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Current Name Former Name(s) Year of Change LaGrange College: LaGrange Female Academy; LaGrange Female College 1934 Lake Washington Institute of Technology: Lake Washington Technical College 2011 Lamar University: Lamar Tech 1971 Lenoir-Rhyne University: Lenoir College (1891), Lenoir-Rhyne College (1928) 2008 [44] Lewis and Clark College
Coat of Arms of the Dauphins of Viennois. The counts of Albon (French: comtes d'Albon) were members of the medieval nobility in what is now south-eastern France.. Guigues IV, Count of Albon (d. 1142) was nicknamed le Dauphin or 'the Dolphin'.
Guigues VII (1225–1269), of the House of Burgundy, was the dauphin of Vienne and count of Albon, Grenoble, Oisans, Briançon, Embrun, and Gap from 1237 to his death. He was the son of Andrew Guigues VI and Beatrice of Montferrat. When his father died, his mother helped guide the leadership of the new Dauphin. [1]
The predecessor of the Angewandte was founded in 1863 as the k. k. Kunstgewerbeschule (Vienna School of Arts and Crafts), [2] following the example of the South Kensington Museum in London, now the Victoria & Albert Museum, to set up a place of advanced education for designers and craftsmen with the Arts and Crafts School in Vienna.
College of Arts and Crafts may refer to: Akita Municipal Junior College of Arts and Crafts, Akita, Japan. California College of the Arts, Oakland, California, USA and San Francisco, California, USA. Camberwell College of Arts, London, United Kingdom. College of Arts and Crafts, Lucknow, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India.
This is a list of fine art universities and colleges in Europe, containing academic institutions of higher undergraduate education, postgraduate education and research, offering academic degrees of fine art (such as Bachelor of Fine Arts, Master of Fine Arts, and equivalent). The list makes no distinction between public or private institutions ...
The school reopened under the name Schule für Handwerk und Kunst (School for Crafts and Art) in 1946. After various name changes and changes of premises this merged into the Kunsthochschule Kassel in 1970, which, in 1971, became a faculty of the University of Kassel. [9] Stuttgart (1869).
In the 12th century, the local ruler Count Guigues IV of Albon (c. 1095 –1142) bore a dolphin on his coat of arms and was nicknamed le Dauphin (French for 'dolphin'). His descendants changed their title from Count of Albon to Dauphin of Viennois. The state took the name of Dauphiné. It became a state of the Holy Roman Empire in the 11th century.