Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PfortaPforta - Wikipedia

    Schulpforta, otherwise known as Pforta, is a school located in Pforta monastery, a former Cistercian monastery (1137–1540). The school is located near Naumburg on the Saale River in the German state of Saxony-Anhalt. The site has been a school since the 16th century.

  2. Schulpforta es un colegio cerca de Naumburgo, estado federado de Sajonia-Anhalt en Alemania, con régimen de internado para la promoción de alumnos aventajados. Entre sus alumnos se cuentan el filósofo Friedrich Nietzsche , el historiador Leopold von Ranke y el matemático y astrónomo August Möbius .

  3. Schulpforte, früher auch Schulpforta, ist ein Ortsteil von Naumburg im Burgenlandkreis in Sachsen-Anhalt. Im Januar 2020 lebten 126 Einwohner im Ort.

  4. Much of All the Light We Cannot See takes place in Saint-Malo (pictured in 2015). When the United States forces lay siege to Saint-Malo in August 1944, Marie-Laure grabs the Sea of Flames and hides in the cellar. After waking the next day, Marie-Laure leaves the cellar to drink water.

  5. 27 de ene. de 2018 · How did Schulpforta, Germany's most renowned humanistic boarding-school, become a Nationalpolitische Erziehungsanstalt (Napola) under the Nazis? This article explores the tensions and transformations of Schulpforta's curriculum, ideology and identity during the Third Reich.

  6. Nietzsche, su infancia y su adolescencia. 3 de noviembre de 2010Publicado por Malena. El pensamiento de Nietzsche (1844-1900), en contra de la moral tradicional, propone una nueva manera de actuar que termine con una sociedad en decadencia. Su obra está plagada de cuestionamientos sobre los valores que rigen la vida de los hombres, de ...

  7. While it may be true, as Wassermann suggests, that the Ilfelder were also steeped in a similar tradition (“Schulpforta 1935–1945,” 14), it seems likely that those Jungmannen from Ilfeld who were selected to go to Schulpforta would have been those most suited to the ideological demands of their task, viz., the “Napolisation” of another ...