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  1. Stettin – den historiske hovedstad i regionen Vestpommern ligger ved udmundingen af Oder-Floden, omkring 65 km fra Østersøen. For mange århundreder siden tilhørte området Grif-familien, et dynasti af pommerske fyrster. Stettins omtumlede historie har ført til, at byen har været underlagt en række lande: Sverige, Preussen og Polen.

  2. Stettin (ghost town), Wisconsin, within the current town. Stettin (region), a unit of territorial division in the Prussian Province of Pomerania 1816–1945. Lagoon of Stettin or Stettin Bay, Szczecin Lagoon, a lagoon in the Oder estuary, shared by Germany and Poland. Štítina (German: Stettin ), a village in Moravian Silesia, the Czech Republic.

  3. No obstante, es la expresión iron curtain utilizada por Winston Churchill, en 1946, la que más se conoce, entre otras consideraciones porque ya figuraba como locución en inglés al designar un telón metálico que, en caso de incendio, se usa como cortafuegos en los teatros. La primera «cortina de hierro» se instaló en 1794 en el teatro ...

  4. Stettin, Germany (now Szczecin, Poland) Number of employees. ~20,000 (in 1918) Parent. Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau. Aktien-Gesellschaft Vulcan Stettin (short AG Vulcan Stettin) was a German shipbuilding and locomotive building company. Founded in 1851, it was located near the former eastern German city of Stettin, today Polish Szczecin.

  5. Szczecin ( German: Stettin) is a large city in Poland in West Pomeranian Voivodeship. As of 2005, 411,119 people live there. The city is on the river Odra ( German: Oder ), near the border to Germany. It is one of the largest sea ports on the Baltic. It is the historical capital of the German province of Pomerania.

  6. Anning, depicted with her dog. Mary Anning (21 May 1799 – 9 March 1847) was an English fossil collector and palaeontologist. She made discoveries of Jurassic marine fossil beds in the cliffs along the English Channel at Lyme Regis, which changed the scientific thinking about prehistoric life and the history of the Earth.

  7. Concluded on 25 August (O.S.) or 4 September 1630 (N.S.), it was predated to 10 July (O.S.) or 20 July 1630 (N.S.), the date of the Swedish Landing. [nb 1] [2] [3] Sweden assumed military control, [2] and used the Pomeranian bridgehead for campaigns into Central and Southern Germany. [4] After the death of the last Pomeranian duke in 1637 ...