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thuringia

  • 21 Thuringia

    n геогр. ист. Тюрингия

    English-Russian base dictionary > Thuringia

  • 22 Thuringia

    English-Russian dictionary of popular words > Thuringia

  • 23 Thuringia

    Wikipedia English-Arabic glossary > Thuringia

  • 24 Killian, bishop in East Franconia and Thuringia

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Killian, bishop in East Franconia and Thuringia

  • 25 turingia

    Turingia f Geog Thuringia

    English-spanish dictionary > turingia

  • 26 Thuringian

    English-Italian dictionary > Thuringian

  • 27 Charmeuse

    A dress fabric made of all silk yarns, and with a satin face and crepe-like back. A hard twisted warp and crepe weft is used. The finished cloth is dull but soft. The name Charmeuse is the registered trade mark of a fabric originated by a French firm, Bianchini, Ferier and Co., bat it has been made common by copying the fabric on a large scale. The Berlin Chamber of Industry and Commerce gives the following opinion: - Charmeuse has been understood commercially for many decades as a woven silk fabric with a lustrous duchess satin-like face and a dull crepe-like back. Originally made from natural silk, this material has been manufactured in the last few years both in part or wholly from rayon. " Tricot-charmeuse " is a knitted fabric, the back of which has an appearance similar to that of Charmeuse. Tricot-charmeuse has been largely used as a rayon hosiery material in Saxony and Thuringia, but such materials have also been called " Charmeuse " for some time past in the factories making Tricot charmeuse. It is considered, therefore, that the term " Charmeuse," without some special designation, has no power of differentiation and cannot be considered for registration as a trade mark.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Charmeuse

  • 28 Kind, Karl Gotthelf

    [br]
    b. 6 June 1801 Linda, near Freiberg, Germany
    d. 9 March 1873 Saarbrücken, Germany
    [br]
    German engineer, pioneer in deep drilling.
    [br]
    The son of an ore miner in Saxony, Kind was engaged in his father's profession for some years before he joined Glenck's drillings for salt at Stotternheim, Thuringia. There in 1835, after trying for five years, he self-reliantly put down a 340 m (1,100 ft) deep well; his success lay in his use of fish joints of a similar construction to those used shortly before by von Oeynhausen in Westphalia. In order to improve their operational possibilities in aquiferous wells, in 1842 he developed his own free-fall device between the rod and the drill, which enabled the chisel to reach the bottom of the hole without hindrance. His invention was patented in France. Four years later, at Mondorf, Luxembourg, he put down a 736 m (2,415 ft) deep borehole, the deepest in the world at that time.
    Kind contributed further considerable improvements to deep drilling and was the first successfully to replace iron rods with wooden ones, on account of their buoyancy in water. The main reasons for his international reputation were his attempts to bore out shafts, which he carried out for the first time in the region of Forbach, France, in 1848. Three years later he was engaged in the Ruhr area by a Belgian-and English-financed mining company, later the Dahlbusch mining company in Gelsenkirchen, to drill a hole that was later enlarged to 4.4 m (14 1/2 ft) and made watertight by lining. Although he had already taken out a patent for boring and lining shafts in 1849 in Belgium, his wooden support did not qualify. It was the Belgian engineer Joseph Chaudron, in charge of the mining company, who overcame the difficulty of making the bottom of the borehole watertight. In 1854 they jointly founded a shaft-sinking company in Brussels which specialized in aquiferous formations and operated internationally.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur 1849.
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    H.G.Conrad, "Carl Gotthelf Kind", Neue deutsche Biographie 10:613–14.
    D.Hoffmann, 1959, 150 Jahre Tiefbohrungen in Deutschland, Vienna and Hamburg, pp. 20–5 (assesses his technological achievements).
    T.Tecklenburg, 1914, Handbuch der Tiefbohrkunde, 2nd end, Vol. VI, Berlin, pp. 36–9 (provides a detailed description of his equipment).
    J.Chaudron, 1862, "Über die nach dem Kindschen Erdbohrverfahren in Belgien ausgeführten Schachtbohrarbeiten", Berg-und Hüttenmännische Zeitung 21:402–4, (describes his contribution to making Kind's shafts watertight).
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Kind, Karl Gotthelf

  • 29 Koenig, Friedrich

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 17 April 1774 Eisleben, Thuringia, Germany
    d. 17 January 1833 Oberzell, near Würzburg, Germany
    [br]
    German inventor of the machine printing press.
    [br]
    Koenig became a printer and bookseller. Around 1800 he was among those who conceived the idea of mechanizing the hand printing press, which apart from minor details had survived virtually unchanged through the first three and a half centuries of printing. In 1803, in Sühl, Saxony, he designed a press in which the flat forme, carrying the type, was mechanically inked and passed to and from the platen. Whether this ma-chine was ever constructed is not known, but Koenig found little support for his ideas because of lack of technical and financial resources. So, in 1806, he went to England and was introduced to Thomas Bensley, a book printer off Fleet Street in London. Bensley agreed to support Koenig and brought in two other printers to help finance Koenig's experiments. Another German, Andreas Bauer, an engineer, assisted Koenig and became largely responsible for the practical execution of Koenig's plans.
    In 1810 they patented a press which was steam-driven but still used a platen. It was set to work in Bensley's office the following year but did not prove to be satisfactory. Koenig redesigned it, and in October 1811 he obtained a patent for a steam-driven press on an entirely new principle. In place of the platen, the paper was fixed around a hollow rotating cylinder, which impressed the paper on to the inked forme. In Bensley's office it was used for book printing, but its increased speed over the hand press appealed to newspaper proprietors and John Walter II of The Times asked Koenig to make a double-cylinder machine, so that the return stroke of the forme would be productive. A further patent was taken out in 1813 and the new machine was made ready to print the 29 November 1814 issue—in secrecy, behind closed doors, to forestall opposition from the pressmen working the hand presses. An important feature of the machine was that the inking rollers were not of the traditional leather or skin but a composite material made from glue, molasses and some soda. The inking could not have been achieved satisfactorily with the old materials. The editorial of that historic issue proclaimed, 'Our Journal of this day presents to the public the practical result of the greatest improvement connected with printing, since the discovery of the art itself Koenig's machine press could make 1,200 impressions an hour compared to 200 with the hand press; further improvements raised this figure to 1,500–2,000. Koenig's last English patent was in 1814 for an improved cylinder machine and a perfecting machine, which printed both sides of the paper. The steam-driven perfecting press was printing books in Bensley's office in February 1816. Koenig and Bauer wanted by that time to manufacture machine presses for other customers, but Bensley, now the principal shareholder, insisted that they should make machines for his benefit only. Finding this restriction intolerable, Koenig and Bauer returned to Germany: they became partners in a factory at Oberzell, near Würzburg, in 1817 and the firm of Koenig and Bauer flourishes there to this day.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Moran, 1973, Printing Presses, London: Faber \& Faber.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Koenig, Friedrich

  • 30 Zeiss, Carl

    [br]
    b. 11 September 1816 Weimar, Thuringia, Germany
    d. 3 December 1888 Jena, Saxony, Germany
    [br]
    German lens manufacturer who introduced scientific method to the production of compound microscopes and made possible the production of the first anastigmatic photographic objectives.
    [br]
    After completing his early education in Weimar, Zeiss became an apprentice to the engineer Dr Frederick Koerner. As part of his training, Zeiss was required to travel widely and he visited Vienna, Berlin, Stuttgart and Darmstadt to study his trade. In 1846 he set up a business of his own, an optical workshop in Jena, where he began manufacturing magnifying glasses and microscopes. Much of his work was naturally for the university there and he had the co-operation of some of the University staff in the development of precision instruments. By 1858 he was seeking to make more expensive compound microscopes, but he found the current techniques primitive and laborious. He decided that it was necessary to introduce scientific method to the design of the optics, and in 1866 he sought the advice of a professor of physics at the University of Jena, Ernst Abbe (1840–1905). It took Zeiss until 1869 to persuade Abbe to join his company, and two difficult years were spent working on the calculations before success was achieved. Within a few more years the Zeiss microscope had earned a worldwide reputation for quality. Abbe became a full partner in the Zeiss business in 1875. In 1880 Abbe began an association with Friedrich Otte Schott that was to lead to the establishment of the famous Jena glass works in 1884. With the support of the German government, Jena was to become the centre of world production of new optical glasses for photographic objectives.
    In 1886 the distinguished mathematician and optician Paul Rudolph joined Zeiss at Jena. After Zeiss's death, Rudolph went on to use the characteristics of the new glass to calculate the first anastigmatic lenses. Immediately successful and widely imitated, the anastigmats were also the first of a long series of Zeiss photographic objectives that were to be at the forefront of lens design for years to come. Abbe took over the management of the company and developed it into an internationally famous organization.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    L.W.Sipley, 1965, Photography's Great Inventors, Philadelphia (a brief biography). J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E.Epstean, New York.
    K.J.Hume, 1980, A History of Engineering Metrology, London, 122–32 (includes a short account of Carl Zeiss and his company).
    JW / RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Zeiss, Carl

См. также в других словарях:

  • Thuringia — • A large part of Central Germany, bounded by the Werra River, the Saale, the Harz Mountains, and the Thuringian Forest Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Thuringia     Thuringia …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • THURINGIA — THURINGIA, state in Germany. Jewish merchants are recorded in Thuringia as early as the 10th century. Jewish communities, however, appeared relatively late. erfurt , the oldest   Jewish settlement, dates from the 12th century. It became the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Thuringia — steht für: Thuringia Versicherungs AG, 1853 in Erfurt gegründet, siehe Generali Deutschland Thuringia, Musik Album der deutschen Pagan Metal Band Menhir, siehe Menhir (Band) eine deutsche Ordensprovinz der Franziskanischen Orden Thuringia ist der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Thuringia — [tü′riŋ əntho͞o rin′jē ə, thyo͞orin′jē ə; thyo͞o rin′jə] state of central Germany: 6,244 sq mi (16,172 sq km); pop. 2,518,000; cap. Erfurt: Ger. name Thüringen [tü′riŋ ən] …   English World dictionary

  • Thuringia — For steamships named Thuringia, see SS Thuringia. Thüringen redirects here. For the municipality in Austria, see Thüringen, Austria. Free State of Thuringia Freistaat Thüringen   State of Germany   …   Wikipedia

  • Thuringia — Thuringian, adj., n. /thoo rin jee euh, jeuh/, n. a state in central Germany. 2,500,000; 5985 sq. mi. (15,550 sq. km) Cap.: Erfurt. German, Thüringen /tyuu rdding euhn/. * * * German Thüringen Historic region and state (pop., 2002 est.:… …   Universalium

  • Thuringia —    Known as Germany s green heart, Thuringiain the Weimar years bordered on Hesse in the west, Bavaria* in the south, Saxony* in the east, and Prussian Saxony (now Saxony Anhalt) in the north. Aside from its capital of Weimar, its chief cities… …   Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik

  • Thuringia — Admin ASC 1 Code Orig. name Thuringia Country and Admin Code DE.15 DE …   World countries Adminstrative division ASC I-II

  • Thuringia Forest (Germany) — Hotels: Ramada Hotel Friedrichroda (Friedrichroda) Ramada Hotel Panorama Oberhof (Oberhof Gehlberg) …   International hotels

  • THURINGIA vulgo Thuringen — provinc. Saxoniae superioris ob fertilitatem Sumen German. dicta Georg. Agricolae. Alias amplior fuit, et Reges habuit proprios, tempore primae stirpis Franciae Regum: nunc valde imminuta. Subest partim Electori Saxoniae, partim Ducibus… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Thüringia (Asteroid) — Asteroid (934) Thüringia Eigenschaften des Orbits (Simulation) Orbittyp Hauptgürtelasteroid Große Halbachse 2,7509  …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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