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herbert

  • 101 Greene, Herbert

    1906
       Ayudante de direccion, con dos peliculas en su haber como realizador; la primera de ellas (1957) es un western de aceptable factura; la segunda (1959), un filme de ciencia-ficcion notablemente inferior titulado The Cosmic Man.
        Outlaw Queen. 1957. 70 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Globe Releasing Corp. Andrea King, Harry James, Robert Clarke.

    English-Spanish dictionary of western films > Greene, Herbert

  • 102 Leeds, Herbert I.

    1900-1984
       Neoyorquino; como otros muchos, pasa de montador, su oficio inicial dentro del mundo del cine, a di rector, asociado basicamente a 20th Century-Fox, para la que hizo la mayor parte de su obra. Debuta en 1937 con Love on a Budget. Realiza westerns y peliculas de misterio y aventuras a un ritmo endiablado que en sus mejores momentos llega a alcanzar los cinco filmes por ano, para Fox, y despues pa ra RKO y Monogram. Entre ellos, cabe citar algunos de los conocidos personajes Charlie Chan y Mr. Mo to, asi como, ya en el terreno del western, Cisco Kid.
        The Arizona Wildcat. 1939. 70 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Fox. Jane Whiters, Leo Carrillo, Pauline Moore.
        Return of the Cisco Kid. 1939. 70 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Fox. Warner Baxter, Lynn Bari, Cesar Romero, Robert Barrat, Chris Pin Martin.
        The Cisco Kid and the Lady. 1940. 74 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Fox. Cesar Romero, Marjorie Weaver, George Montgomery, Robert Barrat, Virginia Field, Chris Pin Martin.
        Romance of the Rio Grande. 1941. 72 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Fox. Cesar Romero, Patricia Morison, Lynne Roberts, Chris Pin Martin.
        Ride On Vaquero. 1941. 64 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Fox. Cesar Romero, Mary Beth Hugues, Robert Lowery, Chris Pin Martin, Lynne Roberts, Joan Woodbury.

    English-Spanish dictionary of western films > Leeds, Herbert I.

  • 103 Strock, Herbert L.

    1918-2005
       Nacido en Boston, montador de formacion, trabaja para la MGM entre 1914 y 1947. A finales de los anos 40 se convierte en realizador de television, para la que dirige centenares de episodios de series mas o menos populares. En ocasiones se enfrenta a largometrajes para la gran pantalla, hasta un total de nueve con acreditacion, mas unos pocos en los que no consigue figurar en los titulos de credito. Hay poco que decir de este director de productos baratos y anodinos, y menos aun de su unico western.
        Rider on a Dead Horse. 1962. 72 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Phoenix. John Vivyan, Bruce Gordon, Lisa Lu.

    English-Spanish dictionary of western films > Strock, Herbert L.

  • 104 Simon, Herbert A.

    (1916–2001) Gen Mgt
    U.S. economist, and political and social scientist. Respected for his work on problem solving, decision making, and artificial intelligence. He began developing his ideas in Administrative Behavior (1946).

    The ultimate business dictionary > Simon, Herbert A.

  • 105 Dow, Herbert Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 26 February 1866 Belleville, Ontario, Canada
    d. 15 October 1930 Rochester, Minnesota, USA
    [br]
    American industrial chemist, pioneer manufacturer of magnesium alloys.
    [br]
    Of New England ancestry, his family returned there soon after his birth and later moved to Cleveland, Ohio. In 1884, Dow entered the Case School of Applied Science, graduating in science four years later. His thesis dealt partly with the brines of Ohio, and he was persuaded to present a paper on brine to the meeting of the American Association for he Advancement of Science being held in Cleveland the same year. That entailed visits to collect samples of brines from various localities, and led to the observation that their composition varied, one having a higher lithium content while another was richer in bromine. This study of brines proved to be the basis for his career in industrial chemistry. In 1888 Dow was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the Homeopathic Hospital College in Cleveland, but he continued to work on brine, obtaining a patent in the same year for extracting bromine by blowing air through slightly electrolysed brine. He set up a small company to exploit the process, but it failed; the process was taken up and successfully worked by the Midland Chemical Company in Midland, Michigan. The electrolysis required a direct-current generator which, when it was installed in 1892, was probably the first of its kind in America. Dow next set up a company to produce chlorine by the electrolysis of brine. It moved to Midland in 1896, and the Dow Central Company purchased the Midland Chemical Company in 1900. Its main concern was the manufacture of bleaching powder, but the company continued to grow, based on Dow's steady development of chemical compounds that could be derived from brines. His search for further applications of chlorine led to the making of insecticides and an interest in horticulture. Meanwhile, his experience at the Homeopathic Hospital doubtless fired an interest in pharmaceuticals. One of the substances found in brine was magnesium chloride, and by 1918 magnesium metal was being produced on a small scale by electrolysis. An intensive study of its alloys followed, leading to the large-scale production of these important light-metal alloys, under the name of Dowmetals. Two other "firsts" achieved by the company were the synthetic indigo process and the production of the element iodine in the USA. The Dow company became one of the leading chemical manufacturers in the USA, and at the same time Dow played an active part in public life, serving on many public and education boards.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Society of Chemical Industry Perkin Medal 1930.
    Bibliography
    Dow was granted 65 patents for a wide range of chemical processes.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1930, Ind. Eng. Chem. (October).
    "The Dow Chemical Company", 1925, Ind. Eng. Chem. (September)
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Dow, Herbert Henry

  • 106 Garratt, Herbert William

    [br]
    b. 8 June 1864 London, England
    d. 25 September 1913 Richmond, Surrey, England
    [br]
    English engineer, inventor of the Beyer-Garratt articulated locomotive.
    [br]
    After apprenticeship at the North London Railway's locomotive works, Garratt had a varied career which included responsibility for the locomotive departments of several British-owned railways overseas. This gave him an insight into the problems of such lines: locomotives, which were often inadequate, had to be operated over lines with weak bridges, sharp curves and steep gradients. To overcome these problems, he designed an articulated locomotive in which the boiler, mounted on a girder frame, was sus pended between two power bogies. This enabled a wide firebox and large-diameter boiler barrel to be combined with large driving-wheels and good visibility. Coal and water containers were mounted directly upon the bogies to keep them steady. The locomotive was inherently stable on curves because the central line of the boiler between its pivots lay within the curve of the centre line of the track. Garratt applied for a patent for his locomotive in 1907 and manufacture was taken up by Beyer, Peacock \& Co. under licence: the type became known as the Beyer-Garratt. The earliest Beyer-Garratt locomotives were small, but subsequent examples were larger. Sadly, only twenty-six locomotives of the type had been built or were under construction when Garratt died in 1913. Subsequent classes came to include some of the largest and most powerful steam locomotives: they were widely used and particularly successful in Central and Southern Africa, where examples continue to give good service in the 1990s.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    H.W.Garratt took out nine British patents, of which the most important is: 1907, British patent no. 17,165, "Improvements in and Relating to Locomotive Engines".
    Further Reading
    R.L.Hills, 1979–80, "The origins of the Garratt locomotive", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 51:175 (a good description of Garratt's career and the construction of the earliest Beyer-Garratt locomotives).
    A.E.Durrant, 1981, Garratt Locomotives of the World, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles. L.Wiener, 1930, Articulated Locomotives, London: Constable \& Co.
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Garratt, Herbert William

  • 107 Gresley, Sir Herbert Nigel

    [br]
    b. 19 June 1876 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 5 April 1941 Hertford, England
    [br]
    English mechanical engineer, designer of the A4-class 4–6–2 locomotive holding the world speed record for steam traction.
    [br]
    Gresley was the son of the Rector of Netherseale, Derbyshire; he was educated at Marlborough and by the age of 13 was skilled at making sketches of locomotives. In 1893 he became a pupil of F.W. Webb at Crewe works, London \& North Western Railway, and in 1898 he moved to Horwich works, Lancashire \& Yorkshire Railway, to gain drawing-office experience under J.A.F.Aspinall, subsequently becoming Foreman of the locomotive running sheds at Blackpool. In 1900 he transferred to the carriage and wagon department, and in 1904 he had risen to become its Assistant Superintendent. In 1905 he moved to the Great Northern Railway, becoming Superintendent of its carriage and wagon department at Doncaster under H.A. Ivatt. In 1906 he designed and produced a bogie luggage van with steel underframe, teak body, elliptical roof, bowed ends and buckeye couplings: this became the prototype for East Coast main-line coaches built over the next thirty-five years. In 1911 Gresley succeeded Ivatt as Locomotive, Carriage \& Wagon Superintendent. His first locomotive was a mixed-traffic 2–6–0, his next a 2–8–0 for freight. From 1915 he worked on the design of a 4–6–2 locomotive for express passenger traffic: as with Ivatt's 4 4 2s, the trailing axle would allow the wide firebox needed for Yorkshire coal. He also devised a means by which two sets of valve gear could operate the valves on a three-cylinder locomotive and applied it for the first time on a 2–8–0 built in 1918. The system was complex, but a later simplified form was used on all subsequent Gresley three-cylinder locomotives, including his first 4–6–2 which appeared in 1922. In 1921, Gresley introduced the first British restaurant car with electric cooking facilities.
    With the grouping of 1923, the Great Northern Railway was absorbed into the London \& North Eastern Railway and Gresley was appointed Chief Mechanical Engineer. More 4–6– 2s were built, the first British class of such wheel arrangement. Modifications to their valve gear, along lines developed by G.J. Churchward, reduced their coal consumption sufficiently to enable them to run non-stop between London and Edinburgh. So that enginemen might change over en route, some of the locomotives were equipped with corridor tenders from 1928. The design was steadily improved in detail, and by comparison an experimental 4–6–4 with a watertube boiler that Gresley produced in 1929 showed no overall benefit. A successful high-powered 2–8–2 was built in 1934, following the introduction of third-class sleeping cars, to haul 500-ton passenger trains between Edinburgh and Aberdeen.
    In 1932 the need to meet increasing road competition had resulted in the end of a long-standing agreement between East Coast and West Coast railways, that train journeys between London and Edinburgh by either route should be scheduled to take 8 1/4 hours. Seeking to accelerate train services, Gresley studied high-speed, diesel-electric railcars in Germany and petrol-electric railcars in France. He considered them for the London \& North Eastern Railway, but a test run by a train hauled by one of his 4–6–2s in 1934, which reached 108 mph (174 km/h), suggested that a steam train could better the railcar proposals while its accommodation would be more comfortable. To celebrate the Silver Jubilee of King George V, a high-speed, streamlined train between London and Newcastle upon Tyne was proposed, the first such train in Britain. An improved 4–6–2, the A4 class, was designed with modifications to ensure free running and an ample reserve of power up hill. Its streamlined outline included a wedge-shaped front which reduced wind resistance and helped to lift the exhaust dear of the cab windows at speed. The first locomotive of the class, named Silver Link, ran at an average speed of 100 mph (161 km/h) for 43 miles (69 km), with a maximum speed of 112 1/2 mph (181 km/h), on a seven-coach test train on 27 September 1935: the locomotive went into service hauling the Silver Jubilee express single-handed (since others of the class had still to be completed) for the first three weeks, a round trip of 536 miles (863 km) daily, much of it at 90 mph (145 km/h), without any mechanical troubles at all. Coaches for the Silver Jubilee had teak-framed, steel-panelled bodies on all-steel, welded underframes; windows were double glazed; and there was a pressure ventilation/heating system. Comparable trains were introduced between London Kings Cross and Edinburgh in 1937 and to Leeds in 1938.
    Gresley did not hesitate to incorporate outstanding features from elsewhere into his locomotive designs and was well aware of the work of André Chapelon in France. Four A4s built in 1938 were equipped with Kylchap twin blast-pipes and double chimneys to improve performance still further. The first of these to be completed, no. 4468, Mallard, on 3 July 1938 ran a test train at over 120 mph (193 km/h) for 2 miles (3.2 km) and momentarily achieved 126 mph (203 km/h), the world speed record for steam traction. J.Duddington was the driver and T.Bray the fireman. The use of high-speed trains came to an end with the Second World War. The A4s were then demonstrated to be powerful as well as fast: one was noted hauling a 730-ton, 22-coach train at an average speed exceeding 75 mph (120 km/h) over 30 miles (48 km). The war also halted electrification of the Manchester-Sheffield line, on the 1,500 volt DC overhead system; however, anticipating eventual resumption, Gresley had a prototype main-line Bo-Bo electric locomotive built in 1941. Sadly, Gresley died from a heart attack while still in office.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1936. President, Institution of Locomotive Engineers 1927 and 1934. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1936.
    Further Reading
    F.A.S.Brown, 1961, Nigel Gresley, Locomotive Engineer, Ian Allan (full-length biography).
    John Bellwood and David Jenkinson, Gresley and Stanier. A Centenary Tribute (a good comparative account).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Gresley, Sir Herbert Nigel

  • 108 Ives, Herbert Eugene

    [br]
    b. 1882 USA
    d. 1953
    [br]
    American physicist find television pioneer.
    [br]
    Ives gained his PhD in physics from Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and subsequently served in the US Signal Corps, eventually gaining experience in aerial photography. He then joined the Western Electric Engineering Department (later Bell Telephone Laboratories), c.1920 becoming leader of a group concerned with television-image transmission over telephone lines. In 1927, using a Nipkow disc, he demonstrated 50-line, 18 frames/sec pictures that could be displayed as either 2 in.×2 1/2 in. (5.1 cm×6.4 cm) images suitable for a "wirephone", or 2 ft ×2 1/2 ft (61 cm×76 cm) images for television viewing. Two years later, using a single-spiral disc and three separately modulated light sources, he was able to produce full-colour images.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1915, "The transformation of colour mixture equations", Journal of the Franklin Institute 180:673.
    1923, "do—Pt II", Journal of the Franklin Institute 195–23.
    1925, "Telephone picture transmission", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers 23:82.
    1929, "Television in colour", Bell Laboratories Record 7:439.
    1930, with A.L.Johnsrul, "Television in colour by a beam-scanning method", Journal of the Optical Society of America 20:11.
    Further Reading
    J.H.Udelson, 1982, The Great Television Race: History of the Television Industry 1925– 41: University of Alabama Press.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Ives, Herbert Eugene

  • 109 Land, Edwin Herbert

    [br]
    b. 7 May 1909 Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA
    d. 1 March 1991 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
    [br]
    American scientist and inventor of the Polaroid instant-picture process.
    [br]
    Edwin Land's career began when, as a Harvard undergraduate in the late 1920s, he became interested in the possibility of developing a polarizing filter in the form of a thin sheet, to replace the crystal and stacked-glass devices then in use, which were expensive, cumbersome and limited in size. He succeeded in creating a material in which minute anisotropic iodine crystals were oriented in line, producing an efficient polarizer that was patented in 1929. After presenting the result of his researches in a Physics Department colloquium at Harvard, he left to form a partnership with George Wheelwright to manufacture the new material, which was seen to have applications as diverse as anti-glare car headlights, sunglasses, and viewing filters for stereoscopic photographs and films. In 1937 he founded the Polaroid Corporation and developed the Vectograph process, in which self-polarized photographic images could be printed, giving a stereoscopic image when viewed through polarizing viewers. Land's most significant invention, the instant picture, was stimulated by his three-year-old daughter. As he took a snapshot of her, she asked why she could not see the picture at once. He began to research the possibility, and on 21 February 1947 he demonstrated a system of one-step photography at a meeting of the Optical Society of America. Using the principle of diffusion transfer of the image, it produced a photograph in one minute. The Polaroid Land camera was launched on 26 November 1948. The original sepia-coloured images were soon replaced by black and white and, in 1963, by Polacolor instant colour film. The original peel-apart "wet" process was superseded in 1972 with the introduction of the SX-70 camera with dry picture units which developed in the light. The instant colour movie system Polavision, introduced in 1978, was less successful and was one of his few commercial failures.
    Land died in March 1991, after a career in which he had been honoured by countless scien-tific and academic bodies and had received the Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honour in America.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Medal of Freedom.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Land, Edwin Herbert

  • 110 гербертовский

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > гербертовский

  • 111 Spencer

    , Herbert(1820-1903)영국의 철학자

    English-Korean dictionary > Spencer

  • 112 evolutionary theory

    1) биол. эволюционизм, эволюционная теория (предложенное Ч. Дарвином объяснение формирования, развития и многообразия видов организмов с помощью законов изменчивости, наследственности, естественного отбора и борьбы за существование)
    Syn:
    See:
    2) cоц. эволюционная теория (объяснение формирования и развития общества в целом и его элементов с использованием принципов биологической эволюции Ч. Дарвина)
    Syn:
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > evolutionary theory

  • 113 bounded rationality

    мет., эк. ограниченная рациональность (полусильная форма рациональности, предложенная Г. Саймоном как более реалистичная по сравнению с полной рациональностью; предполагает ограниченность доступной информации и ограниченность интеллектуальных возможностей человека для анализа всех возможных альтернатив)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > bounded rationality

  • 114 functionalism

    сущ.
    1) соц. функционализм, функциональная школа (направление социологии, в котором все элементы и институты общества рассматриваются с точки зрения выполняемых ими функций (напр., все элементы культуры общества (традиции, привычки, язык) изучаются с точки зрения удовлетворения каких-л. потребностей общества); теоретики функционализма часто проводят аналогию между обществом и биологическим организмом, в котором каждый орган выполняет определенную функцию)
    See:
    2) псих. функционализм (методологическая позиция В. Джеймса, рассматривающая психологию как выполнение ряда функций, направленных на адаптацию организма к окружающему миру и удовлетворение базовых потребностей)

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > functionalism

  • 115 maximizing

    1. прил.
    эк. максимизирующий (о лице, стремящемся к достижению максимального значения целевого показателя; также о варианте выбора, варианте поведения и т. д., позволяющем достигнуть максимального значения целевого показателя)

    sales [profit, value\]-maximizing firm — фирма, максимизирующая объем продаж [прибыль, ценность\]

    profit maximizing output — выпуск, максимизирующий прибыль

    utility-maximizing choice — выбор, максимизирующий полезность

    Ant:
    See:
    2. сущ.
    общ. максимизирование, максимизация
    Syn:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > maximizing

  • 116 Brandt, Willy

    перс.
    пол. Брандт, Вилли (1913-1992; наст. имя Герберт Карл Фрам; председатель Социал-демократической партии Германии (СДПГ) в 1964-87 гг.; президент Социалистического интернационала с 1976; Федеральный канцлер ФРГ в 1969-1974 гг.; в 1958-63 гг. председатель СДПГ Западного Берлина; в 1957-66 гг. — правящий бургомистр Западного Берлина; в 1966-69 гг. вице-канцлер и министр иностранных дел в коалиционном (ХДС-ХСС и СДПГ) правительстве ФРГ; лауреат Нобелевской премии мира (1971); оставил государственную деятельность на посту главы правительства Германии в 1974 г., когда против его помощника были выдвинуты обвинения в оказании помощи восточногерманским спецслужбам; многое сделал для превращения Западной Германии в демократическое общество; благодаря Брандту Социнтерн определил три основных направления своей деятельности: борьба за мир, отношения между бедными и богатыми странами (Брандту принадлежит концепция дихотомии Север/Юг, впоследствии широко эксплуатирующаяся политической мыслью), права человека; правительство Брандта выступало за развитие отношений с СССР и другими социалистическими странами, что привело не только к разрядке напряженности в Европе, но и подготовило объединение Германии, которое произошло полностью в соответствии с представлениями Брандта о возможности ее объединения исключительно путем не конфронтации, а сближения с СССР; такая же позиция Брандта на посту правящего бургомистра Западного Берлина привела к тому, что Западный Берлин перестал быть горячей точкой планеты)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > Brandt, Willy

  • 117 organicism

    сущ.
    мет. органицизм (направление в философии, социологии и психологии, основанное на идее рассмотрения общества с точки зрения аналогии между обществом и биологическим организмом)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > organicism

  • 118 symbolic interactionism

    соц. символический интеракционизм (теоретическое направление в социологии, которое исходит из идей о символической природе взаимодействия людей и важнейшей роли языка и жестов как системы символов в процессе интерпретации действий других и формирования личности, мышления и общества)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > symbolic interactionism

  • 119 Sumner, William Graham

    перс.
    соц., эк. Самнер, Уильям Грэхем (1840-1910; американский социолог и экономист; как социолог изучал историю обычаев; американский представитель социального дарвинизма; как экономист был сторонником жесткой либеральной политики laissez-faire, которая вытекала из идеологии социального дарвинизма, и считал рыночные законы оптимальной естественной гармонией, за что причисляется к "Американским апологетам")
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > Sumner, William Graham

  • 120 biological reductionism

    соц. биологический редукционизм (методологическое направление в социологии и других социальных науках, использующее биологические законы, а также терминологию для объяснения социальных явлений и процессов)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > biological reductionism

См. также в других словарях:

  • Herbert — ist ein männlicher Vorname und ein Familienname. Die seltene weibliche Form des Vornamens lautet Herberta. Herkunft und Bedeutung Der Name Herbert, auch Heribert, entstand aus der Zusammensetzung der althochdeutschen Wörter „heri“ für Heer,… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Herbert — (related to Heribert) may refer to:* Herbert I of Maine * Herbert II of Maine * Herbert I of Vermandois * Herbert II of Vermandois * Herbert III of Vermandois * Herbert IV of Vermandois * Herbert, New Zealand, a small town in North Otago *… …   Wikipedia

  • Herbert — Herbert, George * * * (as used in expressions) Asquith, H(erbert) H(enry), 1 conde de Oxford y Asquith Best, Charles H(erbert) Bradley, F(rancis) H(erbert) Herbert Ernst Karl Frahm Bush, George (Herbert Walker) Dillinger, John (Herbert) Dow,… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Herbert — puede aludir a: como apellido Frank Herbert, escritor. Zbigniew Herbert, poeta. William Herbert, botánico. Ricki Herbert, entrenador de la Selección de fútbol de Nueva Zelanda. Matthew Herbert, músico británico. como nombre Edwin Herbert Land,… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Herbert — Herbert,   1) [ həːbət], Sir (seit 1945) A. P. (Alan Patrick), englischer Schriftsteller und Politiker, * Elstead (County Surrey) 24. 9. 1890, ✝ London 11. 11. 1971. Herbert schrieb lange Jahre für die Zeitschrift »Punch«, verfasste Romane,… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Herbert — m English, German, and French: of Continental Germanic origin, introduced to Britain by the Normans. It is composed of the elements heri, hari army + berht bright, famous. A form of this name (Herebeorht) existed in England before the Conquest,… …   First names dictionary

  • Herbert — • Herbert (ou Héribert) (20 mars), vivait dans une île, au milieu du lac de Derwentwater, dans le Cumberland. Ami de l évêque de Lindisfarne, saint Cuthbert, il mourut en même temps que lui en 687. Nom issu du germain hari (armée) et behrt… …   Dictionnaire des saints

  • Herbert — masc. proper name, introduced in England by the Normans, from O.Fr. Herbert, Latinized from Frankish *Hari berct, *Her(e) bert, lit. army bright …   Etymology dictionary

  • Herbert — Hèrbert DEFINICIJA ONOMASTIKA m. os. ime (njemačkoga podrijetla); Hȇrta ž. os. ime; hip.: Bȇrta (v. i Albert) ETIMOLOGIJA njem. Herbert …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • Herbert [1] — Herbert, 1) H. I. von Vermandois, war Graf von Champagne u. st. 943. 2) H. II., Enkel des Vor., Sohn Roberts, regierte als Graf von Champagne 968–993. 3) Eduard H. de Cherbury, geb. 1581 auf dem Schlosse Montgomery in Wales; er studirte in Oxford …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Herbert [2] — Herbert, eine von den Normannen abstammende englische Familie, deren ältester bekannter Ahnherr, Wilhelm, zu Anfang des 12. Jahrh. lebte u. von dem Grafen von Derby, Robert v. Ferrers, 1125 Norbury in Derbyshire zu Lehen erhielt. Merkwürdig sind …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

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