Definition of Drontheim. Meaning of Drontheim. Synonyms of Drontheim

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Definition of Drontheim

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Meaning of Drontheim from wikipedia

- 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...
- never finished unlike Dora I. Trondheim was traditionally referred to as Drontheim in German, and the name DORA is the letter "D" in the German phonetic...
- 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...
- independent group under the German Sicherheitsdienst in Trondheim, KDS Drontheim Referat IV. The Sonderabteilung ("Special Unit") consisted of around known...
- throughout the war. Between June 1941 and September 1941 it moved to Drontheim. Then it was shifted to Memel and subsequently to Libau. At the end of...
- which was named Macabuin. It was made by Loan Maclibuin the Dark Smith of Drontheim, and could cut the through hardest granite just by touching it. The Norwegians...