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  1. Victor, Duke of Münsterberg. Victor, Duke of Münsterberg also: Victor, Duke of Münsterberg and Opava; Czech: Viktorin z Minsterberka; (29 May 1443 in Cieszyn – 30 August 1500 in Cieszyn) was an Imperial Count from 1459 and Count of Kladsko. From 1462 until his death, he was Duke of Münsterberg, and from 1465 to 1485 Duke of Opava .

  2. Silesian princess of the house Münsterberg, by marriage, Duchess of Anhalt (1473-1530) Margaret of Münsterberg (Q1405559) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to ...

  3. Margaret of Münsterberg (25 August 1473, Breslau – 28 June 1530, Dessau) was a German regent: Duchess of Anhalt by marriage to Prince Ernest I, she ruled the principality as a regent for her underage sons from 1516.

  4. Reviews the book, Hugo Münsterberg: His Life and Work by Margaret Münsterberg (1922). The book presents a biography of Hugo Münsterberg by his daughter Margaret. Münsterberg made several important contributions to philosophy, applied and experimental psychology, and other sciences. The reviewer notes that the text fails of critical evaluation and demarcates too slightly the periods of ...

  5. Hugo Münsterberg on Film: The Photoplay: A Psychological Study and Other Writings. London: Routledge. ISBN 041593706X; Münsterberg, Margaret. [1922] 2007. Hugo Münsterberg: His Life and Work. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1432651633. Street, Warren R. 1994. A Chronology of Noteworthy Events in American Psychology.

  6. 24 de nov. de 2023 · In 1892, James asked Münsterberg to take charge of the psychology lab at Harvard. Since he didn’t speak English well, Münsterberg spent most of his time in the lab and published his work in German. James McKeen Cattell suggested that Münsterberg's lab was "the most important in America." After three years, Münsterberg was offered a ...