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  1. Schubert practice, [1] also known as the Schubert jurisprudence (less often called Schubert doctrine [2] ), is a partially abandoned legal doctrine in Swiss law manifested in a series of decisions of the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland, according to which provisions of domestic law have practical primacy over otherwise binding, but ...

  2. Schubert was born in Oneida, New York on June 7, 1918. He attended Syracuse University where he received his AB ( magna cum laude) in English and Mathematics in 1940 and a PhD in political science in 1948. He served in the United States Army Signal Corps (Intelligence) from 1942 to 1946 as a first lieutenant and was awarded a Bronze Star Medal.

  3. Franz Schubert 's Impromptus are a series of eight pieces for solo piano composed in 1827. They were published in two sets of four impromptus each: the first two pieces in the first set were published in the composer's lifetime as Op. 90; the second set was published posthumously as Op. 142 in 1839 (with a dedication added by the publisher to ...

  4. Ferdinand Lukas Schubert was an Austrian teacher, organist and composer. He is notable for his compositions and for his role in publishing the complete works of his younger brother Franz Schubert. He received training in piano and violin from his father, Franz Theodor Schubert, and his older brother Ignaz, later from Michael Holzer, and finally ...

  5. Franz Peter Schubert, avstrijski skladatelj, * 31. januar 1797, Dunaj, Avstrija, † 19. november 1828, Dunaj. Schubert je danes cenjen kot eden izmed najbolj nadarjenih romantičnih skladateljev ( 19. stoletja ). V enaintridesetih letih svojega življenja je skomponiral ogromno število skladb, med njimi prek šeststo samospevov, sedem ...

  6. The Fantasie in C major, Op. 15 ( D. 760), popularly known as the Wanderer Fantasy, is a four-movement fantasy for solo piano composed by Franz Schubert in 1822. It is widely considered Schubert's most technically demanding composition for the piano. Schubert himself said "the devil may play it," in reference to his own inability to do so properly.

  7. The String Quartet No. 13 in A minor (the Rosamunde Quartet ), D 804, Op. 29, was written by Franz Schubert between February and March 1824. It dates roughly to the same time as his monumental Death and the Maiden Quartet, emerging around three years after his previous attempt to write for the string quartet genre, the Quartettsatz, D 703, that ...

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