- however,
continued using the name Nidaros.
Trondheim was
briefly named Drontheim during the
Second World War as a
German exonym.
Trondheim was
named Kaupangen...
-
Nordstern (English:
North Star),
sometimes referred to as Neu
Drontheim (lit. 'New Trondheim'), was a **** plan for the
creation of a new
metropolis located...
- The
Trondheim Fjord or
Trondheimsfjorden (pronounced [ˈtrɔ̂nː(h)æɪmsˌfjuːɳ]), an
inlet of the
Norwegian Sea, is Norway's third-longest
fjord at 130 kilometres...
-
Maclibuin was a
legendary Norwegian smith. He was
known as "The Dark
Smith of
Drontheim". He was the
seventh son of
Windy Cap, King of Norway. The "dark", does...
-
uncompleted Dora II (Dora 2).
Trondheim was
traditionally referred to as
Drontheim in German, and the name DORA is the
letter "D" in the
German phonetic...
-
independent group under the
German Sicherheitsdienst in Trondheim, KDS
Drontheim Referat IV. The
Sonderabteilung ("Special Unit")
consisted of
around known...
- on and
images of the
public sculpture on East Strand:
three 13 ft high
Drontheim yawl
sails in bronze.
Portrush on the
Culture Northern Ireland website...
- the
Mayflower when his ship was
chartered for a
voyage from
London to
Drontheim (Trondheim) in Norway, and back to London. Due to bad weather, on her...
-
Kriegsmarine also had two
battle groups in
Norwegian ports,
Force I (
Drontheim-Gruppe)
consisting of the
battleship Tirpitz, the
cruiser Hipper and the...
- (Swedish, Turkish),
Tromssa (Finnish)[KNAB],
Trumse (Latvian)
Trondheim Drontheim (archaic German),
Nidaros (archaic Norwegian), Niðarós (archaic Icelandic)...