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  1. Há 2 dias · The works and thought of Jewish-Austrian author Stefan Zweig are inseparable from his “ idea of Europe ”. His vision encompasses a nostalgic lament for a world that has been lost (along with a ...

  2. Há 2 dias · Stefan Zweig’s European utopia. Photograph of Stefan Zweig and Joseph Roth in Ostend, summer 1936, likely taken by Zweig's secretary, Lotte Altmann. Wikimedia Commons. The works and thought of Jewish-Austrian author Stefan Zweig are inseparable from his “ idea of Europe ”. His vision encompasses a nostalgic lament for a world that has ...

  3. Há 2 dias · Ao sair do atelier, Rodin pareceu surpreso com a presença daquele jovem que seria, no futuro, o escritor Stefan Zweig, que registra emocionado, anos depois, no seu livro de memórias ...

  4. Há 3 dias · Goethe had five children with Christiane Vulpius. Only their eldest son, August, survived into adulthood. One child was stillborn, while the others died early. Through his son August and daughter-in-law Ottilie, Johann had three grandchildren: Walther, Wolfgang and Alma. Alma died of typhoid fever during the outbreak in Vienna, at age 16.

  5. Há 5 dias · As part of our ongoing story reading sessions, we read today Stefan Zweig‘s ‘The Invisible Collection.’. The story is set in the world war years and is narrated by a German art dealer who goes back to one his patrons who for over sixty years has been patiently collecting rare prints by great artists of his time.

  6. Há 4 dias · The world’s first transgender clinic functioned like a bookend in time for the Weimar Republic. Founded in 1919 by Hirschfeld, it was forcibly closed in 1933, its library removed and burned. For 34 years it was a place of pilgrimage for adventurous sexual perverts, such as the pederasts of English letters.

  7. www.levoyageur.ch › blog-posts › stefan-zweigSTEFAN ZWEIG - Le voyageur

    Há 4 dias · REGULAR EDITION. STEFAN ZWEIG. "Magellan" Si vous avez soif d'aventure, laissez-vous happer par ce voyage aussi rocambolesque qu'ambitieux ! En 1518, un Portugais exilé du nom de Magellan convainc le roi d’Espagne, Charles Quint, d’un projet fou : « Il existe un passage conduisant de l’océan Atlantique à l’océan Indien.