#alfred friederich
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shinmiyovvi · 3 months ago
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The Salvatorix Crew's ref sheets are here!
Alt. versions and Elli's close-up look under the cut
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Elliott's gas mask and Pershing cap
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balalalalalalaika · 30 days ago
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Confession Albums and Little Bit About Me
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Confession Albums were a popular parlor game among the intellectual and upper classes of Britain in the late 19th century. Being derived from Autograph Books, the Confession Albums were books filled with questionaires meant to be filled by friends, guests and acquaintances of the Album's owner. These questionnaires are known to have been filled by notorious historic figures, such as are Oscar Wilde, Karl Marx, Arthur Conan Doyle, Friederich Engels, Stéphane Mallarmé, Paul Cézanne; with Duke Alfred of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Marcel Proust and Claude Debussy being known to have filled the same set of questions. Although Confession Albums in the models of the ones found during 19th century began to fade in popularity, the tradition of filling and reading questionnaires in an attempt to express yourself and learn more about your peers did not. For such reason, I have decided to fill the questions of an Victorian Confession Album in my first post on this site, I hope those who read it will be able to get an idea of who I am, and I'd be delighted to see others try to answer the questions presented in this post.
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Confessions of Balalaika.
The Quality you like best: Humility Your chief characteristic: Creativity Your favourite occupation: Ranting The vice you hate most: Stubborness The vice you excuse most: Resentfulness Your idea of happiness: Abundance Your idea of misery: Scarcity Your aversion: Bad web-design Your hero: Yuri Gagharin, Carlos Prestes Your heroine: Olga Brenário, Rosa Luxemburg, Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya The poet you like best: Carlos Drummond de Andrade. The prose writer you like best: Machado de Assis, Arthur Conan Doyle, Graciliano Ramos. Your favourite flower: Lavander, Maracujá Your favourite dish: Fish, Noodles, Steak Tartare Your Maxim: It is Right to Rebel Your motto:
Don't fear god, Don't worry about death; What is good is easy to get, and What is terrible is easy to endure.
Your favourite colour: Red Your favourite colour of eyes & hair: Green and Black Your favourite Names: Agatha, Agnes, Arthur, Amelia, Adrian, Aaron, Almalexia The character in history you most dislike: Ronald Reagan, Margaret Tatcher, Boris Yeltsin, Netanyahu, Pinochet, and all the other neo-liberal, imperalistic and fascistic bastadards that have died or have yet to die.
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Final Thoughts;
I am new to this site, and came during the Great Brazilian Twitter Exodus. I am glad to see there are a lot of creatives in here, a friend of mine is trying to get me to interact more with people so hopefully I will post more, publish some of my work here, and else in the near future. English is not my first language so I am sorry if I made any mistakes during the writing of this post, but I hope anyone who've read learnt a thing or two about me or about Confession Albums, or at least had a fun time whilst doing so. Without much further ado, Farewell. TheRealPoggerGuy~
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arcticdementor · 9 months ago
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In the demonology of the West, for nearly a hundred years the rise to power of Adolf Hitler has played a leading part. Nearly everyone knows, or thinks he knows, though he is wrong, that “the Germans elected Hitler,” with the apparent lesson that a people can go bad and democracy must never be allowed to repeat such an error. Few, however, actually know the nuts and bolts of how Hitler came to power. This fascinating book fills that gap, by offering a day-by-day account of the national politics of the Weimar Republic from November, 1932 until the end of January, 1933. And it is certainly true that lessons are strewn everywhere in this story, though they have nothing to with reinforcing our own fake democracy. The authors, two German journalists, Rüdiger Barth and Hauke Friederichs, write a present-tense narrative covering each day, based on daily newspapers, as well as on other in-the-moment documents such as diaries and letters, along with secondary sources. Each day’s entry is headed by excerpts from the mainstream papers of the time, usually with wildly divergent presentations and calls to action (a phenomenon strange to us, of which more later). The authors do a good job of sketching the personalities of everyone involved, and of making clear what can be known and what must be surmised from the evidence. It sounds like such a narrative would be choppy, but the result is actually quite compelling, if not analytically deep.
A fundamental procedural problem was that Parliament for some time had had a “negative majority”—there were enough votes to obtain a vote of no confidence against any Chancellor, as enemies cooperated for that limited purpose, but not enough votes to form a majority that could stand behind a Chancellor. The most recent elections for the Reichstag (the main, lower house) had been held on November 6, 1932. A third of the seats were obtained by the National Socialists (NSDAP). Twenty percent and sixteen percent were held by the Social Democrats (SPD) and Communists (KPD) respectively—both parties of the extreme Left, but violent enemies, because the Moscow-directed KPD had been instructed that the slightly-more-centrist SPD was just as much the enemy as the NSDAP. The only other two parties of note were the centrist Centre Party, a Catholic (largely Bavarian) party, at twelve percent, and the conservative German National People’s Party (DNVP), led by the powerful media baron Alfred Hugenberg. Americans are used not only to an allegedly two-party system, but also to much more monolithic political activity. They are not accustomed to anything like the fractured atmosphere of late Weimar Germany, where many interests aggressively competed—not just political parties, but also powerful independent forces such as trade unions and the National Rural League (representing landowners), which were not aligned with a specific party. For decades in America, the Left has acted in unison, cooperatively crafting and rolling out a program which is then broadcast by Regime media to create the Narrative, then implemented and enforced by every powerful “independent” group in the country. In and through this process, every element of the Left coalition is rewarded and continually supports the collective line (though the recent wars in Israel have caused some cracks in this cozy setup, for the first time). The pretend opposition of the Republican Party cooperates with the Left’s program in exchange for social and material rewards. As a result, today the American system is close to a one-party state. We therefore find it hard to grasp the chaos that a system like Weimar embodied.
We begin on November 17, the day Papen resigned as Chancellor, when it became clear his cabinet refused to continue to support him. Papen was a protégé of the Defense Minister, Kurt von Schleicher, who had also turned against him, in part hoping to become Chancellor himself. The past six months had been uneasy months; among other crises, Hindenburg had dissolved the government of Prussia, the largest and most important state, and effectively administered Prussia by decree, the legality of which was winding its way through the courts. The question of the hour was how a new government could be formed that had any strong degree of support. A government of the Left was out of the question—not only because the Left parties did not cooperate with each other, and even collectively did not have anything approaching a majority, but because such a thing was unthinkable to Hindenburg and pretty much everyone else in the ruling classes. The obvious play was some combination of the National Socialists, the DNVP, and the Centre Party, who agreed on quite a bit. But the National Socialists were not playing nice with the government. They had no cabinet seats, as a result, and no direct access to federal power. Hitler had already rejected a proposal to make him Vice-Chancellor or give the NSDAP some minor cabinet posts. He regarded any attempt to bring the NSDAP into the government that did not include him as Chancellor as a non-starter, a mere attempt to coopt the National Socialists into working for a government that opposed their interests. His analysis was correct, of course—nobody in power actually wanted the NSDAP to have any real say in government. None of the men in charge liked the National Socialists, whom they regarded as vulgar upstarts, prone to gutter street fighting and openly contemptuous of the very existence of the Republic. The NSDAP, however, was behind the eight ball—they needed money (men of the SA, the Sturmabteilung, the National Socialist paramilitary force, with collection boxes, begging on behalf of the Party, were ubiquitous in the streets), and votes for the NSDAP had dropped significantly in the November election. Moreover, they were wracked by internal struggles, notably between Hitler and Gregor Strasser, who wanted more focus on socialist/distributive economics and other “third position” policies. Papen’s resignation meant that Hindenburg had to form a new government—but he wanted one that still excluded the NSDAP, and he certainly wasn’t going to include the Communists, or the Social Democrats, so forming any government was a challenge. The only way to pass something in Parliament was for either the Communists or National Socialists to vote for it, usually not because they favored a proposal, but because it harmed their opponents. (The Communists expected if the NSDAP came to power that they would gain, not lose, power themselves. Conversely, and a fact buried nowadays, most observers expected, if the NSDAP collapsed, that many of its members would move to the Communists.) Hindenburg met with all the key political players, including Hitler, as well as non-political players, such as leading industrialists and landowners. In fact, much of this book is the description of meetings between men of power—some private, some not, some meant to be private and made public by one mechanism or another. He tried repeatedly to get some powerful politician, any powerful politician other than Hitler or someone on the Left, to try to form a coalition government. All refused, or quickly failed in their attempts.
The Ministry of Defense spent much time wargaming whether the military could put down an alliance between the Communists and the NSDAP to permanently overthrow the Republic through a general strike. That may seem like an odd fear, but the two parties had cooperated in smaller-scale actions of this type before. Moreover, in the European context, this kind of general strike is more-or-less a euphemism for civil war, given that the aims of a general strike are massive and permanent governmental change, and that the instigators assume that violence will accompany a general strike. How likely any of this was is anyone’s guess, but the focus on it (and Schleicher’s involvement in it) show the pressure on Hindenburg to form a stable government that could avert this kind of outcome.
Reading all this, you get the feeling of watching a whirring hamster wheel, all these men running in place and getting nowhere. That they were smart and serious men did not prevent them from ending up in a situation that they all (except Hitler and his allies) were trying to avoid. It is not surprising; history offers many examples of disasters not avoided, despite the best efforts of competent, educated, far-seeing men. As always, there was no grand plan by some group behind the scenes; there never is, as much as many like to believe in such fantasies. Everything that happened emerged from the obvious, mostly public, efforts of many men both to advantage themselves and to do what they thought right for the Germans. That is just as true for 2024 America, omitting the part about doing right for the country. But what history does not offer is any example of a society such as ours, where the ruling classes are utterly dominated by the exact opposite of those in the Germany of 1932—rather we have incompetent, uneducated, stupid men and women, dominated by the latter, with the former being feminized, in thought and manner, in a way that would boggle the mind of any decisionmaker in Weimar. Thus, we don’t have the cushion that existed in Weimar, which still fell into disaster. Therefore, we can be sure that when crisis arrives here, the ground will come up even faster to meet us as we fall, not because there is nobody at the helm, but because of something worse—those at the helm are incapable, from a combination of malice and ineptitude, on every level.
So what? This was all long ago. But it matters, because we pretend desperation is not also our reality. True, at this moment, it is perhaps not our reality to the same extent as Weimar, where unemployment was thirty percent, and many did not know where their next meal was coming from. But at least Germany was a high-trust, homogenous society with an economy based on producing actual value, whereas we are—not. Certainly, huge swathes of our country are suffering quietly, unable to have any part of what used to be the standard American life. They are instead pumped full of, and killed with government approval by, Chinese and Mexican fentanyl, while they survive on handouts and gig jobs. They are sedated and kept quiet by government checks, weed, and the internet, games and porn, combined with threats and punishments for anyone who dares fight back or act like a man should. Without these suppressants, America would long since have exploded, and rightly so.
We often hear that our times are a pale imitation of the past, a variation on Nietzsche’s Last Man. Where are the crowds in the street, baying for their preferred political solution? Where are the brawls between competing factions? Where are the political assassinations? No doubt every time is different, and we seem a desiccated society. But I suspect, for both good and bad, we are not desiccated at all—merely asleep, artificially tranquilized. When that spell is broken, something new will emerge. Let’s hope it’s something good.
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n4682 · 9 months ago
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🦷🕸️🪲🪱🌿🍄🌻🪻🦦
🦷 - how do you view being alterhuman (i.e. spiritual beliefs, reincarnation/next life, psycological related, etc.)?
i kinda view it in the sense that i always was nonhuman, and that i somehow ended up in this shitty body. like its a bit more complicated than that, but thats the general idea. the problem with explaining this is that i just view my theriotype/kintype/whatever as just. me. it is me. we are one and the same. i am just it in this fuckin terrible human form.
🕸️ - do you often connect with your theriotype(s)? if yes, how?
if this means like seeing others of my kind then it would be physically impossible to
🪲 - how much of your life and/or your identity would you consider is impacted by being alterhuman?
quite a fair bit of it. if im being honest, trying to discover things about being nonhuman led to me figuring out i was aroace and nonbinary. its also shaped the way i see things, and i feel like its made me better as a person because of it.
🪱 - what are some things that remind you of your theriotype(s)?
the dark, stars, any eye and wing imagery at this point
🌿 - what are some of your favourite alterhuman-related activities?
laying down in my bed making it as dark as possible and just making noises that remind me of... me.
🍄 - does your kintype/theriotype go by a seperate or different identity? (i.e. different name, age, gender, etc.)
i think that i am much much older that my body physically is. i also probably would have gone by another name previously, however kaelin is a nice name ::]
🌻 - is there any music that reminds you of your theriotype?
YEEEEEEEEEEEES OMG i have so much, heres just a few (w/o performance info cause im a bit eepy. if you want more of these feel free to send me an ask!)
Alfred Schnittke - Symphony No. 3
Einojuhani Rautavaara - Piano Concerto No. 1
Alfred Schnittke - Concerto for Piano and Strings
Friederich Gulda - Variations
Takashi Yoshimatsu - Piano Concerto "Memo Flora"
Alfred Schnittke - Concerto Grosso No. 2
Olivier Messaien - Le banquet celeste
Maurice Ravel - Piano Concerto in G, Mvt. II
Igor Stravinsky - The Rite Of Spring
Dmitri Shostakovich - String Quartet No. 9
Dmitri Shostakovich - Violin Concerto No. 1
Alfred Schnittke - Cello Concerto No. 1 (this one especially. the fourth movement..... i could go on for ages about it)
🪻 - have you told any of your loved ones about being alterhuman? how did they react?
i have told some of my close irl friends about it, and theyve been quite accepting. theres no way in hell im telling many more people about it any time soon, but its nice that they're accepting of what i am.
🦦 - what candle scent would you say best describes your theriotype?
uuuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
what does the void smell like
cause that
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ceciliafrom5to7 · 6 years ago
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George Harrison
John Lennon
Amy Winehouse
Pablo Neruda
Brian Jones
Alfred Hitchcock
Joe Cocker
Keith Moon
David Bowie
Chester Bennington
Marlon Brando
James Dean
River Phoenix
Buddy Holly
Heath Ledger
Kurt Cobain
Agnes Varda
Frida Kahlo
Leon Trotsky
Stanley Kubrick
Lenin
Frank Sinatra
Philip Seymour Hoffman
Rosa Parks
Vincent Van Gogh
Sid Vicious
Wendy O. Williams
Fritz Lang
Jim Morrison
Sam Cooke
Otis Redding
Linda McCartney
Marilyn Monroe
Janis Joplin
Jesus Christ
Luis Buñuel
Nelson Mandela
Freddie Mercury
Aretha Franklin
Malcolm X
Salvador Dalí
Jimi Hendrix
Albert Einstein
Martin Luther King Jr
Alan Rickman
Bruce Lee
Jean-Luc Godard
Bob Marley
Johnny Cash
Bob Ross
Ludwig van B.
Karl Marx
Friederich Engels
Charlie Chaplin
Nina Simone
Marie Curie
Mao Zedong
Wilt Chamberlain
Audrey Hepburn
Ian Curtis
Fidel Castro
All dead. They are all dead. All of them. Fuck this universe.
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bild-de-blog1 · 6 years ago
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Nekrolog 2018 – Wikipedia
Nekrolog 2018 – Wikipedia
Tag
Name
Beruf, bekannt als
Alter
Beleg 20. Juni Sándor Kányádi ungarischer Dichter und Übersetzer 89 [1] 20. Juni Peter Thomson australischer Golfspieler 88 [2] 19. Juni Rafael Alcides kubanischer Schriftsteller 85 [3] 19. Juni Dante M. Caputo argentinischer Politiker und Diplomat 74 [4] 19. Juni Stanley Cavell US-amerikanischer Philosoph 91 [5] 19. Juni Uwe Deeken deutscher Theatergründer und -intendant 76 [6] 19. Juni Iwan Dratsch ukrainischer Schriftsteller und Bürgerrechtler 81 [7] 19. Juni Hans-Christian Drömann deutscher Theologe und Geistlicher 86 [8] 19. Juni Elisabeth zu Dänemark dänische Prinzessin 83 [9] 19. Juni Sergio Gonella italienischer Fußballschiedsrichter 85 [10] 19. Juni Hubert Green US-amerikanischer Golfspieler 71 [11] 19. Juni Lowrell Simon US-amerikanischer Soulsänger und Songwriter 75 [12] 18. Juni Hermann Glaser deutscher Kulturpolitiker und Publizist 89 [13] 18. Juni Paul Gratzik deutscher Schriftsteller 82 [14] 18. Juni Kazuo Kashio japanischer Unternehmer 89 [15] 18. Juni Barry McDaniel US-amerikanischer Opernsänger 87 [16] 18. Juni Konstantinos Politis griechischer Basketballspieler und -trainer 76 [17] 18. Juni Nathan Shaham israelischer Schriftsteller 93 [18] 18. Juni Berndt A. Skott deutscher Karikaturist 74 [19] 18. Juni Big van Vader US-amerikanischer Wrestler 63 [20] 18. Juni XXXTentacion US-amerikanischer Rapmusiker 20 [21] 17. Juni Thomas Chorherr österreichischer Journalist und Buchautor 85 [22] 17. Juni Carlos Gelmi argentinischer Journalist 83 [23] 17. Juni Timothy O’Meara südafrikanisch-US-amerikanischer Mathematiker 90 [24] 17. Juni Rebecca Parris US-amerikanische Jazzsängerin 66 [25] 17. Juni Erwin Schöpf deutscher Mediziner 81 [26] 16. Juni Abdoulie Bah gambischer Politiker 69 [27] 16. Juni Hans-Artur Bauckhage deutscher Politiker 75 [28] 16. Juni Martin Bregman US-amerikanischer Filmproduzent 92 [29] 16. Juni Euan Howard, 4. Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal britischer Politiker 94 [30] 16. Juni Edgar Preuß deutscher Fußballtrainer 88 [31] 16. Juni Gennadi Roschdestwenski sowjetischer bzw. russischer Dirigent 87 [32] 15. Juni Leslie Grantham britischer Schauspieler 71 [33] 15. Juni Enoch zu Guttenberg deutscher Dirigent 71 [34] 15. Juni Matt Murphy US-amerikanischer Bluesmusiker 88 [35] 15. Juni Darío Villalba Flores spanischer Künstler und Eiskunstläufer 79 [36] 15. Juni Dieter Wellershoff deutscher Schriftsteller 92 [37] 14. Juni Josef Finkenzeller deutscher Theologe 97 [38] 14. Juni Stanislaw Goworuchin russischer Filmregisseur und Politiker 82 [39] 14. Juni Archibald Montgomerie, 18. Earl of Eglinton britischer Peer 78 [40] 14. Juni Theodor Österreicher österreichischer Jurist 69 [41] 14. Juni Marta Weigle US-amerikanische Volkskundlerin 73 [42] 13. Juni Reinhard Birkenstock deutscher Rechtsanwalt 73 [43] 13. Juni Anne Donovan US-amerikanische Basketballspielerin und -trainerin 56 [44] 13. Juni D. J. Fontana US-amerikanischer Schlagzeuger 87 [45] 13. Juni Rory Kiely irischer Politiker 84 [46] 13. Juni Miguel Mejides kubanischer Schriftsteller 68 [47] 13. Juni Charles Vinci US-amerikanischer Gewichtheber 85 [48] 13. Juni Ulrike Wulf-Rheidt deutsche Bauforscherin 54 [49] 12. Juni Zé Carlos brasilianischer Fußballspieler 73 [50] 12. Juni Wayne Dockery US-amerikanischer Jazzmusiker 76 [51] 12. Juni Rudolf Fritsch deutscher Mathematiker 78 [52] 12. Juni Bonaldo Giaiotti italienischer Opernsänger 85 [53] 12. Juni Jon Hiseman britischer Schlagzeuger 73 [54] 12. Juni Antônio Carlos Konder Reis brasilianischer Politiker 93 [55] 12. Juni Walter Langer österreichischer Schauspieler 89 [56] 12. Juni Alwin Lehner österreichischer Unternehmer 86 [57] 12. Juni Christian Schmidt-Leithoff deutscher Jurist 82 [58] 12. Juni Meinhard Starostik deutscher Jurist 68 [59] 12. Juni Nikolaus Wiplinger österreichischer Pianist 80 [60] 11. Juni Oscar Furlong argentinischer Basketballspieler und Tennistrainer 90 [61] 11. Juni Marcel Hénaff französischer Philosoph und Ethnologe 75 [62] 11. Juni Yvette Horner französische Akkordeonistin 95 [63] 11. Juni Victoria Kalima sambische Politikerin 45 [64] 11. Juni Roman Kłosowski polnischer Schauspieler 89 [65] 11. Juni Erich Meuthen deutscher Historiker 89 [66] 10. Juni Stan Anderson englischer Fußballspieler und -trainer 85 [67] 10. Juni Dieter Kind deutscher Elektroingenieur 88 [68] 10. Juni Martin Metzger deutscher Theologe und Geistlicher 90 [69] 10. Juni Fritz Jürgen Obst deutscher Biologe und Museumsdirektor 79 [70] 10. Juni Liliana Ross chilenische Schauspielerin, Dramaturgin und Theaterdirektorin 79 [71] 10. Juni Ed Sadlowski US-amerikanischer Gewerkschafter 79 [72] 10. Juni Siegfried Schumacher deutscher Kinderbuchautor 91 [73] 9. Juni Martin Birrane irischer Unternehmer und Autorennfahrer 82 [74] 9. Juni Françoise Bonnot französische Filmeditorin 78 [75] 9. Juni Ogobara Doumbo malischer Mediziner 62 [76] 9. Juni Lorraine Gordon US-amerikanische Jazzclubbesitzerin 95 [77] 9. Juni Reinhard Hardegen deutscher Marineoffizier und Politiker 105 [78] 9. Juni Kenyatta Jones US-amerikanischer American-Football-Spieler 39 [79] 9. Juni Clemens Kalischer deutsch-US-amerikanischer Fotograf 97 [80] 9. Juni Ernst Leuninger deutscher Theologe 84 [81] 9. Juni Lotārs Millers lettischer Rennbootfahrer 54 [82] 9. Juni Fadil Vokrri jugoslawischer Fußballspieler 57 [83] 9. Juni Friederich Werthmann deutscher Bildhauer und Plastiker 90 [84] 9. Juni Yirmiyahu Yovel israelischer Philosoph und Übersetzer 82 [85] 8. Juni Per Ahlmark schwedischer Politiker und Schriftsteller 79 [86] 8. Juni Anthony Bourdain US-amerikanischer Koch, Autor und Fernsehmoderator 61 [87] 8. Juni Johann Bruns deutscher Politiker 86 [88] 8. Juni Maria Bueno brasilianische Tennisspielerin 78 [89] 8. Juni Freddy Eugen dänischer Radrennfahrer 77 [90] 8. Juni Eunice Gayson britische Schauspielerin 90 [91] 8. Juni Danny Kirwan britischer Gitarrist 68 [92] 8. Juni Horst-Dieter Krus deutscher Heimatforscher 68 [93] 8. Juni John McKenzie kanadischer Eishockeyspieler 80 [94] 8. Juni Jutta Nardenbach deutsche Fußballspielerin 49 [95] 8. Juni Jackson Odell US-amerikanischer Schauspieler und Musiker 20 [96] 8. Juni Fernando Purón Johnston mexikanischer Politiker 43 [97] 8. Juni Hans-Karl Siebigs deutscher Architekt 88 [98] 7. Juni Leopoldo Ayala mexikanischer Dichter 79 [99] 7. Juni Helge Bofinger deutscher Architekt 78 [100] 7. Juni David Douglas Duncan US-amerikanischer Fotojournalist 102 [101] 7. Juni Minken Fosheim norwegische Schauspielerin und Autorin 62 [102] 7. Juni Arie den Hartog niederländischer Radrennfahrer 77 [103] 7. Juni Alfred Hüller deutscher Physiker 78 [104] 7. Juni Hans Gerd Krogmann deutscher Hörspielregisseur und Schriftsteller 83 [105] 7. Juni Irina Lein-Edelstein russisch-deutsche Pianistin 74 [106] 7. Juni Ralf Petersen deutscher Komponist 80 [107] 7. Juni Martin Polke deutscher Industrie-Physiker 87 [108] 7. Juni Ortwin Rau deutscher Clubbetreiber und Konzertveranstalter 63 [109] 7. Juni Peter Stringfellow britischer Unternehmer 77 [110] 7. Juni Gena Turgel polnische Holocaustüberlebende 95 [111] 7. Juni Stefan Weber österreichischer Musiker 71 [112] 6. Juni Tinus Bosselaar niederländischer Fußballspieler 82 [113] 6. Juni Teddy Johnson britischer Sänger 98 [114] 6. Juni Peter-Paul Müller deutscher Politiker 83 [1]6. Juni Kira Muratowa sowjetische bzw. ukrainische Filmregisseurin 83 [115] 6. Juni Christian Salzmann deutscher Pädagoge 87 [116] 6. Juni Ralph Santolla US-amerikanischer Gitarrist 48 [117] 6. Juni Michaele Vollbracht US-amerikanischer Modedesigner und Illustrator 70 [118] 6. Juni H. H. Wieder US-amerikanischer Physiker 99 [119] 6. Juni Mary Wilson britische Autorin, Premierministersgattin 102 [120] 6. Juni Franz M. Wuketits österreichischer Biologe und Wissenschaftstheoretiker 63 [121] 5. Juni Peter Becker deutscher Musikpädagoge 84 [122] 5. Juni Ira Berlin US-amerikanischer Historiker 77 [123] 5. Juni Jānis Bojārs lettischer Leichtathlet 62 [124] 5. Juni Brian Browne kanadischer Jazzpianist 81 [125] 5. Juni Daša Drndić kroatische Schriftstellerin 71 [126] 5. Juni Jadwiga Grabowska-Hawrylak polnische Architektin 97 [127] 5. Juni Karl Fritz Lauer deutscher Phytopathologe und Herbologe 80 [128] 5. Juni Stanisław Moryto polnischer Organist, Komponist und Hochschulrektor 71 [129] 5. Juni Kate Spade US-amerikanische Modedesignerin 55 [130] 5. Juni Heinz Wenger deutscher Politiker 79 [131] 4. Juni Dwight Clark US-amerikanischer American-Football-Spieler 61 [132] 4. Juni Victoria de la Cruz García spanische Ordensschwester 110 [133] 4. Juni Alexei Dessjattschikow sowjetischer Leichtathlet 85 [134] 4. Juni Norman Edge US-amerikanischer Jazzmusiker 84 [135] 4. Juni Heinz Jansen deutscher Politiker 78 [136] 4. Juni Georgann Johnson US-amerikanische Schauspielerin 91 [137] 4. Juni Charles Martin Newton US-amerikanischer Basketballfunktionär 88 [138] 4. Juni Jalal Mansur Nuriddin US-amerikanischer Rapper, Lyriker und Musiker 73 [139] 3. Juni Douglas G. Altman britischer Medizinstatistiker 69 [140] 3. Juni Alessandra Appiano italienische Schriftstellerin 59 [141] 3. Juni Jan Axelsson schwedischer Politiker 79 [142] 3. Juni Frank Carlucci US-amerikanischer Politiker 87 [143] 3. Juni Clarence Fountain US-amerikanischer Gospelsänger 88 [144] 3. Juni Miguel Obando Bravo nicaraguanischer Kardinal 92 [145] 3. Juni Gilberto Parra mexikanischer Profiboxer 25 [146] 3. Juni Herbert Sleegers deutscher Lyriker und Schriftsteller 85 [147] 3. Juni Karin Stief-Kreihe deutsche Politikerin 68 [148] 3. Juni Georg von Tiesenhausen deutsch-US-amerikanischer Raketenwissenschaftler 104 [149] 3. Juni Gilbert Trausch luxemburgischer Historiker 86 [150] 3. Juni Bernhard Welz deutscher Chemiker 81 [151] 2. Juni Paul D. Boyer US-amerikanischer Biochemiker 99 [152] 2. Juni Robert Brylewski polnischer Rockmusiker 57 [153] 2. Juni Elisabeth Dörr deutsche Heimatforscherin und Autorin 86 [154] 2. Juni Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt österreichischer Verhaltensforscher und Ethologe 89 [155] 2. Juni Martin Hoffmann deutsches Opfer des Stalinismus und Sachbuchautor 88 [156] 2. Juni Gregor Laschen deutscher Schriftsteller und Herausgeber 77 [157] 2. Juni Malcolm Morley britisch-US-amerikanischer Maler 86 [158] 2. Juni Irving Sandler US-amerikanischer Kunsthistoriker und -kritiker 92 [159] 2. Juni Werner Wigelbeyer österreichischer Politiker 81 [160] 2. Juni Emil Wolf US-amerikanischer Physiker 95 [161] 1. Juni Jürg Altherr Schweizer Bildhauer 73 [162] 1. Juni Rudolf Beerbohm deutscher Vielseitigkeits- und Springreiter 76 [163] 1. Juni Artur Cacciolari brasilianischer Akrobat 20 [164] 1. Juni Eddy Clearwater US-amerikanischer Bluesmusiker 83 [165] 1. Juni Jill Ker Conway australisch-US-amerikanische Historikerin und Schriftstellerin 83 [166] 1. Juni John Julius Cooper, 2. Viscount Norwich britischer Diplomat und Schriftsteller 88 [167] 1. Juni Walter Eich Schweizer Fußballspieler 93 [168] 1. Juni Bernard Gantner französischer Maler 89 [169] 1. Juni Jaap M. Hemelrijk niederländischer Klassischer Archäologe 92 [170] 1. Juni Egon Hoegen deutscher Sprecher und Schauspieler 89 [171] 1. Juni Hilmar Hoffmann deutscher Kulturpolitiker 92 [172] 1. Juni Hans Heinrich Kaminsky deutscher Mediävist und Diplomatiker 80 [173] 1. Juni Joseíto Mateo dominikanischer Merengue-Sänger 98 [174] 1. Juni Jiří Nečas tschechischer Künstler und Sprachwissenschaftler ≈62 [175] 1. Juni William Edward Phipps US-amerikanischer Schauspieler 96 [176] 1. Juni Kostas Polychroniou griechischer Fußballspieler und -trainer 82 [177] 1. Juni Lutz Pyritz deutscher Jockey und Pferdesporttrainer 60 [178] 1. Juni Sinan Sakić serbischer Turbo-Folk-Sänger 61 [179] 1. Juni René Séjourné französischer Bischof 88 [180] 1. Juni Rolf Wenzel deutscher Offizier 84 [181]
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