Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Zsigmond Móricz statue (bronze, by Frigyes Janzer, 2007 Elephant fountain (copper drinkwater fountain by Károly Krajcsovics, 2008; removed in 2011 in a theft attempt and put back in 2012) Transport
Manuel Schwenk (born 7 March 1992), previously known as Manuel Janzer until 2019, is a German professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Oberliga Schleswig-Holstein club SpVg. Eidertal Molfsee.
Capillaria (Hungarian: Capillária, 1921) is a fantasy novel by Hungarian author Frigyes Karinthy, which depicts an undersea world inhabited exclusively by women and recounts, in a satirical vein reminiscent of the style of Jonathan Swift, the first time that men and women experience sex with one another.
The Land Is Ours (Hungarian: Felszabadult föld) is a 1951 Hungarian drama film directed by Frigyes Bán and starring Ádám Szirtes, Ági Mészáros and Ilona Egri. [1] [2] [3] It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director József Pán. It was a sequel to the 1948 film Treasured Earth.
Although the acoustics are lacking, the building itself, designed by Frigyes Feszl in 1859, makes a bold impression along the Pest embankment. Built to replace another concert hall on the same site (which was destroyed by fire in the 1848 War of Independence) Feszl's Vigadó was also badly damaged, this time during World War II. The post-war ...
The buyer was the company Czell Frigyes and Sons. The Czell family members were notable citizens of one of BraČ™ov’s suburbs. The elder Frigyes Czell moved to the city center and began working in wool weaving. His son, Frigyes, born in 1816, continued his father’s trade, learning the techniques of finer wool weaving in Vienna and Brno.
Voyage to Faremido (Hungarian: Utazás Faremidóba, 1916) [1] is a utopian-satirical novel by Frigyes Karinthy.Written as a further adventure of Lemuel Gulliver of Gulliver's Travels, it recounts the story of a World War I pilot who crashes on a planet of inorganic beings.
Frederick Knefler (Knoepfler Frigyes) was born in Arad, Hungary in 1833, the son of Nathan Knoepfler, a Hungarian Jew and a physician. He enlisted with his father in the revolutionary forces during the 1848-49 Hungarian War of Liberation.