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Heinrich Bauer (1814 – 1851) was a German shoemaker and revolutionary. He was a leader of the League of the Just. When the League of the Just became the Communist League, Bauer became a member of the Central Authority of the Communist League. He was a prominent figure in the German and international working class movement.
While original items from the Nazi era are sold for high prices, there is a large amount of copies and forgeries on the market. [3] Modern day replicas of miscellaneous Nazi badges aimed at reenactors and exhibitions, for sale at the militaria fair at the Victory Show in Cosby, Leicestershire , UK, 2015: Wehrmacht eagle-and-swastika cap badges ...
Here the museum shows the impact of the Second World War on the shoe industry and types of shoes made. The visitor is led through a typical 1960s flat and they can see, in a completely equipped shoe salon, how the fit of new shoes was tested with a fluoroscope using X-rays. Also on the first floor is the largest pair of shoes in the world: a ...
Adolf "Adi" Dassler: Sports shoes with and without spikes; founder of Adidas. Rudolf Dassler: First sport shoes with screw-in shoe spikes, 1949; founder of Puma. Hans Georg Dehmelt: Physicist. Co-developed the non-magnetic quadrupole mass filter which laid the foundation for what we now call an ion trap. Shared the Nobel Prize in 1989.
200th birthday of Heinrich von Kleist. 5 DM, silver, 1977. 100th birthday of Gustav Stresemann. 5 DM, silver, 1978. 225th death anniversary of Balthasar Neumann. 5 DM, silver, 1978. 150th anniversary of the German Archaeological Institute. 5 DM, silver, 1979. 100th birthday of Otto Hahn. 5 DM, copper-nickel, 1979.
The following entries list the name of the person, the year they were first featured on a stamp, and a short description of their notability.. See also the list of people on stamps of Germany. This list is complete up to 1990 for all issued stamps. From 1990 onward, the stamps of the united Germany were used.
In 1904, it became the "Central Union of Shoemakers of Germany", and it began growing more rapidly. [2] It was the main founder of the International Federation of Boot and Shoe Operatives in 1907, and a founding affiliate of the General German Trade Union Confederation in 1919. [4] By 1928, it had 78,834 members. [5]
Eberhard Heinrich was born in a small rural town in Lower Silesia, roughly 80 km (50 miles) west of Breslau. His father was a clerical employee. Heinrich attended a commercially focused school and started on an industrial/commercial training. In 1943 he was arrested and held in youth detention for several months on account of "illegal political ...