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Topic: Jan Jesensky


  
  Bloody Bohemia
Jan Jesenský and the Battle of Bílá Hora
Jesenský (also known as Jesenius) was a nobleman who took part in the historic Battle of Bílá Hora (White Mountain), a decisive battle for the Czech Lands in the Thirty Years’ War.
One of the men viewing the autopsy was public executioner Jan Mydlář - and he would swing the swords that descended on his former professor and twenty-three others in one day.
bloodybohemia.com /?page_id=8   (303 words)

  
  Jan Jesensky and Bila Hora
Jesensky (also known as Jesenius) was a nobleman who took part in the historic Battle of Bila Hora, decisive for the Czech Lands.
Jesenius, with 26 other nobleman, was put to death for his part in the battle.
One of the men in the audience was the public executioner - and he would swing the axe that descended on his former professor and twenty-six others in one day.
www.angelfire.com /planet/bloodybohemia/jesensky   (127 words)

  
 The Kentucky Post
The Jesenskys were relieved when Dale called his fiancée on Thursday and told her to pass along the word that he and his brother were alive and well.
Jesensky, a secretary with the Boone County Board of Education, is well known in the county school system, and her husband was active in Knothole baseball.
The community has rallied to the support of the Jesenskys once before: In 1992 their oldest son, 16-year-old Andy Jr., was killed when he slipped in the shower and hit the back of his neck on the shower spigot.
www.kypost.com /2003/03/29/kytwosons032903.html   (906 words)

  
 Aftermath: the executions on the Old Town Square - 25-06-2003 - Radio Prague
Their defeat culminated in an exodus of thousands, including such figures as the scholar Jan Komensky, or Comenius as he is more widely known, who fled to the Netherlands.
Among those waiting in prison condemned to die: Jachym Ondrej Slik, Kaspar Kaplir, and Jan Jesensky, the rector of the university in Prague.
From the burghers Jan Jesensky, or Jessenius, was also among those to die that day, and the poor man must have suffered terribly.
www.radio.cz /en/article/42206   (1303 words)

  
 [No title]
JAN JESSENIUS (also written as Jesenius or known as Jan Jesenský), a medieval physician, politician and philosopher of Slovak origin, was born on December 27, 1566 in Wroclaw, Poland, in a family of Balthasar Jesenský and Martha Schueller.
Jan studied at Elisabethgymnasium in Wroclaw and from 1583 at the Wittenberg University, Germany.
As a result of his political views and the active participation in the uprising, Jan was one of the 27 Bohemian noblemen executed on June 21, 1621 at the Old Town Square in Prague (there's an memorial with their names today).
eng.jfmed.uniba.sk /index.php?zobraz=ehtml&idmenu=1   (985 words)

  
 Jesensky - Education - Information - Educational Resources - Encyclopedia - Music
All Jesensky property was confiscated by Osmans; brothers Melchior, Lorenz and Balthasar Jesensky moved to Silesia and lived in Wroclaw and Swidnica.
Balthasar's son was Jan Jesensky, known as Jan Jesenius, famous scientist and polititian who lived in Prague, Bohemia.
Jan Jesenius, 17th century scientist and polititian; Jan Jesensky, 19th century scientist, professor of Prague University; Ruzena Jesenska, 19th century Czech novelist; Jan Jesensky jun., 20th century scientist; Milena Jesenska, journalist and translator
www.music.us /education/J/Jesensky.htm   (344 words)

  
 Franz Kafka and Milena Jesenska
Milena Jesenská (pronounced Mee-leh-nah Yeh-sen-skah) was born August 10, 1896 in Prague to Dr. Jan Jesenský, a dentist and professor of medicine at Charles University in Prague, and Milena (Hejzlarová) Jesenská (in Czech and other Slavic languages, women's last names have a feminine ending).
Her family was a conservative Catholic one, and although she got along well with her mother, she feared and later rebelled against her severe, strict father, with whom she had major problems throughout her life, much like Franz Kafka's problems with his own father.
Milená treasured his letters for the rest of her life.
www.kafka-franz.com /Franz-Kafka-Milena-Jesenska1.htm   (2595 words)

  
 EBU - Report on the work of the commission on rehabilitation, vocational, training and employment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Jan Holmegard of Sweden was succeeded by Kjell Ulmeryd.
It was not therefore possible for the Commission to consider the contents of the document at its last meeting in Madrid.
Dr Jesensky plans to present the English version of the Glossary to the Board at the General Assembly in November.
www.uiciechi.it /vecchio/inter/5assembly/rehab.htm   (2152 words)

  
 Kisac - CIC Kisac   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
On the cemetery there have been burried many patriots and Kisac inhabitants that had built in their work and life into the foundation of their village.
Jan Durovka – an editor in chief of the Slovak editorial RTV offices in Novi Sad
Jan Kohut – a worker in RTS Novi Sad
www.kic-kisac.co.yu /kisac/index.html   (900 words)

  
 Portsmouth Herald Birth Notices 2003 Area Births
EXETER - A son, Ryan Paul Young, was born Jan. 4, 2003 in Exeter Hospital to Donald and Karen (Elcik) Young of Exeter.
CONCORD - A son, Nicholas Andrew Dalton, was born Jan. 10, 2003, to Jonathan and Melissa Higgins of Concord.
PORTSMOUTH - A son, Brady Harrison Cummins, was born Jan. 18, 2003 in Portsmouth Regional Hospital to Robert and Karen Cummins of York, Maine.
archive.seacoastonline.com /2003news/1_5birth.htm   (4004 words)

  
 Excerpts from Skala's Church History
Pe's'ina died in 1680 and the manuscript then got in possession of Jan Bedrich de Wallenstein (probably somehow related to infamous Albrecht Valds'tyn - Czech form of his name - but there were too may Wallensteins around at that time, some even protestants).
The manuscript got in the family library in Duchcov (where much later also worked Casanova as a librarian) and the last four volumes are in the Czech national Museum now.
Dr.Jan Jesenius (Jessenius, Jesensky) from Jesen, physician, moved in Prague around 1600 and the very same year, he performed autopsy, the first ever in Prague.
www.voynich.nu /praha/skala.html   (823 words)

  
 SLOVAK REPUBLIC , Landmine Monitor Report 2001
The Slovak Republic (Slovakia) signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 3 December 1997, ratified it on 25 February 1999 and became a State Party on 1 August 1999.
Slovakia participated in the Second Meeting of State Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty in September 2000, with a delegation headed by Minister for Foreign Affairs Jan Figel.
Interview with Milos Koterec, Milan Ciganik and Marcel Jesensky, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Bratislava, 11 January 2001.
www.icbl.org /lm/2001/slovak   (1749 words)

  
 jan jesensky - Definition and Meaning of jan jesensky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Myth.) Jan One of intermediate order between angels and men.
1: Jan Hus(noun)

1: Czechoslovakian r...
1: Jan Hendrix Oort(noun)

1: Dutch as...
www.wordiq.com /reference/jan+jesensky   (228 words)

  
 "Slovak Links" - The World's Largest Collection of Slovak-related Web Links!
Kleinbussink, Jan - Conductor, harpsichordist, and organist who has performed with the Slovak group Musica Aeterna.
Kleinbussink, Jan - Slovakian conductor, harpsichordist, and organist.
Komensky (Comenius), Jan Amos - Swiss study of his biblical hermeneutics.
www.hosmanek.com /slovak/page5.htm   (1490 words)

  
 Publications: Centre for Patristic, Medieval and Renaissance Texts
Isidor of Sevilla, Etymologiae XIII-XV, Czech translation and notes Daniel Korte, introduction Jan Kalivoda and Jan Souček, Oikúmené, Praha 2001, ISBN 80-7298-032-7.
Isidor of Sevilla, Etymologiae XVIII, Czech translation and notes Daniel Korte, introduction Eva Stehlíková and Jan Souček, Oikúmené, Praha 2002, ISBN 80-7298-046-7.
Karfíková, Jan Eriugena: kosmogonie a antropologie podle De divina praedestinatione a Periphyseon, in: Teologický sborník, 1/2000, str.
oldwww.upol.cz /resources/centrumt/en/publications.htm   (2352 words)

  
 SLOVAK LITERATURE
After enforced silence, he was able to publish again from the mid-sixties.
Jan Smrek (1898-1982), brought up in Modra in a children's home, worked as a journalist and publisher's editor, and founded the Prague-based Slovak literary monthly Elán in 1931.
From the time of his second collection Cválajúce dni (Galloping days, 1925) he became the main Slovak Vitalist poet, and a generally happy-toned, deftly lyrical eroticist, though the Second World War altered his carefree note for a while.
users.ox.ac.uk /~tayl0010/slovaklit.htm   (5364 words)

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