Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Poland and Pomerania in the Shaping of European Civilisation (10th-12th Centuries), ed. S. Rosik, Wrocław 2020, p. 39-110 | Paweł Migdalski - Academia.edu. Poland and Pomerania – from Slavic tribes to diverging roads: Tracing historiographic narratives, in: Europe reaches the Baltic. Poland and Pomerania in the Shaping of European ...

    • Paweł Migdalski
  2. Pomerania, which now includes parts of present day Poland and Germany, and is where the Pomeranian name came from. Pommore or Pommern means “on the sea.” Canine historians also believe that this is the location that the breed was first downsized to about 30-40 lbs. More specifically Pomeranians are part of the German

  3. Postcolonial readings of the medieval history of Pomerania. Tomasz Wiślicz. 2020, Poland, Pomerania and their Neighbours' Shaping of Medieval European Civilisation (10th-12th centuries), ed. by. Stanisław Rosik, Wrocław: Uniwersytet Wrocławski 2020, pp. 367-377. See Full PDF. Download PDF.

    • Tomasz Wiślicz
  4. The History of the Pomeranian. By Cathy Driggers and Kelly D. Reimschiissel. With more coat than body, Pomeranians have quite an interesting history behind them. The Pomeranian, as we know it today, descended originally from the Spitz family of dogs in the frozen Arctic region of Iceland.

  5. History of Pomerania. Early history. Early Middle Ages. High Middle Ages. Late Middle Ages. Early Modern Age. 1806–1933. 1933–1945. 1945–present. Poland portal. Germany portal. v. t. e. History of Pomerania (1806–1933) covers the history of Pomerania from the early 19th century until the rise of Nazi Germany .

  6. 5 de ene. de 2011 · Although a major portion of the Swedish trans-Baltic provinces were lost after the Great Nordic War, a tiny territory on the sea shore, Swedish-Pomerania with the port town Stralsund and the...

  7. La historia de Pomerania comienza poco antes del año 1000 con la progresiva conquista de los recientemente llegados gobernantes polanos occidentales. Antes de que esa zona estuviera documentada hace cerca de dos mil años como Germania, y en la modernidad se divide entre Alemania y Polonia.