the German Revolution of 1918–19. After his release from prison Reimann moved to Ahlen in 1920 to work as a miner, joined the German Coalminer Union and became a full-time official of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1921. Reimann fought against the French Occupation of the Ruhr in 1923 and was imprisoned for a short time. Throughout the 1920s, he held several positions within the Revolutionäre Gewerkschafts Opposition ...
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Robert Reimann (United States Navy Officer)
Robert Theodore Reimann Sr. (August 17, 1936 - June 29, 2014) was a U.S. Navy rear admiral. Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he graduated from the Boston University Questrom School of Business, College of Business Administration in 1958. He then attended the Officer Candidate School (U.S. Navy), Officer Candidate School at Naval Station Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, and was Officer (armed forces), commissioned into the United States Naval Reserve as an Ensign (rank), ensign on May 1, 1959. Reimann's first assignment was aboard the destroyer escort USS Gainard, ''Gainard'' (DD-706). He served as executive officer on the destroyer escort USS Van Voorhis, ''Van Voorhis'' (DE-1028) and the destroyer . Reimann was given command of the destroyer escort from July 1970 to January 1972 and the destroyer escort USS Garcia, ''Garcia'' (DE-1040) from April 1972 to August 1973. After attending the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island and serving a shore assignment in Coronado, Califo ...
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Carola Reimann
Carola Reimann (born 25 August 1967) is a German politician of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) who served as State Minister for Social Affairs, Health, and Equality in the cabinet of Minister-President Stephan Weil of Lower Saxony from 2017 to 2021. She previously represented Braunschweig in the Bundestag from 2002 until 2017. Early life and education Reimann has a doctorate in biotechnology from Technical University of Braunschweig. Political career Career in national politics In parliament, Reimann was a member of the Committee on Health (2000–2013) and the Committee on the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (2000–2002). She served as her parliamentary group's spokesperson on health policy from 2005 until 2009. From 2008 until 2017, Reimann was part of the leadership team of the SPD in Lower Saxony, under successive chairs Garrelt Duin (2007–2010), Olaf Lies (2010–2012) and Stephan Weil (2012–2017). Ahead of the 2009 elections, German foreign minist ...
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Brigitte Reimann
Brigitte Reimann (born 21 July 1933, Burg bei Magdeburg, d. 22 February 1973, East Berlin) was a German writer who is best known for her posthumously published novel ''Franziska Linkerhand''. Life Brigitte Reimann was the daughter of Willi Reimann (1904–1990) and Elisabeth (1905–1992) and the oldest of four children. She wrote her first amateur play at the age of fifteen. In 1950 she was awarded the first prize in an amateur drama competition by the Berlin theater Volksbühne. After graduating with the Abitur, Reimann worked as teacher, bookseller and reporter.Meid, Volker: Reclams Lexikon der deutschsprachigen Autoren, Stuttgart, 2001 Following a miscarriage in 1954, Reimann attempted suicide. In 1960 she started to work at the brown coal mine Schwarze Pumpe, where she and her second husband Siegfried Pitschmann headed a circle of writing workers. There, she wrote the narrative ''Ankunft im Alltag'', which is regarded as a masterpiece of socialist realism. She received th ...
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Günter Reimann
Hans Steinicke (November 13, 1904 – February 5, 2005), better known by his pen-name Günter Reimann, was a German-born economist and writer. He was noted as founder and editor of ''International Reports'', a New York-based weekly publication he created in 1947 and sold to the London Financial Times in 1983, and author of ''The Vampire Economy: Doing Business under Fascism'' (1939) about what he described as the onerous business policy of the Nazi Party and its disastrous effects on the Nazi economy. Prior to World War II, Reimann was a member of the Communist Party of Germany and at the forefront of the underground resistance to Adolf Hitler within Nazi Germany. Biography Reimann was born in Angermünde (near Berlin), German Empire: the Steinickes were a bourgeois German-Jewish family. Drawn to the left-wing intelligentsia at an early age in Berlin, Reimann associated and worked with Ernst Thälmann, Anna Seghers and Walter Ulbricht at the Romanisches Café. Still ...
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Heinrich Reimann
Professor Dr. phil. Heinrich Reimann (March 12, 1850 – May 24, 1906), was a German musicologist, organist, and composer. Reimann was born in Rengersdorf, Silesia, and was a son of Ignaz Reimann, also a musician. Reimann studied at the University of Breslau and was awarded a degree in classical philology in 1875, having simultaneously studied organ with the Silesian composer and organist Moritz Brosig (1815-1887). It was only in 1886 that Reimann changed his profession to music, becoming active in Berlin as an organist, choral conductor, and write on subjects from Byzantine music through Wagner and contemporary composition. Reimann was appointed official organist for the Berlin Philharmonic where he performed on the Schlag und Söhne organ (1888), and became instructor in music theory and organ at the Klindworth-Schwarwenka-Conservatory; he was later appointed organist at the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche in 1895 (where Wilhelm Sauer's largest organ to date—Opus 66 ...
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Hans Reimann (writer)
Hans Reimann (1889–1969) was a German satirist, novelist, and playwright. He wrote under the pseudonyms Max Bunge, Hans Heinrich, Artur Sünder, Hanns Heinz Vampir, and Andreas Zeltner. Biography Albert Johannes Reimann was born on 18 November 1889 in Leipzig where he grew up. He studied German philology and art history at the Kunstakademie in Munich. After serving in the German army during World War I, he published the satirical journal ''Der Drache (The Dragon)'' in Leipzig from 1919 till 1921 from 1924 till 1929 the ''Stachelschwein (Porcupine)'' in Frankfurt on the Main. He worked also for the satirical ''Simplicissimus'' and ''Die Weltbühne'' and founded the cabarets "Retorte" (in Leipzig) und "Astoria" (in Frankfurt on the Main.). He lived in Berlin since 1925. Having expressed critiques of the Nazis and planned a Hitler parody under the title ''Mein Krampf (My Cramp)'', he experienced great difficulties and was blacklisted by the Nazi regime. He wrote under several pse ...
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Katya Reimann
Katya Reimann (born 1965) is an American writer of fantasy novels. Biography Reimann is an author of high fantasy novels. Her debut novel, ''Wind from a Foreign Sky'', is set in a world similar to the Dark Ages. She has cited her literary influences as T. H. White, 18th century writers, and Rene Goscinny. Reimann has a PhD in 18th Century Literature from the University of Oxford, which she achieved in 1995 after six years of study and teaching in England. She also has a bachelor's degree from Yale University. She lives in St. Paul, Minnesota. Bibliography The Tielmaran Chronicles # ''Wind From a Foreign Sky '' (1996) # ''A Tremor in the Bitter Earth'' (1998) # ''Prince of Fire and Ashes'' (2002) Rulers of Hylor Upon the death of Cherry Wilder, Reimann completed the final book in the series: * ''The Wanderer'' (2004) Nominations and awards * John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer The ''Astounding'' Award for Best New Writer (formerly the John W. Campbell Awar ...
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