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Jenny Bossard-Biow (1813 – after 1858), possibly the first woman in Germany to have made daguerreotypes; Marianne Breslauer (1909–2001), active in the early 1930s; Käthe Buchler (1876–1930), documented WWI in Braunschweig, Germany; Traude Bührmann (born 1942), writer, journalist, photographer
1930s; 1940s; 1950s; 1960s; 1970s; 1980s; Subcategories. This category has only the following subcategory. / 1933 establishments in Saskatchewan (3 P) This ...
The images of men, and still more of women, were heavily stereotyped, [40] with physical perfection required for the nude paintings. [41] This may have been the cause of there being very few anti-Semitic paintings; while such works as Um Haus and Hof , depicting a Jewish speculator dispossessing an elderly peasant couple exist, they are few ...
7 August 1930 Lawrence Beitier: Marion, Indiana, United States [s 2] See article Larmes: 1930 Man Ray Paris, France The photograph is an extreme close-up of a woman's upturned face with glass droplets placed on her cheeks to imitate tears. [s 1] [s 4] Sleeping Woman: 1930 Man Ray [s 2] See article Behind the Gare Saint-Lazare: 1932 Henri ...
First-wave feminism made advances, with women gaining the right to vote in South Africa (1930, whites only), Brazil (1933), and Cuba (1933). Following the rise of Adolf Hitler and the emergence of the NSDAP as the country's sole legal party in 1933, Germany imposed a series of laws which discriminated against Jews and other ethnic minorities.
Pages in category "1930s in Germany" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. . Nazi Germany; 0–9.
Operas debuting in Germany include Kurt Weill's Der Jasager, Ernst Krenek's Leben des Orest and Arnold Schoenberg's Von heute auf morgen. Fritz Reck-Malleczewen's comedy novel Bomben auf Monte Carlo is published. Nationalsozialistische Monatshefte, a cultural journal of the Nazi Party edited by Alfred Rosenberg, publishes its first issue.
The history of this plains area actually began 2,000–2,100 million years ago wherein there were two continents separated by an ocean. The "Churchill Continent" which would be Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and the "Superior Continent" which would comprise Manitoba and Ontario. 1,830 – 1,800 million years ago these two land masses collided.