Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The University of Dillingen, at Dillingen an der Donau in southern Germany, existed from 1551 to 1803. It was located in Swabia, then a district of Bavaria . Foundation. Its founder was Cardinal Otto Truchsess von Waldburg, Prince-Bishop of Augsburg (1543–1573).

  2. Application & Enrolment. As one of Germanys largest universities, we offer an extensive range of subjects: You can choose from over 250 bachelor and master programmes as well as teacher training and medicine. Apply now. Admittedly, the Ruhr Area is not New York City. But almost.Living in Duisburg & Essen.

  3. Dillingen or Dillingen an der Donau (Dillingen at the Danube) is a town in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany. It is the administrative center of the district of Dillingen. Besides the town of Dillingen proper, the municipality encompasses the villages of Donaualtheim, Fristingen, Hausen, Kicklingen, Schretzheim and Steinheim.

  4. Dillingen, UNIVRSTY OF, in Swabia, a district of Bavaria. Its founder was Cardinal Otto Truchsess von Waldburg, Prince- Bishop of Augsburg (1543-1573). He first established it under the title, “ College of St. Jerome”, and endowed it with the revenues of several monasteries which had been suppressed at the Reformation.

  5. Encyclopedia Volume. Free World Class Education. FREE Catholic Classes. Located in Swabia, a district of Bavaria. Its founder was Cardinal Otto Truchsess von Waldburg, Prince- Bishop of Augsburg (1543-1573).

  6. The University of Dillingen (Germany), founded in 1549 as Collegium S. Hieronymi, raised to university status in 1551 and handed over to the Society of Jesus (Province Germania Superior) in 1563, was an important educational institution of the Catholic renewal after the Council of Trent.

  7. The University of Dillingen canon law professorship was the result of the joint efforts of Heinrich von Knöringen (1570–1646, r.1599–1646), the prince-bishop of Augsburg who ruled Dillingen, and the local Jesuits. Knöringen, who had studied with the Jesuits in Dillingen and at the German–Hungarian College in