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Gustav Heinse (Bulgarian: Густав Хайнзе), born
Josef K.
Klein (1896–1971), was a poet and
translator who was
mostly active in Bulgaria,
where he lived...
- (Johann Jakob)
Wilhelm Heinse (16
February 1746, Langewiesen, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen – 22 June 1803),
German author, was born at
Langewiesen in...
-
Briefen und
Schriften (1811). His
correspondence with
Johann Jakob Wilhelm Heinse was
published in two
volumes (1894/1896), with
Johann Uz (1889), in both...
- name from the
novel Anastasia und das
Schachspiel by
Johann Jakob Wilhelm Heinse, but the
novelist took the
chess position from an
essay by Giambattista...
-
listings of 100
chess endgames. One of
these positions was used by
Wilhelm Heinse in his
novel Anastasia und das
Schachspiel (English:
Anastasia and the game...
- Present) (2 ed.).
Mazda Publishers. p. 208. ISBN 978-1568591414.
Gaube Heinse,
Iranian Cities, New York, 1979, p. 83 Hooshangi, Farideh. Isfahan, city...
-
change that link by
adding the person's
given name(s) to the link. G.H.
Heinse (1803). Encyklopädisches Wörterbuch oder
alphabetische Erklärung
aller Wörter...
- jubilatum. From 1774 to 1776,
Gleim and
Jacobi edited Iris, to
which Goethe,
Heinse, Lenz, and
Sophie La
Roche were contributors. In 1784,
Emperor Joseph II...
- von Ehrenfels, with the
thesis Wilhelm Heinse und die Ästhetik zur Zeit der
deutschen Aufklärung (Wilhelm
Heinse and
aesthetics in the
German Enlightenment)...
- (1840) J. W. Loebell, C.M.
Wieland (1858)
Heinrich Pröhle, Lessing, Wieland,
Heinse (1877) L. F. Ofterdinger,
Wielands Leben und
Wirken in
Schwaben und in der...