- Lübeck
Marzipan (German:
Lübecker Marzipan)
refers to
marzipan originating from the city of Lübeck in
northern Germany and has been
protected by an EU...
- Rhine. In 1926, it
became a
fully independent business and was
renamed Lübecker Flenderwerke AG. It went on to
become one of the
largest shipyards in Germany...
- Lübeck
Cathedral (German: Dom zu Lübeck, or
colloquially Lübecker Dom) is a
large brick-built
Lutheran cathedral in Lübeck, Germany, and part of the Lübeck...
- The Bay of Lübeck (German:
Lübecker Bucht,
German pronunciation) is a
basin in the
southwestern Baltic Sea, off the s****s of the
German states of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern...
- Berlin-
Lübecker Maschinenfabrik (BLM) was a
manufacturer of handguns,
infantry rifles,
ammunition up to 2 cm,
flareguns and
precision military equipment...
-
Lübecker Straße is a
metro station located in Hohenfelde, Hamburg, Germany. It was
built and
first opened on 1
March 1912,
originally located in a terrain...
- The
Lübecker Nachrichten (LN;
German for Lübeck News) is a
regional daily newspaper in Germany,
covering Schleswig-Holstein and
western Mecklenburg-Vorpommern...
- he
studied theology and law at the
University of
Paris with four
other Lübeckers.
There he came
under the
influence of the
Dutch Protestant Hugo Grotius...
- The
event later became known as the Lübeck disaster, or in German, the
Lübecker Impfunglück (Lübeck
vaccine disaster).
Major scientific journals worldwide...
-
between a
fleet of
Allied ships, the
Danes under Herluf Trolle and the
Lübeckers under Friedrich Knebel, and a
Swedish fleet of 23 or more
ships under...