Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich (English, Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire) (abbreviated Wurzbach from the author's surname) is a 60-volume work, edited and published by Constantin von Wurzbach, containing about 24,254 critical biographies of notable personages in every walk of life and from all parts of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy who were born, lived or ...
By the end of the year, Wurzbach left the army and took up an appointment at the Lemberg University library. In 1849 he was appointed librarian in the Ministry of the Interior at Vienna, and subsequently secretary in the Ministry of State. Wurzbach died in Berchtesgaden, Bavaria. He was the father of Alfred von Wurzbach, an art critic.
Alfred Wolfgang Ritter Wurzbach von Tannenberg was the son of Alfred von Wurzbach and Eugenie v. Wurzbach, the daughter of the banker Joseph Lippmann von Lissingen.He was a great-grandson of the Ljubljana lawyer Maximilian von Wurzbach, who had been raised to the nobility, and the grandson of the biographical lexicographer Constantin von Wurzbach.
He was the son of Constantin von Wurzbach. He studied jurisprudence in Vienna and entered the civil service , but resigned in 1876 and devoted himself entirely to the study of art history . [ 1 ] He was art critic for the Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung from 1881 to 1886.
Constantin von Wurzbach: "Zobel von Giebelstadt und Darstadt, Thomas Friedrich Freiherr." In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich (Biographical Lexicon of the Empire of Austria). Part 60 Kaiserlich-königliche Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, Vienna 1891, p. 212 ( digitalised ).
Photo of office with products produced by Fellowes Brands. Fellowes Brands, Inc. is a privately held manufacturer of office equipment based in Itasca, Illinois.The company was founded as the Bankers Box Company to manufacture the company's namesake Bankers Box record storage boxes.
Low table by Isamu Noguchi (1945) Sofa by Isamu Noguchi (1950) Bucket chair by Charles and Ray Eames (1950–1953) Aeron chair by Don Chadwick and Bill Stumpf (1990s). Herman Miller was founded in 1905 as the Star Furniture Co. [3] In 1919, it was renamed the Michigan Star Furniture Co. under then-president Dirk Jan De Pree.
The phrase "word processor" rapidly came to refer to CRT-based machines similar to the AES 90. Numerous machines of this kind emerged, typically marketed by traditional office-equipment companies such as IBM, Lanier (marketing AES Data machines, re-badged), CPT, and NBI. [31] All were specialized, dedicated, proprietary systems, priced around ...