Definition of Simeonstift. Meaning of Simeonstift. Synonyms of Simeonstift

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Simeonstift. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Simeonstift and, of course, Simeonstift synonyms and on the right images related to the word Simeonstift.

Definition of Simeonstift

No result for Simeonstift. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Simeonstift from wikipedia

- The St. Simeon’s Collegiate Church (German: Simeonstift) was a collegiate church in Trier, Germany, near the Roman city gate of the Porta Nigra (Latin...
- famous than the original depiction. The copy preserved in the Stadtmuseum Simeonstift Trier has some lost portions from above (the written year 1836, depictions...
- ruins of the Porta Nigra. After his death (1035) and sanctification, the Simeonstift monastery was built next to the Porta Nigra to honor him. To save it...
- Diocese of Trier; religious art, also some Roman artefacts); Stadtmuseum Simeonstift (history of Trier, displaying among other exhibits a scale model of the...
- her death in 1976, over 400 works were transferred to the Stadtmuseum Simeonstift [de]. A street in Trier has been named after him. Crane on the Moselle...
- (Landesmuseum Trier) (in German) website of the Muni****l Museum Simeonstift (Stadtmuseum Simeonstift Trier) (in German and French) website of the museum of the...
- Trier, Stadtisches Museum Simeonstift, Exhibition, 29 April to 1 September 1996-1997 Trier, Stadtisches Museum Simeonstift, Retrospective, 16 December...
- Cologne 1985 Wilhelm Hack Museum, Ludwigshafen 1988 Metropolitan Museum Simeonstift, Trier 1988 Künstlerhaus Nuremberg, Nuremberg 1989 Art Cologne, Cologne...
- 1154 and by acquiring the rights of the knights of Nalbach in 1331 the Simeonstift of Trier had in the Nalbach-Valley the basic jurisdiction, the tax collection...
- 1829 Die Familie Tillmann, 1832. Napoleon zu Pferde, 1832, Stadtmuseum Simeonstift Trier [de] Self-portrait with his brother Nikolaus, (1833–1834) Rosenmontagszug...