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The University of Bonn, ... which was founded in 1777. The University of Bonn offers many undergraduate and graduate programs in a range of subjects and has 544 ...
(Father of John Harvard - founder of Harvard University) One of four founders St. Olave's and St. Saviour's Grammar School: 1571 John Lyon: Harrow School: 1572 Thomas Aldersey: Aldersey Grammar School: 1575 William Lambe Sutton Valence School: 1576 Edmund Grindal: St Bees School: 1583 John Whitgift: Whitgift School: 1596 Sir Thomas Gresham ...
Founded in 1818, the University of Bonn counts Nietzsche, Marx, and Adenauer among its alumni. Between the 11th and 13th centuries, the Romanesque style Bonn Minster was built, and in 1597 Bonn became the seat of the Archdiocese of Cologne. The city gained more influence and grew considerably.
1980 - University of Bonn's Max Planck Institute for Mathematics established. 1981 -Bonn Women's Museum founded. Protest in Bonn against the deployment of Pershing II missiles in Germany, 1981; 1982 - 10 June: NATO summit held. 1984 - Bonn Botanical Garden reconstructed. 1985 Rheinisches Malermuseum (art museum) established. May: 11th G7 summit ...
When the University of Bonn was founded in 1818, its first garden director, Dr. Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck (1776-1858), began to focus the garden on scientific botany. By 1900 the garden was second only to Berlin's within Germany, but it was utterly destroyed in World War II. Reconstruction began after the war and was ...
The university declined rapidly and was closed on 18 October 1818, due to a Cabinet Order of Friedrich Wilhelm III. [11] At the same time, the University of Bonn was founded. Large parts of the Duisburg University Library were relocated to Bonn and formed the basis of the newly formed Bonn Library.
Unitas Stolzenfels was founded in Bonn on 28 November 1910 as Unitas Sigfridia and was associated with the Unitas-Verband on 6 June 1911 by the 52nd general assembly (Generalversammlung, GV) of the Unitas-Verband in Fulda. World War I prevented a fast buildup of the Aktivitas (the active student association). Only in the winter term of 1919/20 ...
Friedrich Calker (July 4, 1790 – January 5, 1870), German philosopher, was educated in Jena.For a short time, he was a lecturer in Berlin.In 1818, he was called to an extraordinary professorship in the newly founded University of Bonn, becoming an ordinary professor in 1826.