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Frieder Nögge
Frieder is both a surname and a masculine given name, a variant of Friedrich. People with the name include: Surname: *Armin Frieder (1911–1946), Slovak Neolog rabbi *Bill Frieder (1942), former basketball coach *Katalin Frieder (1915–1991), Hungarian pianist Given name: *Frieder Bernius (1947), German conductor *Frieder Birzele (1940–2023), German politician *Frieder Burda (1936–2019), German art collector *Frieder Gröger (1934–2018), German mycologist *Frieder Lippmann (1936–2023), German politician *Frieder Nake (1938), German computer scientist *Frieder Weissmann (1893–1984), German conductor and composer *Frieder Zschoch Frieder Zschoch (30 March 1932 – 3 March 2016) was a German musicologist. Life Zschoch was born in Großenhain as the second son of the Lutheran pastor Reinhold Zschoch and his wife Hildegard. He grew up in a musical home and received piano ... (1932–2016), German musicologist {{given name, type=both German masculine given names Masc ...
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Friedrich (given Name)
Friedrich is a German given name and the origin of the English Frederick (given name), Frederick. People with the name include: Arts * Friedrich Silaban (1912–1984), Indonesian architect. * Friedrich Goldscheider (1845–1897), Bohemia-born Austrian entrepreneur, and a manufacturer of ceramics and bronze *Friedrich Gorenstein (1932–2002), Russian author and screenwriter *Friedrich Hohe (1802–1870), German lithographer and painter *Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843), German poet, one of the key figures in German Romanticism *Friedensreich Hundertwasser, Friedrich Hundertwasser (1928–2000), Austrian artist and architect, better known as Friedensreich Hundertwasser *Fritz Lang, Friedrich "Fritz" Lang (1890–1976), film maker *Otto Friedrich Walter (1928–1994), Swiss journalist, author and publisher *Novalis, Friedrich von Hardenberg (1772–1801), German poet and philosopher, better known as Novalis *Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), German poet and philosopher Music ...
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Armin Frieder
Abraham Armin Frieder (30 June 1911 – 21 June 1946) was a Slovak Neolog rabbi. After attending several yeshivas, he was ordained in 1932 and became the leader of Slovak Neolog communities before Slovakia declared independence in 1939 and began to oppress its Jewish population. Frieder joined the Working Group, a Jewish resistance organization, and delivered a petition to President Jozef Tiso begging him to halt deportations of Jews to Poland. Frieder was involved in efforts to send relief to deportees and interview escapees to learn about the progress of the Holocaust in Poland. After the German invasion of Slovakia during the Slovak National Uprising, deportations from Slovakia resumed; Frieder was captured but managed to avoid deportation from Sereď concentration camp. After the war, he was appointed Chief Rabbi of Slovakia and attempted to smooth tensions between Neolog and Orthodox Jews. He died after surgery in 1946. Early life Frieder was born on 30 June 1911 in Prievi ...
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Bill Frieder
William Samuel Frieder (born March 3, 1942) is a former basketball coach at Michigan Wolverines men's basketball, Michigan (1981–1989) and Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball, Arizona State (1989–1997). Frieder's 1985–86 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 1985–86 team was the last Michigan team to win a Big Ten Championship until the 2011-12 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2011–12 team. Just before the 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, 1989 NCAA tournament, Frieder announced that he would leave Michigan for Arizona State at the end of the season. Michigan athletic director Bo Schembechler ordered Frieder to leave immediately, and named top assistant Steve Fisher (American basketball coach), Steve Fisher as the interim coach for the tournament. Schembechler famously announced, "A Michigan man will coach Michigan, not an Arizona State man." The Wolverines went on to win the tournament and Fisher was officially given the head coach ...
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Katalin Frieder
Katalin Nemes (born Katalin Frieder; 5 October 1915 - 29 March 1991) was a pianist and teacher. She was the wife of the writer and journalist György Nemes and the mother of the literary translator Anna Nemes. From the age of 10 she attended the conservatory of Debrecen as a student of Margit Halácsy. From 1932 to 1937 she attended Franz Liszt Academy of Music and was taught by Imre Stefániai, Béla Bartók and Imre Keéri-Szántó Imre () is a Hungarian masculine first name, which is also in Estonian use, where the corresponding name day is 10 April. It has been suggested that it relates to the name Emeric, Emmerich or Heinrich. Its English equivalents are Emery and He .... During this period she had to play on piano in a band. After getting degree, she married György Nemes. She taught at Nemzeti Zenede from 1947 to 1949, and then between 1949 and 1951 at Musical Secondary Grammar School at Budapest. At this time she returned to the academy as a demonstrator. Later sh ...
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Frieder Bernius
Frieder Bernius (born 22 June 1947) is a German conductor, the founder and director of the chamber choir Kammerchor Stuttgart, founded in 1968. They became leaders for historically informed performances. He founded the Stuttgart festival of Baroque music, Internationale Festtage Alter Musik, in 1987, and is a recipient of the Edison Award (1990), Diapason d'Or (1990) and the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (1993). Career Frieder Bernius was born in Ludwigshafen-Oppau, the second child of the Protestant minister Helmut Bernius and his wife Inge, a church musician. After his Abitur at the Karl-Friedrich-Gymnasium in Mannheim he studied music and musicology at the Musikhochschule Stuttgart and at the University of Tübingen. In 1968, his first year at the Musikhochschule, he founded the Kammerchor Stuttgart (Stuttgart chamber choir). They first concentrated on a cappella music of the 19th and 20th century, but expanded their repertoire. Since 1977, Bernius has ...
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Frieder Birzele
Frieder Birzele (17 January 1940 – 25 December 2023) was a German politician from the Social Democratic Party of Germany. He was married and had two children. Birzele studied jurisprudence in Tübingen and Berlin from 1960 to 1965. He served as a member of the Landtag of Baden-Württemberg The Landtag of Baden-Württemberg is the diet (assembly), diet of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It convenes in Stuttgart and currently consists of 154 members of five political parties. The majority before the 2021 Baden-Württemberg ... from 1976 to 2006 and was the minister of the interior of Baden-Württemberg from 1992 to 1996. Birzele died on 25 December 2023, at the age of 83. References 1940 births 2023 deaths People from Göppingen Social Democratic Party of Germany politicians Members of the Landtag of Baden-Württemberg Commanders Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany Recipients of the Order of Merit of Baden-Württemberg ...
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Frieder Burda
Frieder Burda (29 April 1936 – 14 July 2019, in Baden-Baden) was a German publisher, art collector and Honorary Citizen of Baden-Baden. Life Born on 29 April 1936 in Gengenbach, Burda was the second son of publisher Franz Burda and his wife Aenne Burda (née Lemminger). Together with his older brother and his younger brother Hubert, Burda grew up in Offenburg. After finishing school in Offenburg, Triberg and Switzerland, he completed a print and a publishing qualification. Burda was trained in his father's business group. Later he lived in FranceJackie Wullschlager (May 27, 2011)A place of his own''Financial Times''. and became a magazine publisher. He spent several years in England and the United States before becoming a printer in Darmstadt. He developed his company into one of the leading commercial print foundries in Europe. Burda died on 14 July 2019 in Baden-Baden at the age of 83. Art collection A major art collector, Burda bought his first work, a slashed red pain ...
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Frieder Gröger
Frieder Gröger (June 15, 1934 - December 6, 2018) was a German mycologist from Berlin. His official author citation is "". Life Frieder Gröger was a teacher for fifteen years until abandoning his job. After that he earned a living partly as a district fungus expert. Besides he was freelance active, mainly literary. Furthermore, he devoted himself to mushroom hunting, the alienation of the grouped goods, flower propagation and selling flowers and onions. Gröger significantly designed the ''Mykologische Mitteilungsblatt Halle'', which was distributed to the mushroom surveyors from East Germany. Beyond that he actively worked on the fungus-themed journal ''Boletus'', which was later combined with the other journal in the 199ßs under this name unter dem Titel. Until he reached the age of 65 he proofreaded, reworked the manuscripts and performed paperwork. At this time his membership in the Federal Committee Mycology of the Naturschutzbund Deutschland (NABU). From then on he conc ...
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Frieder Lippmann
Frieder Lippmann (3 September 1936 – 18 September 2023) was a German politician (SPD). He was a member of the East German national parliament (''Volkstag'') and of the regional parliament (''Landtag'') of Thuringia. Life Provenance and early years Frieder Lippmann was born into a working-class family at Dorfchemnitz, a small town in the Eastern Ore Mountain region (''"Osterzgebirge"''), a short distance to the north of the German frontier with what had recently become known as the Czechoslovak Sudetenland. His grandfather had been a committed member of the Social Democratic Party but had died when Lippmann was only ten, leaving the boy to find his own way to an interest in politics only many years later. War ended in May 1945, putting an end to the Nazi régime and leaving the central portion of Germany administered as the Soviet occupation zone, to be relaunched and rebranded in October 1949 as the Soviet sponsored German Democratic Republic (East Germany). Lippma ...
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Frieder Nake
Frieder Nake (born December 16, 1938) is a mathematician, computer scientist, and pioneer of computer art. He is best known internationally for his contributions to the earliest manifestations of computer art, a field of computing that made its first public appearances with three small exhibitions in 1965. Art career Nake had his first exhibition at Galerie Wendelin Niedlich in Stuttgart in November, 1965 alongside the artist Georg Nees. Until 1969, Nake generated in rapid sequence a large number of works that he showed in many exhibitions over the years. He estimates his production at about 300 to 400 works during those years. A few were limited screenprint editions, single pieces and portfolios. The bulk were done as China ink on paper graphics, carried out by a flatbed high precision plotter called the Zuse Graphomat Z64. Nake participated in the important group shows of the 1960s, such as, most prominently, Cybernetic Serendipity (London, UK, 1968), Tendencies 4: Computers ...
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Frieder Weissmann
Frieder Weissmann (23 January 1893 – 4 January 1984) was a Germany, German Conductor (music), conductor and composer. Life and career Weissmann was born in Langen, Hesse. His civil name was Samuel, which he kept - in the form ''Semy'' or ''Semmy'' - until 1916. After that, he preferred the first name ''Friedrich'' or ''Frieder'' in combination with ''Samuel'', which was soon shortened to ''S.'' before disappearing altogether. In the 1920s, ''Peter'' was added as a third first name. Other surviving stage names are ''Ping-Pong'' and Marco Ibanez. Weissmann grew up in Frankfurt, where his father Ignatz Isidor Weissmann (1863-1939) was Hazzan of the Hauptsynagoge (Frankfurt am Main), Hauptsynagoge from 1894 to 1937. After graduating from the Goethe-Gymnasium (Frankfurt am Main), Goethe Grammar School, he studied law in Heidelberg for one semester in 1911, then philosophy, art history and music history at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich University until 1914. In ...
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Frieder Zschoch
Frieder Zschoch (30 March 1932 – 3 March 2016) was a German musicologist. Life Zschoch was born in Großenhain as the second son of the Lutheran pastor Reinhold Zschoch and his wife Hildegard. He grew up in a musical home and received piano and trumpet lessons. In the autumn semester of 1950, he enrolled at the University of Leipzig for the subject musicology. His teachers there were Walter Serauky, Hellmuth Christian Wolff, Richard Petzoldt and Rudolf Eller. In addition, he studied Germanistics from 1950 to 1952 and was a guest student at the Humboldt University of Berlin with Hans-Heinz Dräger for the subject of systematic musicology. In May 1954, he passed the Staatsexamen for musicology in Leipzig. He wrote his diploma thesis on the subject ''Die Verwendung der Trompete in Oper und Sinfonik des Barockzeitalters unter besonderer Berücksichtigung Georg Friedrich Händels'' (The use of the trumpet in opera and symphonic music of the baroque age with special reference to ...
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